Reviews By Paul McGee

Gypsy Soul True Off the Beaten Track

Cilette Swann and Roman Morykit met in Edinburgh during the 1990’s and have recorded and written together as Gypsy Soul for many years now. They walk an independent path with a music career which has been funded mostly by the continued patronage of their loyal fan base. They have an intimacy in their music that touches a number of sources with their unique blend of roots rock, blues and jazz.

Morykit, is a multi-instrumentalist, composer, and producer whose musical roots reach back to his childhood training in classical piano.

Canadian-born singer/lyricist, Cilette Swann sings with both clarity and power across these eleven songs that make for a very enjoyable release. The instrumental, Magic Carpet Ride, shows off the talent and maturity at play here with a gentle and considered arrangement while the attractions of 6000 Miles, Long, Long Ride, We Are What We Believe and You’re Everything To Me unfold with repeated listening.

One small complaint would be the inclusion of yet another cover version of Hallelujah (Leonard Cohen). I don’t see what can possibly be added to the numerous covers that are already out there and this version brings little to the table. Better by far is the arrangement of Amazing Grace (revisited) which has a nice bluesy groove to the timeless classic.

All other songs are written and performed by Gypsy Soul and they are definitely worth checking out if you enjoy fully rounded, mature music played with an authentic feel. 

Mark Mandeville & Raianne Richards Grain By Grain Nobody’s Favourite

This folk duo from Massachusetts began in the local venues around the New England area and this is their latest release. American contemporary Folk music played with a quiet confidence and the vocal harmonies of Mark Mandeville (vocals, guitar, harmonica) and Raianne Richards (vocals, ukulele, clarinet, penny whistles, electric bass) are a real joy to experience.

The 10 self-penned songs make for a very enjoyable listen and these acoustic arrangements are supported by Doug Williamson (upright bass, piano, papoose, mandolin, vocals) and Peter Hart (dobro, pedal steel).

Pleasant uncluttered songs that visit such subjects as time passing the (title track/Across The Morning), having self-belief (Don’t Ever Stop Believing/Diggin’ Me A Hole), living in the moment (Hang On To The Day/Worn Down), relationship woes (Temper) and shutting down local industries (That Old Machine).

Mandeville and Richards are co-founders of the Massachusetts Walking Tour - promoting local music, arts and culture on foot and have released a number of concerts that were recorded on previous tours. Nice playing and great production by Mandeville & Kyle Swartzwelder, with plenty to enjoy.

The Danberrys Give & Receive Self-Release

Ben DeBerry and Dorothy Daniel are from East Nashville, Tennessee and have been influenced by the traditions of bluegrass, old-time country, blues, and soul music. They have very distinct vocal harmonies and their first recording Company Store, was released in April 2011, followed in 2013 by The Danberrys.

Their latest album Give & Receive was produced by Ethan Ballinger (Lee Ann Womack, Tim O’Brien) at Southern Ground Studios in Nashville and these ten songs provide a musical landscape that reveals a broad range of moods and sounds, reflecting the continued growth of these two artists who wrote all the music & words included here.

Receive has fine vocal harmonies with mandolin and fiddle interplay giving the song arrangement a gentle laid-back feel. Indeed this sense of timeless music is repeated across the ten tracks with a strong presence from producer/musician Ethan Ballinger on mandolin, a variety of guitars, bazouki, banjo,organ, piano, wurlitzer  & percussion. With subtle fiddle on most of the tracks supplied by Christian Sedelmyer and the steady bass playing of Sam Grisman, the project delivers an overall sense of real quality and restrained mood.

The bluegrass sound of Long Song is followed by the slow moody groove of Don’t Drink the Water. Let Me Go visits the subject of escaping a suffocating relationship and Life Worth Living visits the urge to seek real meaning in our lives. We’ll Be Done highlights the superb vocal talent of Dorothy Daniel and brings proceedings to a very satisfactory conclusion on a sea of sweet melody. Recommended. 

Reviews by Declan Culliton

Noam Weinstein On Waves Self Release

On Waves, the eight album recorded by Boston resident Noam Weinstein is soul drenched Americana, containing fifty six minutes of cleverly crafted songs, fifteen in total and often enhanced by delightful strings and horns. A reference point both to Weinstein’s vocal sound and the album’s musical content could be the work of Conor Oberst (Bright Eyes) and yet the album also recalls the type of wonderful melodies created by Todd Rundgren on his 1972 album Something/Anything.

Dedicated to his recently deceased mother and recorded between the time of her death and the birth of his son the album is naturally full of mixed emotions including loss, grief, expectation, love, celebration and no shortage of humour.

Mother is more joyful and celebratory than sorrowful, Intelligent Design is rich, layered and benefitting from a lovely horn section. Over is poppy with a simple catchy chorus that connects instantly.

Recorded at Old Soul Studios in Catskill, NY by Kenny Siegal (Langhorne Slim) and mastered by Jeff Lipton (Arcade Fire) the album features fifteen musicians including bassist Derek Nievergelt (Coldplay, Herbie Hancock), vocalist Heather Masse (Wailin’ Jennys), drummer Stephen Nistor (Rick Rubin). 

Tokyo Rosenthal Afterlife Rock & Socks

Afterlife is the sixth album released by Tokyo Rosenthal. Performing as a solo artist and leading man with bands such as Harpo and Slapshot and Treo Gato in a career stretching nearly three decades, it was not until 20017 that Rosenthal finally recorded his first album One Score and Ten. The song Edmonton from this album was critically well received and lead to an award for cultural and artistic contribution to the city of Alberta and also resulted in a solo tour of Canada sponsored by West Jet Airlines and opening slots for Chris Hillman, Stephen Stills, Rick Roberts and Jackie Levon.

Like many Canadian and American singer-songwriters Rosenthal has developed a hard core following in Europe and the UK and regularly tours Europe. His influences include Gene Clarke, Jackson Brown, The Band, The Byrds and the album captures the familiar gentle country rock one associates with these artists.

Afterlife is produced by fellow Chapel Hill, North Carolina resident and previous member of Alex Chilton’s band, Chris Stamey, who also contributes bass on the album. It includes ten songs exploring various themes such as immortality (Afterlife), relationship breakups (Love’s Hurtin’ Real Bad) and politics (Cold War).

Post Byrds Gene Clarke can certainly be heard on The Pearl and Shreveport, which includes a clever use of the intro from Queen's Under Pressure. Tom Russell disciples will enjoy the Tex Mex feel to Love’s Hurtin’ Real Bad.

The CD also includes a bonus video of The Cold War.

Hackensaw Boys Charismo Free Dirt 

The Hackensaw Boys have always done old timey as good as anyone, plucking and strumming with the best of them. This time out they are produced by Larry Campbell (Bob Dylan, Levon Helm, Judy Collins, Linda Thompson, Paul Simon). The eleven track album is full of good time Appalachian - raw, unpolished and joyfully melodic.

It's old timey in style with modern day lyrics (Mama likes to rock, daddy likes to roll, Mama sips a bottle and Daddy tokes a bowl). The title of the album is taken from a percussion instrument made of scrap wood and metal and invented by former band member Justin Neuhardt.

The current line up of Hackensaw Boys is Brian ‘Nugget’ Gorby, Ferd ‘Four’ Moyse and David ‘Shiner’ Sickmen and Jimmy ‘The Kooky-Eyed Fox’ Stelling. Larry Campbell adds fiddle on The Sweet and guitar on Wolves Howling.

They're nine albums in with basically the same formula of fiddle and banjo-driven bluegrass with tobacco and whiskey fuelled vocals. It's great fun.

Ol’Nick tells of a devil-like character to be avoided (Grab you by your arm when he sees you cannot stand. Ol’ Nick gonna get you if he can), The Sweet swings along with a Dirty Old Town melody and World’s Upside Down questions survival in the modern world. It’s a toe-tapping, hand-clapping, stomping and hollering delight. Pass the jug.

Jeremy Nail My Mountain Self Release

Popped My Mountain into the CD player for first casual listen without carrying out any research into Jeremy Nail, a new artist to me. Immediate impression of both the tempo of the music and Nail’s sometimes semi spoken vocals was pain, a lot of pain.

Further listens and research revealed the source of the pain and the motivation for the album, the second recording by Nail following his 2007 release Letter.

Born in Albany Texas Nail relocated to Austin in 2005 to pursue his career in the musical capital of Texas. Together with his solo career Nail became a member of the legendary Alejandro Escovedo’s band and played guitar on one show of  Escovedo’s world tour in 2013.

After the tour Nail was tragically diagnosed with sarcoma, the result of an incident two years previously when he was kicked while working with cattle at home. Sarcoma is a form of soft tissue cancer that eventually resulted in amputation of his left leg. With his life and career on hold Nail’s main focus became learning to walk again with a prosthetic.  A reunion with Escovedo after a gig was the catalyst for The Mountain. Escovedo, who has faced serious illness himself suffering from Hepatitis-C for many years, acted as a mentor for Nail and his motivation was the driving force behind the album which Escovedo also produced.

The resulting set of songs vividly reflects Nail’s struggle, acceptance and recovery from his trauma. More stripped back than his previous work the emphasis being very much of the vocals which are often unhurried, dreamlike, almost suspended (Down To The Ocean, Survive, Brave).

Dreams is possibly the most radio friendly sound on the album, reflective and hopeful ("We’re given second chances, I finally see the light, The best things come from a higher place, You no longer have to fight") and includes some killer guitar playing by Chris Masterson.

