This feels like Callahan letting his guard down and letting his band breathe around him. There’s a warmth and looseness here that’s rare in today’s singer-songwriter world — it sounds like real people responding to each other in the room, not just a voice over a backing track. The lyrics are sharp and observant; the textures move from folk intimacy to rough edges and back again. But in letting things unfold so organically, My Days of 58 rarely demands your full attention. The songs drift and linger, and while that’s pleasurable, it doesn’t always build into something necessary. You feel the humanity — in the humour, the sadness, the loose grooves — but you don’t always feel the tension rise into something irreversible. It’s warm and alive, but structurally gentle. It invites you in. It doesn’t always make you stay. — My Days of 58 feels like a deep conversation, not a proclamation. Pros Deeply human songwriting Callahan’s lyric sensibility — wry, precise, and introspective — is ...