Scivic Rivers: Scivic Rivers   |  โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | Potluck  |  Feb. 10

โ€œThe last thing I want to do / Is file another field piece / About what it means / To raise a human being.โ€

These words start the last song on the first album by Scivic Rivers (and the seventh album from deep-thinking Durham songwriter Randy Bickford, who adopted the moniker after releasing two 2010s albums as Brice Randall Bickford and a handful before that as the Strugglers).

With all due respect: the album very much is a field piece about raising a human beingโ€”but itโ€™s also much more than that.

Scivic Rivers connects the threads of a songwriter becoming a father as he loses his own father to lung cancer, mulling the amount to which we grow with each generation against the way our patterns can often seem to just go on repeatingโ€”โ€œa child is always on the wayโ€ is the persistent refrain of โ€œInstruction After the Fact,โ€ the aforementioned closer.

Set to folk-rock that runs the gamut from epic and somber to energetic and danceable (captured with immersive clarity with help from local producer Scott Solter), Bickfordโ€™s latest connects these looming existential anxieties with more prescient concerns about the state of our world and nation.

โ€œO little child / You will never know a world / That lets you forget / What youโ€™ve been,โ€ Bickford intones on โ€œBorn Outside,โ€ contemplating the digital footprints that cling to us in this modern age as acoustic guitar and organ slink before blossoming into a patient full-band rollick. โ€œWhen I was a boy / I really thought I would be / Relieved to find out / How the story ends.โ€

Shortly thereafter, Bickford laments that he lived โ€œto see a demagogue / finally get the keys to the United Statesโ€ and that โ€œwe had this coming.โ€

Scivic Rivers is filled with such verses that poignantly weigh near-term concerns of family and society against the arc of time and history.

โ€œShenandoah Graniteโ€ observes, โ€œYou can be scared / And bored at the same time / For the civilized / Itโ€™s hard to feel otherwise.โ€

The opening โ€œHigh Seasonโ€ finds Bickford thinking about how โ€œThe sea is close / As close as you can get to eternity / It goes on / Churning bodiesโ€ as he lies sprawled out on the beach with โ€œother bored voicesโ€ around him.

Appraising a newly built overpass โ€œwith the boy as a lensโ€ on โ€œBlood Vessel,โ€ he notes with a grave double meaning that you can take the interstate โ€œall the way / To the end of the West.โ€

The music on those songs remains elegantly nervy and elemental even as it trips through varying shades of rock, Americana, and disco.

Bound by the yearning of Bickfordโ€™s honeyed and hypnotic baritone, Scivic Rivers ponders questions that are big, unknowable, and universal with arrangements that are consistently immersive and engaging. This is an album that doesnโ€™t pretend to have the answers, but it might make you feel less alone.

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Bio: After seven years in the Triangle, Jordan Lawrence followed his fiancée and their fluffy cat to Greensboro. He has written about music for the INDY since 2010.Twitter: http://twitter.com/JordanLawrence