Recorded over a three day period at Church House Studio, the album was mixed by Grammy Award winner Jim Scott (Tom Petty, Dixie Chicks, Johnny Cash) and alongside Escovedo features a host of Austin’s finest musicians in Chris Masterson (electric guitar), Eleanor Whitmore (violin, vocals), Bobby Daniel (upright bass), Chris Searles (drums), Stephen Barber (piano and strings) and Dana Falconberry and Jazz Mills (backing vocals).

"The spirit grows when the wind of change blow in, I might fall, but I’ll get up again" Nail announces on the title track My Mountain. He certainly has turned personal tragedy into triumph with this wonderful piece of work.

Reviews by Declan Culliton

Bill Price I Can’t Stop Looking At The Sky – Grass Magoops

Inspired by the explorers Lewis and Clark, Bill Price took a lengthy trip around America and over a four year period wrote and recorded this extremely ambitious and hugely rewarding work. The journey covered over five thousand miles across the states of Indiana, Iowa, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho and Wyoming. His original intention was to compile a personal journal but the journey subsequently inspired him to put much of his thoughts and experiences to music. The end product includes two hours and twenty minutes of music, a one hundred and twenty page journal, a one hundred and sixty page book of essays and poems, posters and stickers. The album is Prices’ sixth release since his debut album in 2001.  

This review is based on a sixteen track sampler of music from the venture. The material featured on the album is hugely enjoyable and quite varied. I Don’t Want to Come Home is driving pacey rock, Makes Me Feel Better would sit proudly on Paul Simon’s Graceland while Heaven Collapse is all Tom Petty with predictable, yet wonderful, guitar riffs. If Simon, Petty and Jonathan Richman type 70’s rock is your cuppa, based on this sampler, you will embrace this enterprising product with open arms.

Daniel Romano Mosey – New West 

My abiding memory of Daniel Romano will always be seeing him exiting a taxi outside The Ryman in 2013 on his way to the Americana Awards Show. Resplendent in a colourful nudie suit, boots to match and a cowboy hat, flanked by two equally well attired cowgirls, he impressed as someone who when making a statement goes the whole hog. Mosey sees the enigmatic Romano moth ball the nudie suit and travel an altogether different highway than listeners to his previous albums would have anticipated. The Fifties/Sixties traditional country look on previous album covers has been replaced by a look closer to late 60’s Syd Barrett than Hank Williams on the album cover. Referring to his intention of exploring genres other than country Romano is on record recently stating “I’m trying to cover my ass so I don’t end up in some club I don’t want to be part of!”

A mere twelve months since the release of the excellent If I’ve Only One Time Askin’ the prolific Canadian has recorded most probably his strongest work to date, moving away from the Nashville and Bakersfield influences and exploring dustier border landscapes.  The addition of strings and horns often results in the material bearing a delightfully healthy relation to the work of Ennio Morricone. As was the case with If I’ve Only One Time Askin’ Romano plays all the instruments on the album with the exception of piano, horns and strings but  also managed to arrange the string and horn section. The album was self-produced by Romano and recorded in mono at his own studio in Fenwick, Ontario 

The opener Valerie Leon is a monster of a track, soaring gloriously from the word go with mariachi horns and strings a plenty and slick vocals. The rootsy Toulouse sees actress Rachel Mc Adams dueting effectively with Romano. Mr.E.ME is immediately catchy, humorous and again adorned beautifully by strings and horns. Sorrow (For Leonard and William) has a luscious flow with a vocal and lyric recalling Leonard Cohen. (Gone is) All But A Quarry Of Stone is the most ‘country’ offering including some pulsating keyboards. Equally striking is One Hundred Regrets Avenue, the albums longest track, a seductive piano ballad and an indication of Romano’s ability to be equally adept in penning a ballad as a swashbuckler. 

Echo Bloom Red (2016)/Blue (2013) - Self Release

Two very interesting offerings from an intriguing set of musicians recording under the name of Echo Bloom. The band/collectives title is a play on the phase Echo Boom which refers to the offspring of baby boomers and is a vehicle for multi-instrumentalist Kyle Evans who wrote and produced both albums. The albums form part of a ‘Colours’ triptych with each of the three albums experimenting an entirely different musical genre. The first album Blue represents chamber pop, the second and current album Red visits country(ish) rock and the final album of the trilogy Green will focus on classic pop.

The obvious comparison to Evans’ most ambitious project would be the work of Sufjan Stevens and lovers of Stevens’ work will find so much to enjoy in both these albums. Red features no fewer than ten musicians and describing the album as country rock probably does not do it justice. It often enters dark country-noir territory, no more so than the track Willingham which describes the execution of Cameron Willingham for the murder of his three daughters.  It’s beautifully atmospheric throughout, intense with delightful layered backing vocals adding to to Evan’s often whispered and strained vocal. Leaving Charlestown tells the tale of two lovers eloping from Charlestown in search of a new life. Evangeline recounts the writers failure to deliver on his promises to his lover. “The man you love so long ago‘s all torn and faded and there’s nothing left inside of him not full of hatred. Another Rose is straight down the middle honky tonk.

It’s quite interesting revisiting Blue in the context of reviewing Echo Bloom’s current album and certainly rewarding. The songs are more acoustic and highlight Evan’s seductive vocal often with sparse accompaniment of backing vocal and guitar. The description of chamber pop refers to the addition of viola, violin, French horns, cello and oboe which embellish some of the songs. Evan’s describes how the ideas for the songs on the album were larger and more symphonic than anything he had previously written and demanded absolute concentration and distraction free to complete them. As a result he relocated to Berlin which he considered the perfect location to finalise the album. 

Standout tracks are the quite stunning, minimalistic and haunting The Prostitute (Goodbye Savannah), The Flood, which has a definite nod in the direction of Sufjan Stevens and the equally delightful Fireworks. All in all two excellent albums by an artist that I have to admit passed under my radar but whom I will certainly eagerly wait for the release of the final album from the trilog 

Rachel Garlin Wink at July – Tactile 

This is the fifth album released by San Francisco based singer-songwriter Rachel Garlin.  Featuring twelve tracks, the album often brings to mind the earthy, happy work of Laura Veirs. The album is essentially a series of well written unconnected stories delivered by Garlin, both acoustically and with backing musicians, in a distinctive semi-conversational rather than powerful vocal. She plays guitar on all tracks with contributions from eighteen different musicians. 

Opening with Gwendolyn Said, possibly the albums stand out track, the song nostalgically recalls Garlin’s trips on the school bus and reading a quote from poet Gwendolyn Brooks “Exhaust the little moment, soon it dies.” The Winding Road breezes along, immediate and poppy. The Sea You See is an ode to Garlin’s mother who emigrated from Scotland. Colorado Rain is catchy and toe tapping and the reflective title track closes the album. All in all an uncomplicated, very listenable, enjoyable and particularly relaxing listen.

Rainey Qualley Turn Down The Lights – Cingle

Turn Down The Lights is the debut album from actress turned singer Rainey Qualley.  Daughter of actress Andie Mc Dowell and musician Justin Qualley, the 26 year old’s seven track release is firmly aimed at the country pop market. The material is likely to work with the current country radio listenership leaning heavily toward the commercial poppy end of the market. Qualley without doubt possesses a wonderful voice and considerable song writing ability, six of the seven tracks being co-writes with John Ramey. 

The opener Turn Me On Like The Radio is Kasey Musgraves territory, catchy, instant and radio friendly. Kiss Me Drunk recalls mid 90’s Alanis Morissette and Cool, Wild, Whatever closes the album in style, poppy, catchy and immediate. 

The album, recorded at the Cowboy Arms Hotel and recording Spa in Nashville, if anything suffers from over production in places with layered vocals and drum machines dominating but not particularly enhancing the songs. Qualley has unquestionably inherited her parent’s talents and ticks all the boxes to make an impression in the mainstream country market 

Erin Rae and The Meanwhiles Soon Enough – Clubhouse 

There appears to be an endless contingent of quality female singer/songwriters currently recording albums of exceptional quality. Nashville resident Erin Rae is the latest addition to a string of such artists that have made the first six months of 2016 particularly productive in terms of worthy releases. This debut album Soon Enough was recorded live in Nashville over a two day period and finds the Jackson-born Rae flirting between the Laurel Canyon country folk sound of yesteryear and the more current roots driven Americana. It’s a piece of work that seems to benefit from the short recording period, uncomplicated, stripped back, weightless and natural.

Regardless of classification the irresistible Clean Slate, the second of thirteen songs on the album, will certainly stand out with the writer as one of the finest songs of the year, enhanced by some glorious steel guitar it’s a song that seems to have been with the listener for ever.

The arrangements throughout are simple featuring Rae’s acoustic guitar playing often accompanied only by bass and drums, occasionally with the addition of pedal steel. Rae’s wonderful honeyed vocal stands out and there are delightful songs around in plenty from the unhurried title track to the aching melody of Owe You One.

She is a quality act signed to the Clubhouse UK label, here’s hoping we get the opportunity to hear this set of reflective songs performed live by an artist mature beyond her years. Most definitely for lovers of Laura Cantrell and Patsy Cline.

Reviews by Stephen Rapid

 

The Honeycutters On The Ropes Organic

More than fulfilling the promise of their last album The Honeycutters have delivered an album (their fourth) that underlines both the writing and singing talents of Amanda Anne Platt alongside the playing skills of her four band mates Matthew Smith, Rick Cooper, Tal Taylor and Josh Milligan. Alongside some additional guests on keyboards and harmonica, the North Carolina based band have doubtless built up a strong following wherever they tour On The Ropes, which far from what the title might suggest, is another knockout punch in terms of their recorded output.

There are songs here like Blue Besides that could easily fit on a Kacey Musgraves album while others would not feel out of place on a Eilen Jewell release. That just shows the versatility and scope of the band, it’s music and Platt’s writing. From the underlying sadness of the ballad The Only Eyes through to the dance floor dynamism of Let’s Get Drunk - a song that emphasises the “in for a penny in for a pound” nature of certain uncertain relationships. There are twelve songs written by Platt and one cover of the seemingly ubiquitous Hallelujah, a song that must be keeping Mr. Cohen’s accountant well pleased. My first thoughts were do we really need yet another version? That answer is open to debate but, in fairness, the version here is given a solid country take that is pretty original and played with the appropriate passion that makes it a worthwhile exercise.

On The Ropes is an album that any self-respecting admirer of the current blend of traditional country and roots Americana should be more than happy to be acquainted with. Recorded in a North Carolina studio with Platt and Tim Surrett producing they have realised an album that is free of outside influences and is all the better for that. As it says on the back cover “great music, no boundaries.” Nothing here disputes that claim.

John Doe The Westerner Cool Rock

At the age of 63 the former punk rocker is still making great music. Time has not only weathered his voice but it also has given him time to reflect. The passing of his friend and Dances With Wolves author Michael Blake has doubtless been a factor in the attitude of this record. He co-produced it with Dave Way and Howe Gelb. The sand worn, desert location of that artist’s work with Giant Sand is a factor in the overall feel that is purveyed on the album.

These songs are at heart a mix of acoustic folk orientated songs with some more solidly rocking moments to balance that out. The opening track Get On Board fairly steams along as it tells us that we are all on board life’s train. We all ride the rails at some point. Sunlight, the song that follows is a parched sun drenched song that has some atmospheric Spanish guitar underpinning its mood. A Little Help, with piano and pedal steel, notes that we all need a little help at times - something that all can relate to. Go Baby Go is a more robust and rockin’ tale of getting out there and doing it with a backing vocal from Debbie Harry. A song that could easily resonate with fans of Doe’s days in X. The isolation and sadness of Alone In Arizona is full of heartfelt thoughtfulness that requires some genuine loss in life to make it feel real. Sonically it is restrained but full of ambient sounds that are sympathetic to the song. In truth all the songs here have their place and an understated but committed performance.

It is a solid listening experience, an album in the fullest sense, rather than a random collection of songs. John Doe is still making vital music - some of the best in a long career. The Shephard Fairey illustration on the cover and the title maybe suggest something that is more akin to his work with the Knitters. However this is a wider exploration of openness, space and a sense of freedom that covers a broad but still essentially rootsy soundscape. One that Doe fans and those who look for engaging roots music should get acquainted with.

AP Mauro Rainmakers Lamon

As with any broad format there are a lot of people out there making records. They make albums to be heard to express a point of view or because they just want to. This doesn’t necessarily mean that they are good - or bad. It just means that finding a place in an over supplied marketplace is difficult. This is no reflection on AP Mauro or his latest release rather it is a fact of life. This 6 track EP was recorded in Nashville and was produced by Mauro and Dave Moody. Other than that and the fact Mauro wrote all these songs there is no mention on the cover of who the other players were. But they did a pretty good job in fleshing out these songs. 

The title song You’re A Rainmaker has a propulsive beat with guitar and piano lines under Mauro’s song that offers a wry look on political posturing and shows that the man possesses a solid voice. It’s easy to see the Springsteen/Mellancamp/Earle comparisons that have appeared in reviews. Comparisons that anyone who aspires to a “blue collar” ethos seem to pick up. They are valid if not essentially all there is to know about the music here. In the end most Americana music is redolent of something that has gone before. That’s pretty inherent in the DNA of the genre and can apply to any number of artists.

Of the other songs here all suggest a maturing artist who is developing his craft and while none of the songs have that classic quality that defines a career song These Chains and Lonesome Highways (a trucker’s tale) are well worth repeated listen along with the aforementioned Rainmaker. Those who have heard and enjoyed AP Mauro in the past will be happy that they have some new music to listen to. Others could well start here and maybe find a new name to add to their listening list.

Marlon Williams Self-Titled Dead Oceans

The New Zealand native opens this, his debut solo album, with a the attention seeking Hello Miss Lonesome a fast a furious song that introduces his distinctive and acrobatic vocal style. Previously he has recorded with a band The Unfaithful Ways but this solo album gives him the opportunity to explore a broader more eclectic set of songs. And while he has acknowledged the influence of Gram Parsons for playing country music with respect but with a rock ’n’ roll attitude this album would be hard pressed to be classified as country to some more traditionaly orienteted fans. Country, in truth, would just be one influence in many.

His songs, some co-writes, have, at times, literary and cinematic quality all directed by his undaunted vocal ability that matches the lyrical twists. Dark Child has that a certain sense of that hue in it’s overall delivery. I’m Lost Without You is a 60’s style orchestral ballad written in that era by Teddy Randazzo and is the sort of thing that Marc Almond (or any number of 60s balladeers) would feel right at home with and is full of expressive regret and longing. An ethereal synth solo underscores this dark mood and it is an album standout. Silent Passage is a cover of a Bob Carpenter song (the title of his 1984 album). 

There is a dark humour to Strange Things theme of death, strange dreams and things that creep in the night. Not exactly the theme of your modern country song! When I Was A Young Girl has an eerie folk quality that is stripped down to a voice and guitar setting that again highlights the qualities of Williams’ vocal dexterity on his version of a traditional ballad. The downbeat mood continues for the final track a restrained setting with vocals choruses that tells us that Everyone’s Got Something To Say. Something I would imagine is true of this album. I look forward to Williams next move after what is a pretty remarkable debut.

Scott Cook and The Long Weekends Go Long Groove Revival

This package comes with an extensive full colour booklet of lyrics, an explanation of the Nashville numbering system and a note from Scott as well as a lot of pictures. These pictures show the assembled cast playing Beersbie (also explained in the booklet). A good time was had by all from the evidence and that feeling seems to have extended to the music too. An open love letter to the world it says on the back cover. There has been some love expounded for most things although Bob Geldof and Bono (as well as Russell Brand) may not think so from their mention in Drink Poverty History. Although I think the attitude is tongue in cheek. “And there’s still no snow in Africa this Christmas, and good, ‘cause wouldn’t that be strange?” A cheap shot or a personal observation? One for you to decide, but from Cook’s sleeve note this is the view of a character in the song rather than personal observation.

Elsewhere the direction of Cook’s darts are aimed at big stars, the folk communities reliance on certain songs, a song about the “kid with the comic book” written by Trevor Mills and called exactly that. As an alternative to singing Happy Birthday he wrote his own song The Day That You Were Born

One of the centre pieces is the warm and full timbre of Cook’s voice. It matches his lyrical storytelling. There have been mentions of Guy Clark, John Prine in some of the reviews and to that I might add maybe a touch of Todd Snider and Fred Eaglesmith in their more humourous mode. He gathers members of his old band to, in his own words, “try to put summer on record.” Whatever the intention he and his seven band mates and co-singers have delivered an upbeat acoustic folk stew that both sustains and is flavoursome. 

Cook is a storyteller and and worthy addition to many other notable Canadian singer/songwriters. There are 13 songs on the album the longest and most wordiest is Talkin’ Anthropocalypsc Blues at over eight minutes. It’s fun and makes some points on subjects that interest and provoke Cook. Whatever spirit you take it it deserves to be taken. You may well need that long weekend to take it all in though. Pick a sunny one.

Clarence Bucaro Pendulum TwentyTwenty

The fourth song on this tenth release from the New York based performer is a song that immediately sounds both new and familiar as perhaps the best kind of song should. Girl In The Photograph has a light reggae-ish lilt that has an instant appeal. A substantial but breezy pop song about treasuring a photograph of a person who has meant much at one part or another of someone’s life. Bucaro is also touches on more troubled moments as in Tragedy where he doesn’t want to be caught up in the drama created by another, not wanting to be a part of their tragedy. Watching You Grow is a tender observation with accordion a part of the musical setting.

The subtle sense of melody as well as something a little deeper edge applies to many of the songs here and they become more appreciated with regular play. Bucaro has a strong velvet smooth voice that gives life to these reflective and intimate songs. Throughout he works with a band that includes Scott Ligon on bass and keyboards, Rich Hitman on guitar and pedal steel and Alex hall on drums, accordion and keyboards. A tight but essential unit of players under the direction on Tom Schick (who has previously worked with Ryan Adams) and Bucaro himself behind the production desk. My Heart Won’t has central characters  that seek but are wary of finding love, or anyway a love that might last. Another notable contribution comes from Alison Moorer who co-wrote and sings on the final song Strangers. There is a sense of melancholy in the strangers in the night theme that is reflected in the prominently featured pedal steel. That instrument does not a country album make though and this, overall, has a folkier feel - even with the full band there to give the songs some added strength.

Clarence Bucaro after nine previous albums should be making some headway in terms of recognition and judging by the overall consistency shown here on Pendulum, one can only hope that some of that might just swing his way. Even if that’s not the case in proves that although there is something of an overdose of singer/songwriter albums on the horizon there are still undiscovered performers out there who make travelling down our lonesome highway worthwhile.

