To repeat an old rant, too many Nashville-based female
singers are like Lego pieces: unsnap one and pop another into place. As a rule
they are young, small-voiced, whispery-toned sopranos—pretty to hear, but with
all the distinctiveness of a block of clapboard houses painted white. Here's a
June 2018 edition of Women with Amazing Voices—the ones that will make you want
to stuff those Lego pieces back in the box and hide them in the closet.
Ellen Starski, The Days When Peonies Prayed for the Ants
Ellen Starski has a unique voice you'll either love or find
odd. Put me firmly in the first camp. Its nasal, but expressive; dramatic, but
controlled. The latter quality is one I really admire. "Daughter of the Sea" is a perfect example. This song has theatrical qualities with its
bouncy, edgy strings, but it's deliberately paced and the tension comes from
small shifts in Starski's voice, not flashy outbursts. It's also typical in
that most of the songs are about loss, family, and coming to grips with the
ways of adult life. "Ode to Nanny and Cookie" is about her
grandmothers; the tone is somber and wrapped in moody repeated guitar pulses.
"Miss You Mary" is homage to her mother and she wrenches emotion from
lines such as I was looking for a place
to bury the past with you. A different kind of yearning emerges in
"Missing You," Glimpses of you
still surface on my skin/I shower and the world comes crashing in…. Starski
lists influences such as Leonard Cohen, Aimee Mann, and Sarah McLachlan, but
there's also some old-time country in it that, to me, evoked Kitty Wells. Check
out songs such as "Honey, I'm Not Him." When she sings I told you once don't make me tell you
again/You better stay away from my man it's way more ominous than you'd
expect. It also has Appalachian seasonings that reflect the northwest
Pennsylvania coal country from which she hails. "Taken By the Breeze"
also has an old-time flair, though its catchiness is enhanced with just a touch
of mariachi brass that takes us south of the mountains. Ms. Starski also has a
footlights-quality to parts of her repertoire. "Chasin' the Sun"
feels like a string band vaudeville song, and she also engages in moody spoken
word forays such as "Slip of Paper" and the title track, one that is
completely silent for thirty seconds before Starski recites a rhythmic poem to
flute and snare drum accompaniment. I always appreciate musicians who take
chances and Starski's recording ranks high among my 2018 favorites. ★★★★★
Gretchen Peters, Sad Songs Make Me Happy
Perhaps the name Gretchen Peters gives you pause, but I’ll
bet you know her music. She has a dozen records of her own, including the newly
released Dancing with the Beast, but
she is best known as a songwriter; she even has a niche in the Nashville
Songwriters Hall of Fame. Her “Independence Day”—a hit for Martina McBride—ranks
# 50 of the Top 100 greatest country songs of all time, but you’ve not heard it
the way it should be sung until you’ve heard Peters perform it. Luckily you
can; NoiseTrade has released it on a compilation of Peters’ back catalogue
material. Take the collection title seriously; Peters has an affinity for tough
songs. “Independence Day,” for example, is based on the infamous 1977 Francine
Hughes case, and involves an eight-year-old girl who is at the fair the day her
mother sets fire to the home of her abusive husband while he and she are in
it.* A tragedy? Not from Peters’ perspective! “Disappearing Act” (from her new album) is about mortality,
and "Blackbird" is another murder ballad. “On a Bus to St. Cloud,” a hit for Trisha Yearwood, is a sad
song of missing a lost love; and “When All You Got is a Hammer” is about an
Iraq War vet who comes home with PTSD and the deck stacked against him. When he
chillingly strikes back Peters sings, When
all you got is a hammer/Everything
looks like a nail. There are several tender moments on this collection,
including the lovely “The Way You Move Me” and her Peters' manifesto of things
of value in “The Answer.” Mostly, though, this is an album about when life
isn’t exactly as imagines, like the harried woman in “Five Minutes,” or the
woman aching for “The Matador,” but fearing his rage and not sure who I was cheering for… I loved the fighter and the bull. A
final word: Although Ms. Peters’ music is often labeled country, that's an inaccurate
descriptor. Her voice is like a huskier version of Emmylou Harris’ and like
Harris, the music transgresses folk, pop, country, and Americana borders. Quite
a lot, in fact, is piano-based—more like a rawhide tough Sara Bareilles than a
CMT cutout. ★★★★★
*For those needing further proof Sean Hannity is an idiot,
he has used "Independence Day" as a theme for his radio show under
the mistaken impression it's a patriotic song!
Angela Josephine, Daylight
This album has been dubbed a combination "folk-opera
and personal exploration" and that's an excellent description. It's deeply
spiritual in a dark and honest way—musings filled with doubt, yearning, and
surrender to the reality there are mysteries we cannot answer. In her stunning
eight-minute finale "Face to the Wind," Angela Josephine asks do you know the way of darkness? Her
revelation isn't what you expect, nor is her insistence: I'm taking the cross in this way/there's no other way… In it we
also hear some of the instruments she has mastered: piano, guitar, mandolin, dulcimers…. Ms. Josephine's voice is soulful,
emotive, and adaptable. She's Grace Slick-like in the way she works the band
and trippy grooves of "Got to Believe," which is another song that
doesn't play out to usual scripts. She takes to task a man with no one to hold/just a prayer/and a Bible/and
what you've been told. And what do we do with the refrain of the
ambience-dripped, feedback-enhanced, echoic "River Rising" with its
refrain: O sister glory be/Glory be our
mother/O sister glory be/The father, son, the lover. The title track is the
album's most cheerful, one that unfolds to scampering of mando notes, but
Josephine mostly walks on the mysterious and dark side. "Red Roses,"
for example, is a (sort of) love song but one so moody it could be French—or
Leonard Cohen! Josephine is a talented singer, musician, poet, and thinker. She
recorded this album in a barn in her Michigan Upper Peninsula homeland and
those old beams sparked a lot of serious contemplation. ★★★★
Kris Angelis, Photobooth
Florida-born Kris Angelis now resides in Los Angeles, where
she's an actress and singer/songwriter. She has just dropped a single titled
"Photobooth" and has released a five-song NoiseTrade EP to mark this.
Like much of her music over the past 5-plus years, "Photobooth" is
upbeat, a giddy romance unfolding behind a photo booth curtain. Angelis has a
small voice, but it's sweet and she can kick it up to drop into danceable
arrangements. She draws comparisons to Brandi Carlile and Rachel Platten,
though I think her voice is cleaner than Platten's. Check out "Heartbreak is Contagious," her warning she doesn't want to be the rebound girl. Much
of it is just guitar and voice, but Angelis gives lots of bounce to the song to
make it sound bigger than it is. That's the same approach we hear in the
piano-shaped "Prove Me Wrong," the joyous "Roll the Dice,"
and the indie energy of "A Billion Hearts." Perhaps you've seen
Angelis on TV; now give her a listen. ★★★★