New Album Reviews

Tellico Woven Waters Organic

Original Roots music and a second release following debut album, Relics and Roses, in 2015. The band comprises Anya Hinkle (guitar, fiddle, vocals), Greg Stiglets (bass, harmonica, vocals), Aaron Ballance (dobro, lap steel) and Jed Willis (mandolin and electric guitar). There are guest appearances from David Brewer (drums) and John Doyle (bouzouki), who also produced the project. 

The band are part of the vibrant Roots music community in Asheville, North Carolina and the nine tracks included on this release run to almost 40 minutes and are played with impressive technique and subtle skill by these tightly integrated musicians. Storytelling was an integral part of the Appalachian sound and songs like the Ballad Of Zona Abston keep that tradition alive, as does the song, Salsa, which tells of a favourite horse who goes missing in the mountains. 

There is bluegrass, old timey rhythms and some sweet folk leanings included in these songs but it’s the collective playing that impresses mostly with songs like West Of The Cumberlands, Courage For The Morning and Like November that linger. Hinkle has a fine delivery and her vocal is very expressive, with hints of Natalie Merchant. Never more so than on, It’s Just Rain, with the lyrical imagery of “another storm has come to wash the sin out of the stain”, staying on the breeze. Anya writes five songs, with Greg penning three more and there is one co-write between them. Worthy of your time and attention.

Review by Paul McGee

Blake Brown & The American Dust Choir Long Way Home We Believers

This debut release goes back to March 2018 but it only found a recent place in my review pile. Blake Brown is an American singer-songwriter from Denver, Colorado. Collaborative projects apart, he formed The American Dust Choir which includes wife, Tiffany Brown (keyboard/vocals), Adam Blake (drums), Jason Legler (bass) and Trent Nelson (guitar). Their sound is based around guitar orientated arrangements that echo an Americana feel and the dynamic is added to by the subtle vocal style of Brown, who employs an approach of ‘less is more’. 

On repeated playing, the overall sound is understated, yet addictive, and the easy swing of tracks like Up In Arms and Fever Dreams channel a Chris Isaak mood. Clocking in around 35 minutes, this release does not overstay its welcome and the neat production of Joe Richmond has much to recommend it. With clean lines and a nice separation on all instruments, it makes for an engaging listen and the commercial sound of Stop Shakin’ and Bended Knee indicate one direction that the band could focus on. Acoustic numbers, Accidental Love and Untitled are also engaging. However, it is the more ‘noir’ sound of tracks like Kissing Knives and Get Out that indicate where the true heart of the band’s sound may lie. Interesting.

Review by Paul McGee

Martha Reich Brave Bird Self Release

This 7-track release opens with a simple banjo, cello & fiddle accompaniment to the sweetly sensitive vocal of Martha Reich on If You Only Knew, and you are instantly hooked. Drawn into a space where time stands still and the plaintive, sparse sound of this Folk artist slowly takes hold of the moment. Self produced and written by Reich, with the exception of a cover, Over The Rainbow, you are touched by the sense of being in the presence of, perhaps, Joni Mitchell’s older and wiser, sister. Ethereal, gentle soundscapes that drip with restrained atmosphere and tracks like So Brave, The River, Fade Away and I’d Rather Be Surprised, over 30 minutes plus, leave you transformed. Yes, it’s that good!

Review by Paul McGee

Kalyn Fay Good Company Horton

I was very impressed by Fay’s last album Bible Belt and the Oklahoma musician (and graphic designer) has gone one better with her new album. On this release she has brought in Jesse Aycock to produce. He is a session musician and a recording artist in his own right. The sound is layered and varied, one that runs from the solid riff and propulsion of Highway Driving to the more folkish soft rock of Good Company and all points in between, that include country and rock in its make-up. 

The result is a collection of thoughtful and considered songs that benefit from Fay’s alluring vocal. It is a sound that speaks directly to you in a way that is personal and not without its own sense of panache. A sound that is intensely welcomes you to a deep sense of her heritage, talent and place. Described as quintessentially Oklahomaian, it is also quintessentially Kalyn Fay, as the two are largely intertwined. The one feeds the other and as Fay has recently made a move to Arkansas to further her fine arts career, it is no doubt twinned with some sense of that separation.