 

 

Reviews by Paul McGee

David Berkeley Cardboard Boat Self-Release

These ten songs are companion pieces to stories contained in David Berkeley’s book The Free Brontosaurus. He uses the song characters to mirror the perspective of each story’s main character. This is an interesting idea and one that gives the listener the chance to absorb the songs/stories from different angles. Writing in character can give a song a somewhat distant feeling, but the reflections and insights in each song here can be taken as very personal. 

This is the sixth studio release from a literate, talented and accomplished song-writer who creates a gentle mood with his rich voice and a superb backing band that includes guitarist Bill Titus (Dan Bern, Brother Ali), trumpet and banjo player Jordan Katz (De La Soul, The Indigo Girls), bassist/keyboard player Will Robertson (Shawn Mullins) and drummer Mathias Kunzli (Regina Spektor). The harmony vocals of Sara Watkins are especially memorable and her vocals dovetail beautifully with Berkeley amongst the easy flow of these songs.

There are references to the sea with Setting SailTo the Sea and Cardboard Boat. Many of the songs contain a melancholy air touching on topics like relationship vulnerability, loss and regret; absence and a need to return; disillusionment and sadness and lost souls. However, there is also a perspective that new beginnings are possible and a brighter day awaits with new love and opportunity. This is folk music that is thought-provoking and delivered with great assurance.

Corinne West Starlight Highway MAKE

West has four previous releases and here the talented songstress has gathered a troupe of musicians who serve Starlight Highway’s ten songs with great reverence and some sublime playing. The arrangements are acoustic based with plenty of room for the various instruments to be heard and the production, by West herself, has to be applauded as she delivers a real gem. 

Her voice is very sweet and can soar with the rise of the instruments on songs like Give Our Ships Away and the jazzy tinge of Gypsy Harbor. There is the bluesy mood of Find Me Here and the old time swing of Cry of the Echo Drifter together with the rockabilly up-tempo pace of the title track. These are sophisticated songs delivered with fine feeling and restrained playing by an ensemble that includes the talents of Mike Marshall, excellent on mandolin and Henry Salvia on B3 Hammond organ, piano, accordion and Wurlitzer. Most of the songs are co-writes with the very talented Kelly Joe Phelps who adds some fine guitar and vocals on a number of tracks while Edo Castro on 7-string Fretless Bass and Ricky Fataar on drums give a solid rhythm to the melodies. A number of additional musicians add to the rich colour and the best way to enjoy these songs is to turn the volume up on the headphones and sip a slow glass of red wine to the sweet strains of, Audrey Turn the MoonTrouble No MoreMonday’s Song and Night Falls Away Singing – so much to enjoy.

Daniel Martin Moore Golden Age Sofaburn

This is Daniel Martin Moore’s fifth release. He possesses a beautiful voice which is startling like Art Garnfunkel’s and sings with a melancholic tone to melt even the hardest of hearts. Produced by Jim James of My Morning Jacket, the 10 songs here drip with atmospheric melody on the air of a soft breeze.

Joined by the subtle playing talents of Dan Dorff, Jr., Joan Shelley, Jim James, Kevin Ratterman, Dave Givan, Ben Sollee, and others from around  Kentucky, Moore takes his gentle reflections and turns them into finely polished gems of light jazz, piano-based, late night soulful spiritual searching.

Reviews by Stephen Rapid

 

TWO FROM CANADA: A hotbed of some traditionally orientated country music

Ginger St. James One for the Money Busted Flat 

St. James is a Canadian singer and songwriter who has a passion for traditional country, rockabilly and blues. You can add the word rowdy to this description to help sum up her sassy attitude which may spring from her previous involvement in the burlesque scene. This 9 track album also has some more thoughtful and quieter moments like Honeymoon Stage, Best Of Me and You and Somebody Shot Me alongside the more up-tempo stompers like Train Whistle and the hard rockin’ Hair of the Blackdog

St. James has a commanding voice as well as a way with words that suits her chosen musical path. She is accompanied by a band of players including longtime guitarist Snowheel Slim and pianist Chris Altman, who join her on the credits for the mostly self-written songs. The set was produced by James McKenty and it is a step up from her previous entertaining EP release Spank, Sparkle & Growl, recorded with her previous band, The Grinders. One for the Money affirms that St. James is developing her craft in what might be considered a segment of the musical spectrum that is under represented. This is one for the moment.  

Eli Barsi Portrait of a Cowgirl Red Truck Int.

Barsi is an artist with a string of releases under her (cowgirl) belt and one I have not encountered previously. The Canadian roots/country scene is full of artists who tend not to receive much recognition outside their homeland. Barsi’s experience and talents shine on this album, which deals with themes related to farm and ranch life. She also touches on the more personal aspects of relationships such as He’ll be Back Again and I See You Everywhere.  

Barsi’s sound is a fairly satisfying blend of traditional and contemporary. A solid rhythm section gives a radio friendly base under the banjo, fiddle and steel guitar embellishments. Add keyboards and electric and acoustic guitars and you have a layered sound that isn’t retro, but stays within what can be rightly credited as country music. 

She has written all the songs here and the sound has a wide ranging appeal. Perhaps she should be considered as a parallel to singers like Joni Harms and Wylie Gustafson. They all come from a background rooted in the land, horses and a western lifestyle. Indeed Barsi has a number of “western” albums to her credit and Portrait of a Cowgirl fits well, as it is a musical evocation of an attitude and ethos that is fast disappearing, one which many are attracted to but don’t have the opportunity to live. This is something that Barsi considers (as have others) in Big Hat, No Cattle, but in the end the song Country Music Was Made for Saturday Night sums up the letting off steam, end of the week release that country music seems well suited for.

TWO COVERS ALBUMS: Two artists offering their choice of favourite songs - with the mixed reaction that that often entails.

Karl Blau Introducing Karl Blau Bella Union 

This album from Blau is far from an introduction; it is more an introduction to some of his favourites and is being presented as a country/soul album. This is a combination that is big buzz word right now. A look at Blau’s discography on his website highlights some of the numerous releases he has made over a 20 year recording career. 

There are twelve songs on this album which opens with the oft recorded That’s How I Got to Memphis. The sound is, in truth, not overtly country in a sense that fans of honky-tonk or Texas dance floor might imagine. Rather it is a blend of smooth delivery with soulful overtones that allows Blau’s warm, rich, deep vocal to sit front and centre. However, a little against type, there is little brass featured. Strings and keyboards feature with acoustic, electric and pedal steel guitars.

The overall feel is perhaps a take on the more refined countrypolitan Nashville melodious sounds of the 60s and 70s. Producer Tucker Martine gathers together a set of players who clearly understand what the songs need to give them a makeover. How successful this is, and indeed, any cover is, depends on your relationship to the original or best known version. I’m curious as to how many of these songs Blau’s audience would have encountered previously. 

Woman (Sensuous Woman) was recorded by Don Gibson, No Regrets was written by Tom Rush and recorded by the Walker Brothers (amongst others). If I Needed You is perhaps Townes Van Zandt’s best know song. Dreaming My Dreams was written for Waylon Jennings, was a hit in Ireland when covered by Marianne Faithfull and was also covered by Patty Loveless. To Love Somebody is a Bee Gees song that has been recorded by a number of roots/country artists such as Blue Rodeo. The first single from the album is a compelling version of Fallin’ Rain, written by Link Wray. 

There is plenty here to both admire and enjoy and the album may serve as an introduction to Karl Blau’s broader musical world. It might even get some indie fans to explore the richness of country music’s past and in turn open the minds of some usually more strictly focused country fans. In the endit is down to the performance, the singer and the songs. Here the match is good enough to hold attention and to reassess the songs that Blau has chosen. He’s the one wearing the cowboy hat and embroidered jacket on the cover and this gives you a clue as to where he’s coming from this time.

Robert Rex Waller Jr. Fancy Free Western Seeds

Waller fronted the band I See Hawks in LA for some years now before deciding to release this solo outing, funded by Kickstarter. Divided into Side A and Side B, the first song from Side A is his take on Walking through your Town in the Snow and it is a good opening choice as it highlights Waller’s deep baritone voice. Written by Bruce Utah Philips the song sets you up for the Americana that follows, including a melancholic, but uplifting take on Neil Young’s Albuquerque.  From then on there are versions of songs from Ray Davies (Waterloo Sunset), Albert Hammond (The Air That I Breathe) and Dylan’s She Belongs to Me, which features an extended guitar outro. There are also lesser known songs such as the title track or Mike Stinson’s Counting My Lucky Stars. There is also a short piano and vocal version of Amazing Grace 

Each listener will find their own loves and loathes, although nothing here should deserve the latter opinion. Waller has produced the album with Marc Doten and they ring the changes across the songs; some are stripped back while others offer a more cosmic sound. The version of the Doors The Crystal Ship fits that particular sonic sound well.

Doten is at the heart of the sound, playing keyboards, guitar and bass and he is joined by drums, guitar and violin. The album takes each song on its own terms and as such is difficult to pin down to any one single genre direction. Which, if you are listening without a particular preconception, offer a wide ranging listening experience.

With I See Hawks in LA Waller sings original song. Here he is given the freedom to interpret songs that have entered his consciousness in an individual, stylised way that makes the most of his voice and their musical settings. Enjoyment will depend largely on how willing you are to follow him down a winding path.

