Your March musical marching orders contain some things new
and some things old.
The New:
Keith Johns gave
up a job in a physics lab for the lucrative world of folk music! But that's the
point of his album Grateful Fool, which
is themed on the idea that oblivion is the ultimate fate of all things, so one
should embrace life while you have it. The title track imagines a proud,
well-to-do man when he falls from his lofty perch and faces his reckoning.
Johns admonishes: Just take enough, more
is a crime/Help me give it all up, nothing is mine/I'm a wayward grateful fool,
and that's alright. Johns has a high tenor voice with a hint of a draw–he's
from Florida. Though he's a folkie at heart, he flirts with an indie rock vibe on
"Silver Strings," which is about the nature of things from the
perspective of physics and astronomy, but isn't the least bit obtuse. "TheFall" opens with a bluegrass instrumental groove and evolves into a folk rock
arrangement suited to a song about how autumn is both a season of endings and
one that drops seeds of renewal. Johns is also unusual in that his lyrics are
either quite extensive, or very short. Among the latter is "Drops of
Water" with its onomatopoetic guitar and sentiments such as these: Ahead, a million threads/And yet a single
braid behind/A million distant memories/With no way to rewind. You have to
admire a man who can contemplate his own death in one song ("Aubade")
and then repeat his grandmother's advice to never spoil a story by peeking at
the ending in another ("Isn't It Grand?"). Smart stuff. ★★★★
Hayley Reardon is
a name to watch, though I doubt her latest album, Good, will push her over the
hump to stardom. She hails from Marblehead, is just 20-years-old, and has been
hanging around with Boston music vets like Kevin Barry, Duke Levine, and Loren
Entress. So much promise—but not there yet. She has a gorgeous voice that
climbs the scales, plumbs a few depths, and has an attractive catch to it. In a
nutshell, though, Good is an
eleven-track release in which sameness dominates musically and thematically.
Entress produced the record and he seems to be aiming at creating Daniel
Lanois-like atmosphere. The tracks are drenched in sonics, but not all of them
flatter Reardon. Hers are lovely tones, but as yet Reardon's voice lacks
clarity and accentuation. This means that whatever poetry is embedded in her
lyrics gets washed out in the rinse cycle. You should definitely check her out–she's
simply too talented to ignore–but this might be a buy-a-few-tracks kind of
release. For my taste, the best songs are those that chuck the formula a bit.
"Paper Mache" has a tinge of Motown soul lurking at the edges; the
guitar in "When I Get to Tennessee" bites with a bit of swampiness;
and "The High Road" is a Western/pop blend with solid hooks
throughout.★★
I'm not sure if Tara
MacLean belongs in the "new" or the "old" category. Her
new Noisetrade sampler is titled Evidence, which is also the name of
a hit song she recorded in 1996, and has stuck on other LPs and EPs. Another
song for which she is known, "Silence," was also first done in 1996,
and a review of her backlist reveals she often records the same songs. Lots of
performers do this, and I only mention it because sameness is also my biggest
critique of her 8-song Noisetrade project. Like Reardon, MacLean has a lovely
voice. I especially like the small husk she adds to her soprano to give it more
grit. She also knows that a song should build rather than come at you Celine
Dion-full bore style. I wish MacLean would express this with more variety than
a straightforward soft-to-loud formula and pop diva-wannabe arrangements.
"Evidence" is indeed a good song. A snappy rhythm emerges from a
cacophonous opening and then MacLean settles into a moody wrapper. My favorite
tracks, though, were the more controlled ones, especially "Scars" and
"White Noise." On these we hear a uniqueness for which the flavor-of-the-moment
pop world is seldom known. ★★
½
The Old:
Does it count as old if someone writes songs that sound like
they came from an archive? Let's say it does! Dana and Susan Robinson draw just two songs on The Angel's Share from
the traditional well ("Five Miles from Town," "Man of Constant
Sorrow"), but each track has an old songs groove. Old songs generally
references rural songs that have a timeless quality, often those from Appalachia.
They differ from bluegrass in that the song gets priority over the
instrumentation and the production is less showy. That's the Robinsons to a
tee. This is unpretentious music that makes you long to sit by a fire and hum
the choruses. Dana Robinson's voice is invitingly warm and both know their way
around stringed instruments (acoustic guitar, banjo, mandolin, fiddle). You'll
hear waltzes, some country blues, and songs about places and people. You'll
even get contemporary ideas that sound ageless, as in Robinson's "RiverFlows On," which muses upon solar energy and living within limits, and
"John Muir's Walking Blues," which expands upon environmental themes.
New Englanders will enjoy "Loose the Ties," originally written in the
Pioneer Valley, but apt for Vermont, where the Robinsons now reside. The title
track, by the way, references a term used in distilling in which the vapors are
declared "the angel's [sic] share." The Robinsons' version is also a
lovely tune for dancing. ★★★★
Vic Chesnutt (1964-2009)
made seventeen albums in his brief life–partly because he had prodigious
flourishes of insight, and partly because he wasn't entirely discerning about
what he recorded. Whatever you think of his music, he was an original. Raised
in Zebulon, Georgia, the craggy-voiced Chesnutt was left a semi-paraplegic in a
1983 car crash when he was just 18. He slowly discovered a limited range of
motion, could make basic chords, and could pick with two fingers. Chesnutt was mostly
a local legend until Michael Stipe encountered his in 1996. The last thirteen
years of Chesnutt's life involved NPR and PBS exposure, a documentary film,
some movie work, and friendships with folks such as Stipe, Patti Smith, Lucinda
Williams, Bill Frisell, and Jonathan Richman. Chesnutt often gets dumped into
the folk rock category, but his music is closer to the acoustic outlaw country
of Townes van Zandt, Guy Clark, and Jimmie Dale Gilmore–though he wasn't in
their league. A new collection titled New West Hotel spotlights a dozen tracks culled from four albums he made on the
Texas Hotel Label from 1990 to 1995, and two from the New West label in 2003 and
2005. At his best, Chesnutt sang with the pained honesty of Neil Young. Check
out 1990's "Aunt Avis:" Help me
mama, for I have grinned. Yet the same debut album, Little, has "Soft Picasso" and it's pretty awful. New West Hotel is that kind of uneven record.
"Soggy Tongues" is simple and gorgeous, as is "In My Way,
Yes." But some cuts are as rough as sandpaper soaked in coal grit, a
category into which "Stupid Preoccupations" and "Sleeping
Man" fall. What do you want to do with lyrics such as these from the
latter: You are a freak of nature/You are
a Siamese/You are in a pickle jar/For all the world to see. Or this from
"What Do You Mean?"– Like a
puppy on a trampoline (4x—followed by an angel/chipmunk mash of backup
singers chirping the song title). Toward the end, Chesnutt had lots of help on
the stage, which produced the intriguing "Virginia," a lush
arrangement with Frisell on guitar, and Van Dyke Parks washing the song with
organ wipes. It sounds like a Gothic surf song being played at a dangerous
strip club. If you're unfamiliar with him, Vic Chesnutt is worth discovering–but
be selective. I don't wish to be uncharitable, but without the tragic back
story, his musical legend probably would have remained local. ★★
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