To help her realise this set of songs Fay has a range of local musicians involved including John Fullbright and Carter Sampson, as well as Aycock’s contribution on guitars, pedal steel and piano. While these may be names known only to those who follow the musicians mentioned, the othermusicians are equally attuned to the song-writing which takes into account the possibilities of love, loss and of locality,. The songs include 10 originals and a well chosen cover of Malcolm Holcombe’s Dressed In White (an underrated songwriter). The titles offer a clue to her inspiration from Oklahoma Hills to Fool’s Heartbreak. These songs bookend theunderlyingsense of place and relationships. Though both, as with most places, exist as often inseparable points on life’s compass.

They overall theme that these songs touch on is one that is universal and the sound is also one that captivates on a broader level to make the album work for thelistener, no matter where they happen tom reside.It is simply an album that shows an artist communicating at her best with her finest music to date. 

Review by Stephen Rapid

Boo Ray Tennessee Alabama Fireworks Self Release

The album opens with steel guitar on a song whose lyrics include the album’s title. It sets the tone for a selection of tracks that cover a number of different moods that are held together by Ray’s songs, allied to Noah Shain’s production and the assembled players collective skills. “What doesn’t come from the heart doesn’t reach the heart” a line from that opening track,A Tune You Can Whistle, sums up Ray’s credo. There is a consistent theme of travel, highways, truckers and small towns. Going Back Down To Georgia, as suits that particular song, has a more soulful direction with  sone funky guitar, bass and brass. Honky Tonk Dream continues to use the steel guitar and brass to good effect. 20 Questions finds Ray under the spotlight trying to deal with a wide array of lifestyle enquiries from his partner. The slower paced,She Wrote The Song, has a solid beat with some effective guitar lines mingled with the pedal steel to emphasise the emotion of the song. Dee Elle is an instrumentalist that again has the steel well to the fore and giving it a desert atmosphere. Out Run The Wind is more straight up country. 

There is a weariness and understanding in Ray’s voice which shows that he understands these emotions and motivations. His music is described as “Outlaw” on his Facebook page and while he may not fit the current stereotype, he fits the description in that he does his music his way, without interference from outside sources. Music that reflects his varied musical influences and experiences in the clubs and stages of Nashville, LA and in South Georgia, as well as his experiences from growing up in North Carolina. His sound has been perfected over recent albums such as Six Weeks In A Motel and Sea Of Lights, as well as some interesting single releases that feature such duet partners as Elizabeth Cook and Lily Winwood. An easy album to like and one that gets better with repeated plays. The cover depicts a sign that Ray repeatedly passed in his travels appearing as a “surreal, southern gothic effigy” - a pretty good marker for his music then.

Review by Stephen Rapid

Charles Wesley Godwin Seneca Self Release

Looking not unlike an old-time explorer on the cover of this album, Charles Wesley Godwin is perhaps fitting for a songwriter who is constantly making discoveries about the people and locations he has met or passed through in his life so far. Previously a member of Union Sound Treaty with whom he released one album, he played and listened to bluegrass and traditional country and began writing his own songs. These were coloured by his upbringing in West Virginia where he grew up with a coal mining father and a school teaching mother. He understood the people and places that he encountered along the way and these experiences of life are the bed rock of these songs.

His songs can be affecting, like Seneca Creek, a downbeat ballad that lays out a story of arelationship that has been touched by different aspects of weather and the weathered relationships that can occur in a particular place. It appears twice on the album,as afull band version and it also closes the album in an acoustic guitar and voice version. Both adequately highlight the storytelling power of Charles Wesley Godwin’s song-writing and singing. 

Charles Wesley Godwin recordedover a 12 month period, in between touring to raise the money to make the album. Inthe process he met some of the musicians he wanted to work with and allowed for their schedules to achieve this. The results show the time well spent and the affinity that producer Al Torrence has with the material and the artist. The rhythm section provide a solid base over which there are bass, guitars, keyboards, fiddle, banjo, dobro and pedal steel embellishments that colour the  textures but never over paint the pictures that Charles Wesley Godwin conjures. Seneca is an album that is deserving of a wider audience. Several of the songs in an acoustic setting are featured along with his back story on his website and are well worth checking out.

Review by Stephen Rapid

Balsam Range Aeonic Mountain Home

Great expectations awaited this eighth release from Balsam Range, who are named after a sub range of the Appalachian Mountains in their home state of North Carolina. They have, after all, twice been voted Entertainer of the Year by the IBMA membership and between them they have won 11 other individual IBMA awards. 

And they won’t disappoint their myriad of fans with this latest self produced offering, ambitiously titled Aeonic (enduring, lasting immeasurably). The selection of songs from well established bluegrass and country writers and a couple of covers from other genres, all delivered in their traditional bluegrass style but with a smattering of newgrass and country touches, show that Balsam Range are not content to stand still musically.

The Girl Who Invented The Wheel kicks off the album at blistering pace, band leader Buddy Melton’s superb vocals doing more than justice to an unusual theme - extolling the virtues of a woman who has just dumped him but he is still in awe of her wonderfulness. In true bluegrass style, Buddy also gets to show off his much awarded fiddling on most of the tracks. Another particularly memorable tune is Tumbleweed Town (from the pens of Milan Miller and Beth Husband) wherein Tim Surrett shows that he’s as adept on the dobro as he is on bass. Guitarist Caleb Smith’s sweet vocals here are perfect for the pacy country ballad, with lots of lovely mandolin infills from Darren Nicholson.

Ray LaMontagne’s early song Hobo Blues is given an appropriately simpler arrangement and, again with Caleb Smith’s vocals, is one of the standout tracks.

The four gospel choices here are predictable fare but they allow the vocalists to indulge themselves in gorgeous three and four part harmonies. Marc Pruett’s legendary banjo playing shines on Let My Light Be A Life and also on the driving Get Me Gone.

Most outstanding though is the cover of George Harrison’s classic If I Needed Someone. Taken at double pace, and with Buddy Melton working some sort of electronic sorcery on his fiddle making it sound like a whole string section, it is over all too soon! 

Review by Eilís Boland

Whiskey Shivers Some Part Of Something Devil Duck

Whiskey Shivers seem to have exploded onto the music scene recently - certainly they have only come under my radar in the past year - but would you believe that this is their 5th release? They’ve been bubbling under in Austin for years now - often described as ‘Austin’s best kept secret’ - but the secret is out! Currently in the middle of an extensive European tour, I suspect Europe doesn’t know what has hit it.

The band’s live performances are by now legendary - they are known for their high energy, irreverence and good humour, and much of that spirit comes across on this album. Produced by Houston’s Robert Ellis, the songs are a combination of original songs and covers of traditional bluegrass and folk songs, all performed in their signature ‘thrashgrass bluegrass’ style.

If you’re a bluegrass purist, you can turn off your set now. Whiskey Shivers play with a marked punk sensibility that is strangely compelling to these ears, and definitely grows on you with repeated listens. ‘Manic' is the description that springs to mind on hearing their breakneck cover of the bluegrass/folk standard Angelina Baker, and it also applies to their original songs Reckless and No Pity in the Rose City. Cluck Old Hen sounds like it is being sung by a chain gang in the 20’s, but it really works with this rollicking bluesy psychedelic treatment. Long Gone, a country tinged ballad, allows the band, led by vocalist/ fiddle player Bobby Fitzgerald, to show that they are no mean musicians.

Music to drive to - but watch your speed! 

Review by Eilís Boland

Reviews by Stephen Rapid

J. Hardin The Piasa Bird Self Release

This is the first release from John Everett Hardin under this guise. He had previously released albums under the name Everett Thomas but had decided to take a break from music to concentrate on some other aspects of his life. During that time, he’s written a number of songs but wanted to get his friend and fellow artist Hayward Williams to produce them. This they did at a converted farmhouse studio in Illinois. There, Hardin and Williams were joined by Daniel McMahon on guitars and keyboards and Darren Garvey on percussion as well as Liza Day and Naomi Marie on backing vocals. Hardin played acoustic guitar and sang while Williams played bass. They have done this two-sided set of 8 songs some justice.

The end result is a mini-album named after a mythical wall-painted Native American dragon which were less mythical and more about the often mystifying aspects of relationships. There are odes to a particular female characters in Oh Sophia (parts one and two), Woman Like You and Run Jackie, Run! Other songs such as Drifter and Shot My Baby Down are equally evocative. The former opens the album in a relaxed style that brings voice music and story together in a relaxed, full band folk/rock style that is rewarding and receptive. Though much of the album follows in this relaxed, restless mood the band can add weight and depth as required. Shot My Baby Down is a song just waiting for its place on the likes of a True Detective. It has a darkness that is underscored by the reverb guitar and funeral pace.

The lyrics are good here but it is the overall atmosphere that you are drawn to. One that sets the tone for the song even when, on initial listen the lyrics are not totally decipherable but enough is understood to know that these are full of imagery and invocation. The pace picks up, naturally enough given the title, for Run Jackie, Run! The album closes with Oh Sophia (Part 2) with Liza Day’s shadowing vocal echoing the poetic nature of the sense of intrigue and innocence of missing a person. It is stripped back to the voices and guitar and ends the album with you wanting some more. Hopefully this team will work together to bring a little more music to a waiting world - even if it doesn’t know it’s waiting.

Trevor Alguire Perish In The Light Self Release

When you hear a striking album and find out that it is the artists 6th release you realise just how much good music (and bad) remains to be discovered. On the evidence of this Trevor Alguire is well worth seeking out. A Canadian singer/songwriter who has co-produced and written all the material here and these are songs that have an immediacy that is as convincing as it is confident. For want of a better sound comparison I would say that fans of Blue Rodeo would be well at home here. Indeed, that band’s steel player (Bob Egan) is one of many players to add their noted contribution to the album.

Keyboards, violin (and pedal steel) enhance the bass, drums and guitars on what is essentially an Americana (or should that be Canadiana) album. There are up-tempo dance floor ready romps like Flash Flood that sit easily alongside a song like Out Of Sight/Out Of Mind that looks at life today from the perspective of a 93 man and how life has changed in his lifetime. It is an evocative piece of writing that hits home. Another stand out is My Sweet Rosetta a sing that starts in silence before revealing the longing and love that is the lady in question. It is a duet with noted Canadian singer Catherine MacCellan who both share the vocals and take individual verses to describe different viewpoints and perceptions. 

Wasted Ways, Wasted My Time With You are both songs that consider how easily time can be so easily spent on pursuits that have no satisfactory conclusions. Relationship that are going nowhere fast or simply a way to pass time - for a time. The use of time is considered again on the final track If I’d Stayed In School. The title of the album is taken from a line in the first song The Ghost Of Him about a man who is comfortable in the shadows but who would perish in the light. Likewise, music sometime equally need that exposure to grow stronger and Trevor Alguire already has that in his native land but could easily use some of the wider recognition that this album deserves. 

Silver Lake 66 Let Go Or Be Dragged Saw Tooth

Formally of L.A. based band The Ruby Trees, the duo of Maria Francis and Jeff Overbo now record and play under the name of Silver Lake 66. They play a roots music blend of country, rock and blues. They moved to Portland, Oregon and began to play sessions there which resulted in them gathering a group of players around them for live sessions. This became the nucleus of Silver Lake 66. Bass, drums, dobro, pedal steel, keyboards and fiddle were all added to the duo’s guitars to make this album. They wrote and produced the album together and it’s a summation of their music blend.

The opening Bury My Bones In Arkansas has organ and pedal steel running through a slow song about music and place. Jeff takes the lead with Maria providing harmony. They change roles though throughout and the next track up Magnolia is another slow paced song with more of a late night bluesy tone. Change Your Mind is taken at a similar pace and features a strong vocal from Maria. Sinuous steel and twang laden guitar are behind the duet Devil’s Lookin’ For Me a song that finds both declaring their allegiance to places that may be less than savoury. The album continues largely with this moody blend of influences that is less dance floor orientated than it is meditative. Sherman County is another strong country style song and a couple of tracks that definitely up the tempo in a welcome change of pace are San Francisco Angel and Don’t Have To Tell Me You’re Blue

The album’s twelve songs all are well performed, produced and written material that, of itself, may not make you feel that you’re hearing something you haven’t heard before. However, what you do hear should please and it is an album with many moments that feel right and should encourage you to listen back. Maria Francis and Jeff Overbo are definitely making music that they can be satisfied that they are achieving what they set out to do when they wrote and recorded these entertaining songs. 