TWO FROM THE PAST: Two artists offering popular songs, with the mixed reaction that often entails.

Billy ‘Crash’ Craddock Mr Country Rock Humphead

Craddock is a singer whose recordings on this 2CD collection go from 1978 to 1986. He was a vocal stylist rather than a songwriter, recording songs that had a solid enough country backing, but were in many ways more associated with rock and pop. The set opens somewhat ominously with Knock Three Times which was a big country hit for him. After that we get 49 other songs including Dream Lover, You Better Move On, Come a Little Closer, Slippin’ and Slidin’, Think I’ll Go Somewhere (and Cry Myself To Sleep), Sea Cruise and a live version of Whole Lot of Shakin’ Goin’ On. Starting out as a rock ’n’ roll/rockabilly singer Craddock released records and toured in the 50’s before taking a career break. After that he returned as a country singer and it is from this period that these recording come.

There is a certain nostalgia about these songs that are largely inoffensive and inessential. They are not without a certain charm and highlight Craddock’s serviceable voice that owes a little to Elvis Presley in tone. The production makes the best of the backing musicians who include Lloyd Green on steel and there is enough variety in the tempo and tone to ensure a solid listenable experience. The penultimate track She Belongs to Me is not the Bob Dylan song but an unrelated, uncredited one. By this time, as exemplified by the final track I Didn’t Hear The Thunder, things had moved on as it is a largely keyboard-based song with backing vocals that is neither rock nor country. Billy “Crash’ Craddock is an performer who largely changed with the times and this compilation misses his early rock phase and goes from country to something more middle of the road.

Dave Dudley Truck Drivin’ Son-of-a-Gun Humphead

Humphead put together these two CD collections and, depending on individual preferences, some hit the spot more than others. This collection spans recordings from 1965 through to 1977, so the production from each period changes the sound and the musical backing styles. The difference between tracks 5 and 6 (You’ve Got to Cry Girl and What We’re Fighting For) is quite wide apart from Dudley’s voice. It is the earlier recordings that largely hit home the most for me.  

The version of Six Days on the Road is not the original version from 1963 but a later recording from 1975. The subject matter Dudley’s best known for are those that dealing with the trucking fraternity. Songs like the aforementioned signature songs along with Me and Ole C.B., Farewell to the Road, Trucker’s Prayer, Truckin’ Dad and the title track. There are also a wide variety of relationships that were also a staple of any singer’s repertoire. You Got to Cry Girl, a song he co-wrote in 1972, sounds like mainstream crooner pop to me. 

The majority of the songs are more about relationships than on the road themes. What is apparent throughout is the strength of Dave Dudley’s deep baritone vocals. He seems at home with the choices that the producers made to keep the songs relevant with radio styles when these songs were recorded. One writer Dudley turned to was Tom T Hall who provides some 14 of the songs - two co-written with Dudley and one, Day Drinkin’, on which Hall and Dudley duet on a song illustrating the title.

There is no getting away from the period sound of the production on these tracks, but that is part and parcel of the appeal. Dudley’s voice was suitable for this material, but he is most fondly remembered for the truckin’ songs. However there is enough here to show that Dudley loved what he did.

TWO FROM THE SAME SOURCE: Michel McDermott is the primary songwriter for both of these albums.

The Westies Six on the Out Pauper Sky

On this second Westies album the band continue in the vein that they set up on their fine debut release. The band is fronted by Michael McDermott and Heather Horton with five other players including guitarist Will Kimbrough and bassist Lex Price, who also produced and mixed the album. For the uninitiated there are some comparisons to the writing and sounds of Dylan, Springsteen and Elliott Murphy in the mix, but the Westies stand on their own feet and make a sound that will appeal to fans of certain periods of those other artist’s work.

McDermott is the writer and main singer here and the songs are dark and dirty and deal with the lives of those who exist in shadows and on the margins of a largely uncaring society. The songs tell truths and have undoubted passion and understanding for those who inhabit these songs. The Gang’s All Here is a strong ballad with tin-whistle that suggests a certain Irishness in ethos and community. Like You Used To is another ballad, sung this time by Horton, that seeks love from another in a way that may have been lost over time. Love is something that these characters seek and other songs here look for the meaning of that. Everything is All I Want for You and This I Know are declarations of hard won solace.

The opening If I Had a Gun pulls no punches in that the lethal weapon could either be “pointed back at me” or equally used to “blow them all to hell” and the sense of desperation is palpable. Henry McCarty is the tale of an Irish-American outlaw better known as Billy the Kid. It tells his tale, one often told before, in a way that has an understanding for who and how he became that legend. Sirens is the about murder and the deep devastating loss that results from loss of family. These may be not the stuff of mainstream music, but the performances here make these songs stand up and fight for themselves and they put up a good fight.

Michael McDermott Willow Springs Pauper Sky

Ostensibly this is a solo album from Westies frontman Michael McDermott, although the cast of players has names common to this album and Six on The Out. McDermott sits in the production chair this time, and while the Westies recorded their album in Nashville, this album was recorded in the titular Willow Springs in Illinois. McDermott started out as a lauded songwriter and singer and released his debut album 620 W. Surf  in 1991. Stephen King called him “one of the greatest songwriters in the world.” Indeed his Irish heritage has given him the gift of storytelling.

This album seems a little more oriented around an acoustic guitar, folkish approach, though the full band is present throughout to fill out the melodies and add a texture to the sound palate. The songs take a similar approach to those on the Westies album in that they are considered and concerned tales of the lives of everyday working or unemployed folk. 

A wider audience has so far eluded McDermott and that may be due to a superficial comparison to Bruce Springsteen’s work. That may be something initially obvious, but there are songs her that I’m sure the Boss would have been proud to have penned. Both men come from the “Judas” tradition of amped up electric folk rock in any case. This is something McDermott addresses in Folksinger. “I don’t wanna be a folksinger anymore, I wanna hear some big guitars.” In truth though he may always be a folksinger at heart , though one who also rocks hard.

There is a strong sense of melody and lyricism on display throughout the album. Soldiers of the Same War notes that man has been “fighting for a thousand years” and that war and all it brings is a constant, something we never seems to learn from. From reading the lyrics in the booklet one gets a sense of an overall despair and downbeat hearts. The feeling that a person who is a half empty guy who if he “wasn’t laughing … you could bet that he would cry”. But that would deny the positivity that is inherent in McDermott’s music and life. He has been through bad times and has come out the other side. In Let a Little Light In and Shadow in the Window, he underlines a need and search for love, both to give and to receive. 

I would place him along side Elliott Murphy as singer/songwriters who plows their own furrow, who continue to write songs that are relevant and real. They are artists who exist outside mainstream commercial success but who may be the better for it in terms of their artistic endeavours. Willow Springs is an album to savour, one to admire and one that salutes the human heart for all its frailties, faults and fervour.

Reviews by Paul McGee

Christa Couture Long Time Leaving Self-Release

On the track That Little Part of my Heart, Christa Couture sings “Don’t be afraid to be amazing – you are amazing”. She could be singing this line to another or to herself, about herself, in an attempt to boost her self-talk to a level where renewed courage shines through. It is just one example of the subtle muse at play when she writes her words of life and longing, love and lust and everything in-between. 

This is Christa’s fourth release and it marks a departure from the searing self- analysis of her previous albums which dealt with personal tragedy in a way that both inspired and devastated in equal measure. Coming out of a marriage and going through divorce  is a time for reflection and self-examination, but when life has dealt you dire cards in the years before, then a certain perspective is brought to bear. Fighting cancer and losing a limb, yet winning the battle, was nothing compared to the deaths of her two children, losses painfully and bravely borne and now referenced through her music.

For this new project Christa has employed the many-talented Steve Dawson as producer/musician and his finely tuned influence is very prominent on Long Time Leaving ‘s 12 songs. The studio musicians add a texture that allows plenty of space and room. The sound is lighter and more commercial with a number of upbeat arrangements to add a nice tempo to the overall feel.

The early glow of a potential new relationship is explored in Alone in This and is balanced against the sad realisation of Separation/Agreement that leaves a feeling of resignation, with lines like “it’s difficult to know how to divide which ghosts are yours and which are mine”. The Slaughter explores flirtation with the heady swim of experimentation and new opportunity to play at being Aphrodite. Solid Ground reaches out to try and find mutual understanding where the “best medicine is an honest conversation”, while Zookeeper looks at the whole process of counselling and the role of a marriage guidance counsellor as a zookeeper overseeing the zoo animals who might strike out at any moment. Dealing with the frustration of failed relationships is given a fresh spin on When It Gets Dark Again and the urge to binge drink all problems away for just a little while. 

We end with feelings of enduring, which is a mantra that seems to run through the path of this artist; brave and resourceful, talented and open to tomorrow. Along Time Leaving is a very fine release that sits well in Couture’s catalogue and is an example that creative music that can be found in the worst of experiences and shared for the greater good.

Jeb Barry Milltown Dollyrocker

Milltown is a follow up to Barry’s solo EP Bury Me in a Lonely Place released in 2014.  It is based in the acoustic singer-songwriter vein and comparisons have been made to Jason Isbell and Steve Earle in both the vocal delivery and subject matter of the 15 songs.

 Clocking in at just over of 47 minutes, the tracks become somewhat repetitive with sparse songs of the darker side of life; small town decay (Milltown #2, No Way Out of This Town) resignation with life (Drag the River, $10 Girl), regrets over the past and old relationships (Shoot Out the Moon, If You Were Whiskey, Gone), lost hope and lost lives (Hard Times, Why I Drink Alone, Weird Places).

 Barry sings in a weary, gravelly voice that fits the words well and the support musicians slot superbly into the songs with Pat Powers (banjo, harmonica), Ernie Barufa (bass, percussion), Mike O’Neill (guitar, Dobro) and Heather Austin (vocals) all adding understated support to Barry and his various guitars. 

This is a contemporary take on bleak, economically busted small town America and the perspective of wasted lives. Barry’s style has been aptly described as ‘hard dirt Americana’ which sums it up very well. 

West of Eden Look to the West West of Music

West of Eden is a 6 person Swedish band inspired by the creative hub of Jenny and Martin Schaub, who write the majority of the songs. This is their 9th release, a concept album focusing on the emigration trail taken by many Swedes in the 19th century, looking for a better life and greater opportunity on the shores of England, America and beyond. There is a strong resonance with Ireland and our own mass emigration following the Famine years of 1845-1849. The music of both nations is similar and this is added to by the very Gaelic feel that runs through many of the song arrangements. 

Both Schaubs have studied Irish traditional music here and their sensitive arrangements are beautifully produced with a swell of melody giving a lush feel to songs about missing home (Going to Hull, Sweet Old Country), sailing away from loved ones (Oh I Miss My Home, The Final Cut), reluctant travellers (The Crying Stairs, Look to the West) and hard luck stories of deception and robbery on distant shores (Wilson Line).

Their sound has been described as ‘Celtic Folk’ but this is not a very fair reflection of the experience and talent that these musicians bring to each project. Yes, they honour to old folk traditions of songs about land and sea, hard times and hope for the future, but they are so much more with fine harmonies lifting the melodies to new heights and the subtle use of horns and trombones on certain tracks giving the project a deeper resonance. The fiddle/viola playing of Lars Broman is always a joy, along with the fine accordion playing of Jenny Schaub and the flute of Steph Geremia, the mix of dobro, mandolin, pump organ and guitars make for a heady experience.

There are songs of packing for the journey (The List) and of having to escape a loveless marriage (Please Mister Agent). However, one of the most poignant songs is The Ticketless Man which tells of those left behind through not being able to afford the ticket to a new life. Rainy Town sings of another left behind who does not envy those who leave for an unknown fate – better to stay with the familiar life that is tried and tested. Two instrumentals show the band and guest musicians in full flow and both  Paddy Fahey’s/Sweel and Tekla’s Tune display the range of talent at play.

Strong storytelling in the traditional folk style and the sweet voice of Jenny Schaub make this a potent listen and the talents of West of Eden are worth investing time in discovering. 

James Houlahan Multitudes Gumbo Luvah

James Houlahan is a singer- songwriter who first came to prominence with bands like Dogs on Television and The Jody Grind around Boston. Now living in Los Angeles, he has released two previous solo albums, Seven Years Now and Misfit Hymns and has a number of recognised session musicians on this collection of 10 songs, including Fernando Perdomo (Jakob Dylan) on bass and Danny Frankel (Lou Reed, kd lang) on percussion. The project was recorded at Veneto West studios in Santa Monica, and was produced by Houlahan and Ronan Chris Murphy (King Crimson, Steve Morse).  

Many of the song arrangements display a leaning towards the eccentric and strange, with the instrumentation somewhat at odds; the drums on the opening murder song Fires of Mercy sound ponderous and a second murder song Marcy’s Lament suffers from noise treatments and vocal distortions. The rock groove of The Rogue Song stands starkly against the gentle folk strum of acoustic guitars on Morning Sun and the ghost/fantasy dreamscape of Mystery Earth Song, the longest track here at almost 7 minutes, contains elements of Mexican brass and strings added to the mix. The country twang of Home shows the direction that this artist could benefit from placing greater focus on, with some neat pedal steel from Erik Kristiansen and sweet violin from Kaitlin Wolfberg.  

The final track is also interesting with the slow strum of Joyful Circuit  and Danny Levin’s horns adding greatly to the overall feel. There are just too many different styles here, which leads to a general feeling of no real direction. 

Carly Dow Ingrained Self Release

This is the first solo release from Canadian artist Carly Dow, who lives in Manitoba. She sings of the environment and our relationship with nature (Too Much to Go Back) in addition to reflecting on matters of the human heart and our ability to endure (Watch it Go). 

She sings with a clear and strong voice that blends perfectly with her acoustic based songs and her banjo and guitar rhythms. From the clap and stomp beginning of Olive Branch and its message of sisterhood, to the bluesy beat of This Dress, there is a confidence flowing through the arrangements and the playing that fits perfect with the overall feel of the project. 

The light jazz groove of Down This Road has some very tasty bass playing from Ashley Au that is complemented by the fine playing of Matt Filopoulos on lap steel and electric guitar. Cello by Julian Bradford on Yours & Mine is beautifully understated and dovetails with lap steel in a reflection on past relationships ;  “I search in the past, where I sometimes live; for the touch, for the brush of a hand”. This is fine writing and plenty to enjoy ona very promising debut.

Mike Jacoby NorthEastSouthWest Self Release

Jacoby is based in Long Beach California and has released his second solo album which takes the title from his birth place in the NorthEast and his current abode in the SouthWest. The album is a self- produced project and Jacoby plays all the instruments on the eleven self-penned songs included here.

 He writes in an American-ish vein, with opening tracks Ready When You Are and Nevermind Me setting the tone with strong beats and a rhythm that sweeps along with attitude. He is clearly a musical talent and his ability to deliver this project single-handed has to be admired and applauded.

There is a country feel to Explaining to Do with its’ swing and swagger and Lay of the Land has a radio friendly groove that will appeal to many. Lie in Bed is a strong track that slows everything down before the driving beat of Where She Goes recalls early 1950s rockabilly.

Reviews by Declan Culliton

Lera Lynn  Resistor Resistor

Shape Shifter, the opening track on Lera Lynn’s latest release, announces a radical change in direction. Her previous releases Have You Met Lera Lynn (2012) and Avenues (2014), were brooding folk-tinged Americana with cleverly crafted song writing delivered by Lynn’s distinctive vocal. Resister finds her abandoning her earlier twang and replacing it with a darker mystical psychedelia which approaches territory inhabited by Jesse Sykes and The Sweet Hereafter and more recently by St. Vincent. The album is released on her own record label Resister Music, a further indication of an artist intent on maximum control over her own musical destiny. Whatever her motivation on leaving her previous comfort zone, the results are staggering ,with Resistor going places not previously visited by Lynn.

Perhaps her impressive involvement on the True Detective series (the trailer featuring a clip of Lynn performing The Only Thing Worth Fighting For achieved over 35 million views) pointed her in this direction, perhaps her writing with T-Bone Burnett on the series was the catalyst. Lynn has said that writing with Burnett allowed her freedom to experiment with her darker side.

The production duties were shared between Lynn and multi-instrumentalist Joshua Grange ( Dwight Yoakam, Lionel Ritchie, Victoria Williams, Dixie Chicks and Michelle Shocked;production work for Conor Oberst, Stephen Malkmus and kd lang). All instruments were played by Grange and Lynn.There is so much to savour on the album which has an otherworldly, almost cinematic feel, throughout. Unlike her previous work the vocals aren’t out front but drift around atmospherically.

Slow Motion Countdown is hypnotically dreamlike and intoxicating, bordering on frightening, Cut & Burn is revengeful (I cast my soul into a bullet babe, fine metal for our last dance) with an almost Joy Division like baritone guitar dominating. What you Done recalls late 80’s Marianne Faithfull (You can pluck a rose while wearing sheep’s clothes but you know what you done) and the power poppy Little Ruby closes the album in style.

The sweet’ girl next door’ from Have You Met Lera Lynn (2012) has moved to an entirely darker and seedier neighbourhood. The move may lose her some of her earlier listeners, however  Resistor is likely to expose her to a considerably wider audience and, if given the promotion it richly warrants, should feature in many year-end ‘best of’ lists whether that be in the Americana or Indie categories.

Carter Sampson Wilder Side Continental Song City

Hot on the heels of Margo Prices’ superb Midwest Farmer’s Daughter comes another classic female country album. Carter Sampson has been working, recording and touring relentlessly in recent years without achieving the deserved industry breakthrough. Like Price, Zoe Muth and Elizabeth Cook, Oklahoma born Sampson possesses a glorious country voice which certainly packs a punch on the ten tracks on Wilder Side. Her love of the traditional country queens Emmylou Harris, Patsy Cline and fellow Okie Reba Mc Entire is evident throughout the album.

Wilder Side is her fourth album and sees her reunited with producer and multi-instrumentalist Travis Linville who also produced her second album Good ForThe Meantime (2009). Linville plays guitars, Dobro, bass, drums, percussion, banjo and pedal steel. Tulsa Oklahoma singer-songwriter John Moreland, who has gained much acclaim for his latest album High on Tulsa Heat, adds backing vocals. Boasting a musical family legacy that includes Roy Orbison and with music flowing through her veins, Sampson has been experimenting and writing music from the age of fifteen. She founded The Oklahoma City’s Rock and Roll Camp for Girls, offering a formal music education for girls and women.

