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These upstate New York hooligans drew easy comparisons to the Band, with their shaggy songcraft, olde-timey instrumentation, and lurching rhythm section. But Yonder Is the Clock grants them membership in the old weird America on their own merits. The revival-tent aspect of their music, blowzy trombones and honky-tonk piano, has been subdued, and Ian Felice’s Dylanesque rasp takes on a funereal tone from the first track. “The Big Surprise” is an exercise in delayed gratification, as the band hints at a release that doesn’t arrive until midway through the disc, on the picaresque “Run Chicken Run,” a propulsive jam that’s the closest thing here to past sing-alongs such as “Frankie’s Gun!” Indeed, the surprise is the depth of the brothers’ artistry. For all the joy that their rustic punk rock has brought, there’s been a sneaking suspicion that their music was somehow another con, much like the ones they sing about so fervently -- the wiseguy tale of a bunch of yokels pulling the beards of grizzled folk types and then going back home to listen to Led Zeppelin. Felice songs never address the universal when they can name-check a particular -- a rogues' gallery of Frankies, Lucilles, Anns, moms, cousins, and sisters. Yonder lays the shtick aside, and instead of backwoods Bruce Springsteen, the songs summon the genuinely creepy and desperate -- Tom Waits without the art house cinematography. The low-tech hootenanny “Memphis Flu” shows they really do know their roots; it’s a revival rant recounting the 1918 flu epidemic, and the desperate “Boy from Lawrence Country” chillingly imagines the motivations of a bounty hunter seeking Jesse James. In short, it’s the kind of great leap forward fans of this hardscrabble collective have been waiting for. Maybe not such a big surprise, after all. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble