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2022 release. Something Worse Than Loneliness is Bob Lind's third album of new material in the past decade, following 2012's Finding You Again and 2016's Magellan Was Wrong. Both of those records served to reintroduce many of us to Lind. We remembered him from his smash 1966 folk-rock hit 'Elusive Butterfly' and oft-covered classics such as 'Cheryl's Goin' Home', but what we discovered was that his new work was just as potent - even more so, perhaps - as those earlier releases. Something Worse Than Loneliness takes Lind to the next level, at a time when most of his contemporaries have long ago lost their mojo. This new collection is a gift that gives more with each new listening. The album was produced and arranged by Jamie Hoover, who you may already know as the prime mover behind the Spongetones, a great pop-rock band from North Carolina. Hoover, who also provides much of the instrumentation on the album and the back-up vocals (along with Elena Rogers), save for George Wurzbach's spellbinding keyboards, seems to know instinctively just how to frame Lind's evocative language, to bring out it's lustre and inherent wisdom. There's a familiarity to these songs - they instantly feel as if you've known them all your life - yet there is nothing retro about them. You'll welcome them into your life like a new best friend.