From the opening and title track Wilder Side (which  Sampson admits is a tribute to her alter ego) through to the  closing track See the Devil Run, much of the album has a breezy  late 70’s country feel to it, uncomplicated, captivating, and conjuring up scenes of road trips on hot, dry, sun drenched highways. A self-confessed lover of travel from an early age, much of the material references movement, freedom and journeying. Medicine River is inspired by Medicine Park in the Wichita Mountains;  Holy Mother could be drawn from the Linda Ronstadt songbook and Highway Rider is a sobering road song depicting both the joys and strains of constant career-driven travel. 

Sampson performs on average 220 shows a year and if there is any justice the masterfully crafted Wilder Side will bring her to the attention of a much wider audience both in her home country and Europe.

Cathryn Craig & Brian Willoughby In America Cabritunes

Recorded in Nashville in the summer of 2015, In America offers seventy minutes of charming folk music in this latest collaboration between Virginia-born singer-songwriter Cathryn Craig and the superlative UK guitarist and ex-member of The Strawbs, Brian Willoughby. This is folk music at its very best, weighted with traditional Celtic influences and including a group of talented musicians in Andy Reiss, Brent Moyer, Mark Fain, Fran Breen, Dennis Bryon, Pat McInerney, Ritchie Bailey and Jeff Taylor. The production duties were undertaken by Thomm Jutz, who also plays on the album.

In America features sixteen tracks, eleven of which are co-writes by Craig and Willoughby. This includes four bonus tracks, two of which acknowledge Craig and Willoughby’s very early career work, his with Mary Hopkin’s Those Were The Days ( Willoughby played guitar) and the Righteous Brothers You’ve Lost that Lovin’ Feeling (recalling Craig’s first venture into the music industry).

The title track tells of immigrant dreams of escaping the potato famine in Ireland for the shores of America (We’re glory bound I am told, Bluest skies and streets of gold in America). A Soft Place to Fall is a thoughtful, sincere and hopeful ballad, written by Craig for her niece. Willoughby’s solo album Black and White (1998) is revisited with The Fire. Bullet, co-written with Bill Mead of The Sharpees fame, bounces along with a catchy chorus.Worth special mention is the delightful artwork and packaging of the album, which includes a twelve page booklet including lyrics and a brief introduction to all the tracks.

In America is perfect listening for a lazy rainy afternoon. The combination of Craig’s wonderful, yet sometimes delightfully vulnerable vocals, Willoughby’s remarkable playing and the many talented contributors, makes the journey from Malahide to Donegal to America both reflective and rewarding.

Reviews by Stephen Rapid



Steven Casper & Cowboy Angst I Feel Like I’ve Got Snakes in My Head  Silent City

This mini-album opens with a spaghetti western-styled instrumental titled For a Few Dollars Less and thus wears its influences on its sleeve. Guitar and keyboards shoot it out over a galloping rhythm, but it represents one aspect of Los Angeles based Steven Casper, a veteran of several bands before he put his name upfront, along with that of his regular band. They have released several previous EPs, as well as full length albums which attest to Cowboy Angst being a seasoned band.

Casper fronts the four piece, which is largely American/roots orientated, combining elements of country-rock, blues, folk and straight ahead rock. Restless Heart, Maria, Slow Dancing, She’s Bad and Driving Fast are all written by Casper. He has a distinctive voice, full of character which holds attention. The band and producer Ira Ingber have taken a slightly different tack with each song. Maria has strong a Tex-Mex influence with a featured repeated organ riff and conjunto accordion, while Slow Dancing is a piano and slide guitar-lead ballad that exudes a certain tenderness. Driving Fast appears in two versions, first in a Canned Heat style straight-ahead rock riff take and the second version, designated as the “4AM” version, is more acoustic with guitar, accordion and tambourine. It is the song from which the title line comes and shows how easily a song can be adapted to a different setting or mood, and work equally well, depending on how one wants to frame a particular story.

This is an accomplished band led by Casper, whose voice and songs probably have a strong following in California and beyond as their back catalogue attests. Equally they are not making music that hasn’t been heard before or is going to take you by surprise. They are a tight, focussed and talent unit whose songs and performances should guarantee them their place and piece of the pie.

Spicewood Seven Still Mad  Phoebe Claire 

This collective released their debut album in 2006 titled Kakistocracy. They were led by lyricist Luke Powers and Austin musical stalwart Tommy Spurlock and included the likes of Leon Rausch and Garth Hudson in the line up. All four are here with the latter pair appearing together on the song The Magic Bullet. They are joined by the likes of Suzi Ragsdale and a solid rhythm section. The songs are all written by Powers and Spurlock. The latter is the album’s producer and the two handle the vocal on a series of songs that are not without their bite and pose a polemic reaction to their immediate surroundings both personal and political. 

The previous album was rooted in the Bush era. That era may have changed, in terms of the names, but Power and Spurlock still aren’t too happy with what they see, hence the title of this new set of songs. These songs represent a different viewpoint from many in country music, apart from well know dissenters like Steve Earle. The titles pretty much give you an idea of the overriding lyrical themes expressed: I Live with The Devil, Hey Idiot (a song about some sound parental advice), Broke, Dumb It Down as well as the more reasoned and open consideration that People Are Basically Good. The final song The Magic Bullet is a reference to the theory of the single bullet theory associated with the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Not normally a subject heard to the backing of a steel guitar-led country band.

Recorded in Nashville, the Spicewood Seven prove themselves to be a united team who play the songs with a conviction that suggests they are all behind the sentiments expressed. The overall sound is edgy country rock, with both Spurlock and Powers handling the vocal duties with ease. The songs are not exactly designed for superficial listening and with no lyric sheet they require engagement to connect with them. Given all that, this will appeal to a certain frame of (open) mind and those who like things a little rough and ready. Let’s hope they’re still mad enough to do another album. No doubt the political climate will provide inspiration in the coming months and years.

Daniel Meade & the Flying Mules  Let Me Off At The Bottom  At the Helm

This is the latest album from the Glasgow singer/songwriter Daniel Meade and is the follow up to the Nashville-recorded, Morgan Jahnig produced album Keep Right Away. It is a tribute to Meade’s regular band; Lloyd Reid, Mark Ferrie and Thomas Sutherland, with guests. It sounds as good as that previous album both in songs and performance. Jahnig was again involved, as he did the mix in Nashville. Otherwise it was recorded in Glasgow.

The rhythm section is tight, Reid is a damn fine guitarist and there is some great piano playing throughout. Meade is an especially convincing vocalist and writer and the whole album could easily have emanated from the Americana community in Austin or East Nashville.

There’s a Ghost Where Her Heart Used to Be and Ghost and Crocodiles have an energy that is contagious. Meade can also keep the pace down as with the regretful “what could have been” He Should’ve Mine where Meade gives a passionate and perfectly suited vocal that fully conveys the emotion in the song. The title track is a cautionary tale about wanting to stay away from the dubious dizzy heights of success, another song that shows just how talented this crew is. That mood of an uncompleted relationship is further enunciated in Leave Me to Bleed, which features a strong guest vocal from Siobhan Wilson. These and other unresolved and unrequited factors of an unhappy life reach a conclusion in the final track of the self-explanatory The Bottle Called for Me 

The overall feel draws from an earlier era which blends hillbilly, swing, blues and folk, but sounds like a living, breathing, hard-kicking iteration of a timeless musical form which might only require water, or something stronger, to grow. Daniel Meade and The Flying Mules have made a very fine album that proves again that the roots of this music lie (partly) in these isles and is as much at home here as it would be in Tennessee.  

The Chapin Sisters Today’s Not Yesterday  Lake Bottom

While male sibling harmonies are fairly prevalent, there are not that many sister duos in recent times. Nieces of the late Harry Chapin, the Chapin sisters, Abigail and Lily, are releasing their 4th full length album. Their previous album was a tribute to the Everlys that didn’t get as much attention as the one by Norah Jones and Billie Joe Armstrong.

The Chapins are dressed for the cover with white dresses and cowboy hats, and the album has a certain country-rock flavour, among other styles. What is foremost is their voices, either singing together in harmony or with one or other taking lead vocal - a very attractive sound it has to be said. The production, with Dan Horne and Jesse Lee, makes effective use of those voices over a layered musical setting that includes keyboards, bass and drums  (Horn and Lee respectively)  as well as pedal steel on three tracks and some judicious use of electric guitar here and there. 

The overall feel is of a slightly dreamy county/folk/pop; a sound that insinuates itself and allows the listener the chance to luxuriate in the music. The sisters have written all 12 songs on the album, with one co-write, and they show skill in that area too. Love Come Back, Autumn, Angeleno, Sleep In, and Waiting are all examples of this. The sound is fairly similar throughout and doesn’t vary a great deal, but that enhances the album nature of the music, where one tracks follows in tone from the next without showing up anything that seems out of place. Today is not yesterday, but tomorrow holds a future for these two talented and visually aware sisters and their music.

Underhill Rose The Great Tomorrow  Self-Release

With The Great Tomorrow the trio of Eleanor Underhill, Molly Rose and Sally Williamson release their latest album of their folk/bluegrass/pop and country infused music. It has ten songs written by the individual members, plus one outside track. It is centred on their vocal harmonies. They usual have one of the trio take the lead vocal, generally the song’s writer, with the others adding close harmonies. 

The country connection is emphasised by Matt Smith’s pedal steel guitar, which is featured prominently, as is Nicky Saunders’ violin. The album’s producer, Cruz Contreras, adds guitar and keyboards to the sound. Williamson plays bass with a drummer to create a solid and effective rhythm section. Undersell and Rose add guitar, banjo which along with the upright bass give the core sound it’s folk and bluegrass centre, around which the other instruments help to embellish the particular song’s mood.