Chip Taylor Little Brothers/I’ll Carry For You Trainwreck

By now Chip Taylor should have perhaps achieved some of the status that Leonard Cohen has achieved. Both have an understated semi-spoken delivery of well thought out and written songs. These two albums however taken a more personal direction.Little Brothers opens with a song about his granddaughter Alex on a ride home after winning a golf tournament. Each of these song has a little explanation note about it’s particular inspiration. There are a number of song that are dedicated and draw inspiration from his wife Joan. All are affecting and delivered in his inimitable style. Like Enlighten Yourself! has a spoken introduction that encourages to do just that. In fact, Chip tells some tales throughout not unlike a concert setting which in fact it pretty well is a live in the studio set-up. The musicians who accompany Taylor include long time guitarist John Platania. There is also upright bass (Grayson Walters and Bill Troiani) and some essential keyboards from Gøran Grini (who also co-produced the album with Taylor). Backing vocals are also present with some from his granddaughters. Refugee Children is a somewhat topical song that tells of an encounter with a group of them fishing in a forest in Sweden. 

The second album here is a shorter set of 8 songs that are inspired by Brooke and Brittany Henderson, two Canadian golfing sisters. Not a subject often taken on by singer/songwriters but then there’s Chip and anyone who is aquatinted with his previous album and live performances will know what to expect and will smile and be drawn into the Taylor way of doing things. There are some piano instrumentals on the album composed by Grini. While Platania is also present on guitar. A bonus track is the title song performed by Shave Zadravec. Taylor’s song is about striving to achieve against odds and succeeding (or not). He delivers it in a committed and emotional voice. 

Chip Taylor may not be for everyone but those who have got to know his music will recognise a human being who cares and observes and tries to put his feelings and beliefs into his music. Something he does with these two albums.

Kalyn Fay Bible Belt Horton

The debut album from the Tulsa, Oklahoma based artist is a contemporary take on a mix of country, folk and rock that is immediately accessible and pleasing. Fay is of Cherokee ancestry and a graphic designer by trade (she designed the album’s cover). She also sings and plays guitar and, although it doesn’t clearly state on the cover, has written all the songs too. She and co-producers (Scott Bell and Dylan Layton) gathered some musicians together to realise these songs with their skill and support.

Cody Clinton on electric guitar, Roger Ray on pedal steel and Cory Mauser on keyboards and Kevin Warren-Smith on fiddle are some of the team who join Layton on bass to lay down the tracks. They do so with an understanding for these, often, relationship related songs. Songs that show off Fay’s voice to good effect. She has a voice that has an intimacy and instinctiveness that allows these tales to be told with an understated ease. Black & Blue, Looking For A Reason, Wherever I Feel Right and The Fight all consider the way that relationships can twist and turn while Oklahoma, Tula and the title track are related to people and place. Spotted Bird wonders what secrets the titular creature keeps.

Bible Belt is a very promising start to Fay’s musical career and a chance for listeners to get to know her music in its recorded form from its inception. Her take on country music has a quality that makes it a living breathing form that is capable of going in different directions. There is a video of her playing an acoustic version of Oklahoma with a banjo player that shows another aspect of these songs. But for now this album is worth seeking out for a good listen. 

TV Jones & The Tomahawks Self-Titled Self Release

This mini-album comes from a Kilkenny band who specialise in all things ‘Billy. Be that rock, psycho and more. There is a lot of twanging guitars and full bore energy displayed on these 50s style songs. The band have written all the songs and they stand up well within the parameters they have set. Ones that usually come from locations far from Ireland’s shores. The band co-produced the album with Leo Pearson who would seem a perfect partner in crime for the recording.

The majority of the songs are paced like there’s a hellhound on their tail. There is no TV Jones to be found but his is a fiction of the quartet who are in fact Jimmy Conroy, Tony Doherty, Noxie Noonan and Pius Maher on vocals and guitar, electric guitar, upright bass and drums respectively. The themes are oriented to a time period that is instinctively American. Dragging My Chevy is about a favoured car and has some nice slide guitar. Other songs talk a somewhat darker B-Movie tones with songs like Die, Die, Die and Night Of The Living Dead.

There has been a healthy support for rockabilly in Ireland through the years with a number of prime exponents from the USA and Europe have played the Kilkenny Rhythm & Roots Festival through the years so it is good to see a home grown unit continuing that tradition and doing with some gusto and aplomb. In truth nothing too radical is happening here but that is not really the point. They are playing music that truly motivates them and they do it with the passion of those who live and breathe their inspirations and that should translate across to devotees and ‘Billy believers.