Joseph Huber ‘The Hanging Road’ - Muddy Roots

When I read that this was a one band production I was slightly dubious. In the past these have been somewhat sterile affairs but the truth is this is a pretty punky affair. The former .357 String Band member’s music comes from the streets and bars of America and Huber know how to keep the edge and energy in his music. The songs are equally rough edged tales of hard won victories and down hearted defeats. Huber is a multi-instrumentalist know for some fast and furious banjo playing but here he plays everything that’s required. That included guitar, banjo,piano, drums, bass and fiddle. The songs, all Huber compositions, mix string band, folk, insurgent country, cajun and roots elements but each is complete in itself. Sadness stands along side the upbeat and highlight the skill that Huber has brought to his third solo album, something crafted by hand and heart, something that feels right.

A song like Wanchee & Manteo clocks in 0ver 5 minuets and has the feel of a Townes Van Zandt’s song. High praise but one that is warranted with the quality of storytelling on offer.The final track The Unpromised Land is even longer at over 7 minuets 40. A wordy song that tells of exploration and of naming distant shores and giving demands for unpromised lands. It is simple and direct in delivery with the seasoned voice of Huber sounding ageless and aged. The song builds to a haunting piano centre that has a powerful overall effect that underlines the hand craft involved and manages to fit its length without seeming forced.

The songs flow together with songs like Coming Down From You and Goin’ Far On Little (Just A Little Too Long) containing genuine memorial hooks that will make them live favourites and capable of reaching wider audiences without ever compromising on the integrity that Huber and his music has. However having said that you won’t be hearing those or any other songs here on radio rotation any time soon. This is the sound of an off the radar roots music that is real and heavy with the patina of human hope and hubris. Take a trip down the hanging road.

Elliott Murphy ‘Intime’ Self-Release

The latest release from the Paris based singer-songwriter which will be welcome to his long-time fans. Over the last few years Murphy has released numerous albums since his acclaimed debut Aquashow. The songs on this five track ep were written in his Paris apartment while looking across the street at a vacant apartment. Benedict’s Blues opens the set which was produced by Murphy’s son Gaspard. Murphy is joined here by excellent long time guitarist Olivier Durand who can be heard to good effect throughout especially on that opening song. Laurent Pardo plays bass and Alan Fartas is the drummer. This tight musical unit is the perfect one to back Murphy’s distinctive voice and song structures.

The words, as always, veer towards the poetic and the pictorial, often telling stories in non-linear classic Dylanesque rhymes that makes perfect sense in context.Sweet Honky Tonk talks of missing New York in general and a bagel in particular. Land of Nod, as befits the title, is taken a gentler pace. Things get a little more uptempo with The Land That Time Forgot and the final track is Every Little Star, wherein destiny is pondered as a question of “would you rather be happy or be right”. I’d rather be happy and this small slice of Murphy does that. It keeps you satisfied until the next full album comes along. Murphy’s website lists all the albums he has so far released http://www.elliottmurphy.com/discography.html  and also supplies some unreleased versions of his songs, for both newcomers and long time fans.

Bradford Lee Folk and The Bluegrass Playboys ‘Somewhere Far Away’ - Five Of Diamonds

Folk is former member of band Open Road and now fronts this new band. As the band name suggests, Folk is a thoroughbred bluegrass exponent,  but as the playboy part of the name hints, the music comes from a time in the past where bluegrass and country music were less separate than they often appear now.

The instrumentation here is fiddle, banjo, upright bass, mandolin and guitar but it is Folk’s singing and writing that gives the album it’s distinctive flavour. He has written the majority of the 8 songs. He is a stylist in the mode of such greats as Jimmy Martin and Del McCoury and when he sings, at the end of the album, a song like the more folk-styled Soil and Clay you are immediately drawn into the heart of melancholy and sadness of this haunting song. 

There are various bluegrass songs from the uptempo opener Foolish Game of Love through to the more reflective Trains Don’t Lie. These and the other songs all show the strengths of the band which manage to highlight what an instinctive singer Folk is and how his songs have a depth that is more Americana in flavour than one can sometimes expect in bluegrass songwriting.

There is a darkness on occasion here that often relates back to earlier times which gives a different tone to some of the more standardised traditional repertoire that one can come across with some new bands.This is a very promising start to Folk’s journey as he balances the varied musical strands that exist within his music. 

Brigitte DeMeyer 'Savannah Road' - Self-Release

This is recording number six on a continuing journey that has seen Brigitte DeMeyer develop a growing reputation as a performing artist both across America and Europe. She displays a wonderfully natural feel for soul-steeped, blues-infused roots music and on this release has been delving deeper into southern musical territory. 

DeMeyer has a strong partnership with guitarist/songwriter Will Kimbrough, with whom she has toured and collaborated since 2010. The songs she has been writing, primarily with Kimbrough are a rich blend of fingerpicking, blues inflection and acoustic soul. The songs stem from DeMeyer and Kimbrough’s musical chemistry, and are brought further to life with her sultry vocal delivery that reminds me of a Bonnie Raitt/Mavis Staples groove, combined with Kimbrough’s strong playing. Soulful, sweet and with more than a little honey on the side.

Frankétienne & Mark Mulholland 'Chaophonies' - Self-Release

This is a project that has been supported by a variety of enterprises in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Mark Mulholland was born in Glasgow and has been travelling and playing music around Europe and North America for more than two decades. Now living in Port-au-Prince he joins with Haitian poet, dramatist, painter and actor, Frankétienne. Mark composed music for a selection of texts by Frankétienne, and the pair combine this spoken word and music gumbo into a compelling listen. The language is entirely foreign, but the power of the performance, the passion and persuasion of the delivery draws the listener deeper into a world of intrigue and imagination.

Several other musicians appear on the recording, including Haitian percussionist Zikiki, Belgian double bassist Hannes d’Hoine and violinist Buni Lenski, French accordionist Olaf Hund and Scottish cellist Nicola Geddes. There is a ghost-like quality to the arrangements and the freedom afforded the players allows for some fine passages of acoustic and percussive riffing, while keeping interest firmly focused  on the delivery of the poet, Frankétienne. Well worth checking out

Kathy Kallick 'Cut to the Chase' - Self-Release

This West Coast Bluegrass artist has released 17 recordings over a long and distinguished career. Here Kathy delivers thirteen tracks that she describes as ‘story songs’. Several were written in collaboration with English singer-songwriter Clive Gregson and while the flavours of bluegrass and acoustic Americana are never absent, there are also lots of new elements present.

Pedal steel guitar blends seamlessly with mandolin and fiddle on a number of songs to deliver a high standard of musicianship and an impressive maturity that is appealing. Feet on the Ground and Not as Lonesome as Me, are two songs that showcase this fine interplay between musicians and my advance copy does not tell me who plays what; just that seventeen different musicians join Kathy at various points along this musical map. This is an impressive and strong release.

West My Friend 'When the Ink Dries' - Self-Release

Canadian folk music has been gaining increasing attention in recent years with a number of acts surfacing who promote an organic style of playing. West My Friend is a fine example of this genre, with the quartet delivering a strong release on these twelve tracks.

Guitar, mandolin, accordion and bass form a potent mix with additional piano, percussion and pump organ showing up in just the right measure on various songs. The arrangements are full of colour and personality with the clear vocal delivery of all four band members forming into a strong unit.

West My Friend released their first full-length album, Place, in 2011 and it received multiple award nominations. This second release ranges in scope from intimate moments to the use of strings, trumpet, flugelhorn and brass arrangements that showcase the musicianship and multi-instrumental abilities of this promising young band.

Wyatt Easterling 'Goodbye Hello' - Self-Release

A veteran of the music business stretching back to the 1980’s, Wyatt Easterling has experienced many different roles, including producer, record executive, songwriter, singer, and session musician. His second solo album, Where This River Goes was released by High Horse Records in May 2009, which saw a return to the recording studio after many years and now we have Goodbye Hello, the results of a Nashville studio collaboration with record producer Bill McDermott.

The eleven songs on this recording are very well written and the vocal delivery reminds me, in part, of James Taylor. The songs display a fine balance of sympathetic playing and understated delivery and are based around life changes, personal relationships and upheavals with both endings and new beginnings and a few cul-de-sacs along the way.

The musicians are all talented players and the ensemble deliver an easy listen, with lots of light touches and gentle solos. That Day Will Come (advice in love) and Teach Me How to Say Goodbye (the death of a parent) are two mature arrangements that blend together well and Help Me Find My Way sings of finding hope when feeling lost. A fine project that comes recommended.

Ruth Trimble 'Things I Want to Say' - Self-Release

This Belfast singer songwriter is a real talent and a welcome addition to the local Irish music scene. A multi- instrumentalist, Ruth Trimble displays a natural flair for musical arrangement and melody in the twelve songs on this, her debut release.

She has been gaining an increasing reputation by working hard on the live circuit and recently tours with Kevin Montgomery, Kimmie Rhodes and Beth Nielsen Chapman has seen her sharpen her already impressive skills with songwriters of this calibre.

The title track is dedicated to a close friend, Will Owsley, who passed away and is particularly poignant as he plays on two of the songs included here. Tonight is a song that channels the passion of wanting someone who is just out of reach, while Let You Go speaks of having to walk away from a relationship that has run its course.

Production credits are exclusively down to Ruth and the sound is very impressive, with plenty of space in the song arrangements with room for the lovely melodies to breathe and linger. More impressive is the fact that she plays almost every instrument on this collection and displays a maturity well beyond her years.

Awaken My Soul is quite beautiful with a restrained tempo and fine guitar colouring. Equally, Goodbye is a love song that tugs at the most stubborn heart-strings. We are given songs to new life in the world, Fighter & Judah, which somehow balances the book of life and loss.

We have been given a unique, local talent and one that will undoubtedly grow with greater exposure. Watch this space…!

Jace Everet 'Terra Rosa' - Haywood Group Productions

JaceEverett’s new album is an absolute knockout, from its gorgeous cover (designed by Lonesome’s own Stephen Rapid) to the strongest music Jace has ever come up with, which, considering his previous track record is a bold statement, but absolutely deserved.

His inspiration is Biblical stories and parables. Unfortunately I have a very literal mind and overlook metaphors and wouldn’t know a parable if it bit me in the butt, but I love the songs here.

The actual music is bold, powerful and effective, and the words match the music perfectly. The production is superb, by Jace and Brad Jones and unlike much of my listening there is nothing I would like to tweak or eliminate.

When you like an album as much as I like this one it is hard to choose favourites but Pennsylvania where Dan Cohen’s mandolin becomes a narrative voice alongside Jace’s vocals, Lloyd’s Summer Vacation with its sly, discordant humour and its music which evokes both Procul Harum and the Animals and the apocalyptic No Place to Hide are currently my top picks, but they change daily.

Jace has always been a strong singer, using his voice to amplify the pictures his words draw, but his control and use of his voice, particularly his haunting falsetto in parts of Love cut Me Down, is absolutely stunning.

Terra Rosa is a really impressive album, but it is also really enjoyable – you can even whistle it – that I’d recommend to anyone who loves music

The Sweet Lowdown 'May' - Self-Release

Nominated for a Canadian Folk Music Award as Vocal Group of the year in 2013, the Sweet Lowdown are three very accomplished musicians; Shanti Bremner on banjo, Amanda Blied on guitar and Miriam Sonstenes on fiddle. While this is the first of their CDs to come my way it seems to be their third album overall.

 Lead vocal are traded amongst all three, though Amanda Blied takes the lion’s share. There are four instrumentals on the album, my favourite being Shanti Bremner’s  Lucknow, inspired by a trip to India for a wedding and it is an amazing evocation of India from 3 instruments normally associated with folk/bluegrass. 

While there are two covers of traditional songs (Sail away Ladies and a high-energy Reuben’s Train) the rest are written by the band  and touch on love, the environment, friendship and memory as well as ‘a lullaby for hard times’, the lovely Hushabye.

The album is very well made and packaged – something not to be taken for granted with independent CDs – and really enjoyable. Enjoyable enough so that I look forward to seeing the band live and looking out their earlier music

Southern Girls ‘A Little bit of this – a little bit of that’ - Self-Release

The Southern girls are three very distinctive voices who feature smooth harmonies, neat solo vocals and some interesting cover choices, including Patty Loveless’ Timber and the Judds Why not Me?. I can’t tell you much about the ladies as I don’t read or speak Norwegian and the south their name refers to is Kristiansand, one of the southernmost points in Norway, not the southern or western states of the USA.

American West Coast country seems to be big in Norway, well, Scandinavia in general – Alan Jackson chose to tour there last year rather than coming to Ireland, the UK or mainland Europe and his gigs were sell outs.

John Beland, ex-Flying Burrito Brothers who has a varied and impressive record as performer, session ace and producer, produced the album and it is polished and slick, if anything a bit too smooth for these ears. But these ladies can really sing and I would like to hear more of their original songs as well

Moot Davis 'Goin’ In Hot' - Crow Town

When Lonesome Highway started, it was to write about acts that were making great music but not exactly travelling in the mainstream. Moot Davis is exactly the kind of artist that fits the bill. His latest album, his fourth if you don’t count those he sold at gigs while playing on Nashville’s Lower Broadway back in the day, is the best yet. Davis’ first two were produced with Dwight Yoakam producer Pete Anderson and you can see what attracted Anderson to Davis. Davis has a great sense of direction, an understanding of where his music has come from and where he wants to take it; then there are the songs, considered and meaningful, and, not least, there’s the voice, which has both character and the capacity to deliver the essential message of those songs.

Davis’s last album Man About Town was produced by another guitarist/producer. This time it was Kenny Vaughan and it was a step forward for Davis. Goin’ in Hot is again helmed by Vaughan and they have built on their relationship. The press release tells us that the album is more roadhouse rock than hardcore honky-tonk. This is true, but is a distinction that may have little relevance for those who already know and love Davis’ music and the influences he draws from to create something genuinely rewarding. It may not exactly be pure Texas honky-tonk and it sure ain't Nashville lite but it does impresses on many levels.

Moot Davis has come through a relationship break-up that was the impetus for several of these songs. What you won’t find is the kind of “tail gate and tan lines” songs currently doing the rounds in Music Row. No, here we have material more substantial and stylistic. The album opens with the title song and immediately sets the pace and tone with an up-tempo beat and some incisive guitar, honking brass and solid beat group harmonies. Food Stamps is about surviving hard times in these modern times and it could have come from the canon of Merle Haggard. It highlights some fine playing from pedal steel guitarist Gary Morse.

The heart of this album is Davis’s road band of lead guitarist Bill Corvino, bassist Michael Massimino and drummer Joey Mekler, a tight and inventive combo that has worked these songs up on the road. They’re joined on the album by producer Vaughan, Gary Morse and keyboardist Micah Hulscher plus Chris West on brass and Luella Wood on harmony vocals who vary the mood, tempos and aural textures to deliver a very satisfying soundscape.

Made for Blood has a groove that is greasy and swampy. Used to Call It Love,  a song co-written with Helen V Estepp, has a more laid back feel and an emotional vocal about a love falling apart through different expectations of what it means to both parties. The song is built around steel and guitar that emphasise the sense of heartache while being set against an appealing musical setting that contrasts with the down emotions. It would easily fit on a classic Dwight Yoakam album. The second co-write Love Hangover, this time with Robert Mahaney, is a  tale of how a love hangover hurts more that any drink induced variation. It’s another uptempo kicker that is hard to resist.

The real rock ’n’ roll heart here is Ragman’s Roll with piano and slide guitar to the fore. The dobro in Wanna Go Back underscore the lonesome feel of the song’s sad tale of a man who has treated his family to a world of hurt and how he regrets his actions ands wants to go back to a better time. Davis gives a striking vocal performance on this, another album highlight. Yet another song filled with personal pain is Hurtin’ For Real, a mid-paced balled where Davis shares the vocals with upcoming star Nikki Lane. It again has a sound that reminds you of his links to classic country and roots music while creating something immediately distinctive. 

Things get a little spacier and reach for the outer limits on the closing track, 25 Lights which has producer Kenny Vaughan adding electric guitar, tone generator and theremin to create an otherworldly atmosphere to this tale of alien abduction, not a usual topic for today’s contemporary country performers. It does show the sense of openness this album’s makers take in delivering something hot and tasty.

What this proves is that, along with the likes of Sturgill Simpson, Nikki Lane, Chuck Mead and many others, there is a healthy exploration of the real heart of country music out on the fringes in the independent sector and there’s where you need to look to find the music that makes you realise why you like this stuff in the first place. It’s not strictly retro rather it’s a living, breathing and feeling form that the powers-that-be have tried to kill. Well it appears that they haven’t succeeded!

The Redlands Palomino Company 'Broken Carelessly' - Clubhouse

This album was recorded in an old chapel in Gloucestershire and again highlights along with several other recent albums by My Darling Clementine, The Rockingbirds, Danny & The Champions of The World and Hank Wangford a number of acts making contemporary and very good country music in the UK. They are all distinctive and following their own paths, offering some very different takes on the broad church of country inspired music. 

This album was produced and mixed by Alex Eton-Wall who, along with his wife Hannah, heads up this fine band. It was recorded before their drummer emigrated and utilises the talents of all five members to good effect. The instrumentation included pedal steel, guitars of several styles as well as keyboards, fiddle and mandolin which bring a range of textures to the songs and provide a perfect backdrop for the lead and backing vocals. The lead vocals are shared between Alex and Hannah with the latter handling the lion’s share which is understandable as she is the main songwriter. The songs, while not fitting the tag of pop, have a melodic resonance and lyrically a strong singer-songwriter quality that’s sometimes oblique, sometimes obvious. 

The final song is something of a summation of the company accounts. The Band Song tells of being “married, broke and tired”;  of being “naive and dumb waiting for the break to come” but in the end wanting the band to live on. Given the strengths of this album and how they’ve grown over their three previous albums, one can only hope that they do continue to make their music and make it mean something to them and all their growing audience.

Amelia White 'Old Postcard' - White Wolf

Old Postcard was produced and recorded in Nashville,  and though there are touches of pedal steel it is leaning much more to the left than the centre. Producer Mike Poole has gathered together a bunch of independent and like-minded players to support White’s latest album of songs. There’s Ann McCue, Sergio Webb, Pete Finney and Poole himself with may others who have contributed to this rootsy and rounded album.

At its heart is the voice of Amelia White and her and songs. There are three co-written with John Hadley, who has written with and for the likes of David Olney, Kieran Kane, Kevin Welch and Trisha Yearwood.  Telisha Williams, Anne McCue and Thomm Jutz are others who had a hand in the writing of some of this album’s 11 songs. The opening track Big Blue Sun, Hollow Heart, River of My Dreams  and Get Your Cowboy On are all songs that immediately appeal. The latter has a sense of need for and nefarious thoughts about a bar-room opportunity with a cowboy object of affection.

Poole has fused these songs with some gritty and graphic guitars. They have a layered depth that give the songs a toughness. This would doubtless appeal to those who have loved,  lived and grown with Lucinda Williams. The themes are adult and concern with times that are hard.  White seems to feel that life is hard generally and there is a need to find sunlight where you can. That’s what these songs are about, the people whom you love, lose and learn from.

Not every song is completely lyrically clear and the lack of printed lyrics allows the listener to add their interpretation of the individual songs sense of truth and reconciliation. Suffice it say I like what I hear and, like an old postcard, it is a picture from another place, another time, filled with new memories

Grand Old Grizzly 'Grand Old Grizzly' - Self-Release

This is a rockin’ rootsy, what we used to call alt.country trio of the old school, who offer up eleven self-produced songs that are neither particularly subtle or sanitised. Rather, Grand Old Grizzly set out to mark their territory, which in their case is Houston, Texas. While there is nothing brand new here that you haven’t heard before, that doesn’t diminish the fact that you can enjoy it with a tapping toe and a hearty smile. Grizzly have added extras to the studio versions of these song with additional guitars, banjo and pedal steel,  all which make Grand Old Grizzly something of an undiluted pleasure;  a rowdy night in as opposed to seeing the band live at a rowdy night Inn.

The songs are snappy and run from Marvelistic Coward Band’s 2.34 to Indecision’s 4.22, so nothing outstays it’s welcome and the songs are additionally carried by the vocals which are led by guitarist Will Thomas and are impassioned and pivotal. There are hints of punk style crowd choruses that suggest earlier musical affiliations. But there’s as much Old 97s here as there is London Calling. Whatever inspired this trio,  the results speak for themselves. Not that everything is hell for leather as there are pauses for reflection and breath on Lament but they also consider Desperate Times and ways to get round them. This Grand Old Grizzly make give you a hug, but be careful of those claws and that fancy footwork. Either way,  enjoy the dance

Jonas Carping 'All the Time In The World' - Self-Release

The cover on this album doesn’t seem to represent the music in it. Jonas Carping possesses a voice with a memorable quality that suits the songs well. The music is also effective and evocative. The voice and acoustic guitar are central and around that you get layers of strings, pedal steel, mandolin and a range of guitars that create a compelling mood that is folk-ish, yet not strictly of that genre.

Carping sing in English throughout and on the song The Sting shares his vocals with Sigrid Nilsson. Both have a strong vocal presence that fills the song with a quiet drama that is intriguing. There is a quality to this music that draws you in and makes you want to understand the understated nature of the songs. The voice, guitar and cello of The Rulers combine to tell a strange story that pleads “don’t be ruler, not like that” that has you, as a listener, trying to get to the heart of the song while you are captivated by what you are hearing.

It is an album that you have no expectation for but find yourself listening to closely, not just passively but in a more focused way as you get drawn into the overall sound. There appears to be a melancholy to much of Carping’s writing. It has a sadness that is lyrical though, at times, impenatrable. However that doesn’t really matter as it’s likely that you will be either drawn in or you won’t see it the same way. That is the truth of music: you can  be taken with a particular overall sense of an album or it just passes you by.

 All The Time In The World is not something that we all have, but on this occasion it is perhaps worth taking some to listen.