Although all three contribute as solo writers, the overall theme of love and relationships blend together. And while the album plays together well, there are a couple of songs that stand out in terms of immediate connection. They include Rest Easy, which has a livelier pace and is given some distinction by a Dobro. Elliott Wolff’s Straight Up is essentially just the band with a drummer and the stripped back arrangement works well. Not Gonna Worry pairs banjo and steel together and gives the two instruments equal prominence.

The Great Tomorrow should have appeal and it expands from what I imagine is the normal live trio’s acoustic setting. There is nothing too demanding here. It is all very understated and that is both a strength and a weakness. However Underhill Rose will continue to grow the fan base to a listening audience. 

Murder Murder From The Stillhouse  Self-Release

Think along the lines of punk-infused old-time music, Springsteen’s Seeger Sessions and a touch of the Pogues and you might have an approximate idea of what this 6 piece band sound like. They are an Ontario-based acoustic band and this is their second album of original songs, the one exception being a spirited version of Guy Clark’s The Last Gunfighter Ballad.

Three of the band share vocal duties, offering different styles, and they all lead the choruses over rambunctious rhythms and dexterous playing. Some of the songs have an immediate affinity with age-old traditional songs, which is a testament to their commitment to bring life into a style that has been around a long time and needs the occasional kick in the arse. Murder Murder are not the only band doing this by any means, but on their own terms, they may be one of the best.

There are some stand-out performances on the album including the environmentally-themed Where the Water Runs Black. Duck Cove is a song about the sailing life and suggests that these guys could easily play a pirate party. They can also calm things down to good effect on the spiritual quest pondered in When the Lord Calls Your Name. Alberta Oil is a song about an oil worker’s journey through a hard working life to death. The Last Gunfighter Ballad sounds in good hands too with Murder Murder making it sound like a song for the ages.

They sound like a band well worth seeing live and they are touring the UK and Ireland in May. If you can’t make it along, then check this album. It has a lot going for it and while it has precedents it has colour and power. Despite the dark name and intent, the band look pretty colourful in the main picture on their website - maybe to balance out the murder ballads they play. Check them out.

Reviews by Paul McGee

Matt Andersen Honest Man Self Release

Matt Andersen is an award-winning Canadian blues guitarist who hails from New Brunswick.  He’s been playing his blend of blue-collar folk, electric blues and roots rock for many years. Honest Man, produced in New York with Commissioner Gordon (Joss Stone, Amy Winehouse, Santana, Quincy Jones), follows the JUNO Award-nominated Weightless and sees Anderson breaking new ground without losing his signature sound. 

Anderson is blessed with a rich gospel/soul voice and here he uses a cast of players that includes Andy Bassford (Toots and the Maytals, Burning Spear, Natalie Merchant), Benji Bouton (Ibibio Sound Machine), Josh David Barret (The Wailers, Lauryn Hill), and Lenny Underwood (Mary J. Blige, Amy Winehouse).  Using beats in the tracking gives the songs a real groove and swing that carries the arrangements along and gives an overall feel of good times had by all in the studio sessions.

The ten songs that make up Honest Man explore both the political and the personal wrapped up by his powerful vocal delivery which is filled with emotion on songs such as Last Surrender and I’m giving In. Let’s Get Back talks about how daily life has changed and the need to be an inclusive and open in society again. Who Are You Listening To? is a call for people to think for themselves and not be swung by a media message. Break Away is a song to remind us that sometimes a change of scenery is all we need. 

With a 2013 European Blues Award, and winning Best Solo Performer at the Memphis Blues Challenge, it appears that the wider world is waking up to Matt Andersen. He has built a fan base through relentless touring and  his reputation has built steadily through word of mouth. This is a fine honest blues record played with style and plenty of heart. It comes recommended and this artist is certainly one to watch.

Gem Andrews Vancouver Self Release

Andrews was born in Liverpool and is currently based in Berlin. This is her second release, which  has its roots in the time she spent in Vancouver learning her craft of song-writing and performance. Vancouver is produced by Martin Stephenson, who also plays and adds harmonies on several tracks. The songs are very much in the folk tradition and conjure up images of lost innocence and the disappointment that life can bring. 

Andrews has assembled a fine band of musicians, with the fiddle playing of Bernard Wright particularly prominent, which adds real colour to the arrangements with some atmospheric melody lines. Her voice is clear and strong as she delivers songs about family memories (Your Father’s Diary), lack of hope (Dead Weight) ageing and role-reversal (Mother Dear), longing (Crimson Tide) and broken relationships (Please Forget Me/ Ten Thousand More). She also covers the McGarrigle’s Heart like a Wheel. The production is airy and bright throughout which gives us an album that is full of excellent interplay and gentle reflections.   

Jason Rosenblatt Wiseman’s Rag Self Release

This is an intersting take on roots, blues and early jazz, featuring producer, pianist, vocalist and harmonica player, Jason Rosenblatt, one of the world’s foremost harmonica innovators. On his latest recording, Wiseman's Rag, Jason returns to his blues roots. With touches of Jelly Roll Morton, Robert Johnson, Paul Butterfield and Professor Longhair, Jason's all original repertoire of blues, jazz and ragtime compositions are gritty but performed with good humour. The players are Jason Rosenblatt (harmonica, piano, vocals, B3), Joe Grass (guitar), Joel Kerr (bass) andEvan Tighe (drums). 

Ken Dunn & Gypsy Starfish The Great Unknown Self Release

Ken Dunn plays with a finger style acoustic guitar technique and performs either solo, with partner Anna Green, or the band Gypsy Starfish.  These songs are firmly based in the folk tradition. This CD won Best Americana Album for February 2016 at the Akademia Music Awards in Los Angeles, and the music is both undemanding and classic in composition. Dunn has been releasing music since the early 1990’s and has built a reputation for original and thoughtful song arrangements. 

Cross of Lorraine has some lovely interplay between Tyler Beckett on fiddle and Keira McArthur on cello, while the harmony vocals of Anna Green are always complementary and fit gently into the melody. Fukushima Nightmares has a nice groove with the guitar of Dean Drouillard supported by the attractive keyboards of Drew McIvor. Equally Shifting Sand has a quiet groove that rewards repeated listening and the title track is a gentle tribute to a performer’s life and is an insight into the price that is paid for the perceived freedom of the open road. Again the fiddle playing of Tyler Beckett is a standout feature as on many other tracks here.  

Tiny Toy Cars Falling, Rust & Bones Self Release

Tiny Toy Cars feature mandolin, violin, banjo, guitar and upright bass, so there is an expectation that bluegrass and old time rhythm will be the order of the day. However, add a high level of instrumental virtuosity from violinist Martin St-Pierre, guitarist Andrew Chute, bassist Brian Burns, plus the drumming of Aaron Guidry and the song writing of Peter Fand ( mandolins and voice) and an unexpected image begins to emerge. 

Traditional West African music mixes with roots based Americana music and lends the songs an intriguing slant. Indie Americana with a twist; this band has members from Cirque du Soleil and display both great song writing and a keen eye for cutting edge arrangements and melodies. Tracks such as Rapture and Hell, Do Everything You Can before you’re Dead, Down on the Bowery and Addicted To You build into a compelling release. Think Mumford and Sons meets Old Crow Medicine Show and Tiny Toy Cars is the next chapter in a genre with roots in traditional music, but with a firm vision for the future.

Text editing by Sandy Harsch

Reviews by Declan Culliton

Various Artists Country to Country (Volume 2) Hump Head

Compilation album in support of the recent Country 2 Country tour of the UK and Ireland (See Lonesome Highway Live Reviews). The album includes twenty tracks by artists who featured on the tour including  household names on the US country circuit for decades Dwight Yoakam Man Of Constant Sorrow and Lori McKenna The Time I’ve Wasted, both still sounding as vital as ever.

The standout tracks on the album are perhaps those contributed by female artists, in particular American Idol winner Carrie Underwood Smoke Break, Ashley Munroe On To Something Good, Miranda Lambert Automatic and Kacey Musgraves with High Time. Chris Stapleton also does his gender proud with Traveller - the title track from his CMA award winning album.

The album certainly highlights the contrast in music styles being marketed today as “country". Purists may very well bemoan the lack of fiddle, banjo and steel guitar on the majority of the offerings on the recordings. The thorny issue of what actually represents true country music today comes to mind when considering a number of the artists represented. Contemporary Country, bordering on Country/Pop in many cases, is well represented by artists such as Luke Bryan, David Nail, Frankie Ballard and Sam Hunt. 

Emerging singer-songwriter Andrew Comb’s offering Nothing To Lose recalls a young Glen Campbell whereas UK duo The Shires contribution All Over Again is closer in sound to The Corrs than country. Also featured on the album are Dierks Bentley, Kip Moore, Little Big Town, Maren Morris, Callaghan, Old Dominion and Maddie & Tae. With twenty artists represented there is something to savour on this album both for purists and for the punter that prefers their country music a tad sugar-coated.

Matt Patershuk  I Was So Fond Of You  Black Hen

There appears to be an endless supply of hugely talented Canadian singer-songwriters emerging in recent years. Ryan Boldt, Jim Bryson, Kathleen Edwards, Kendal Carson, Luke Doucet, Frazey Forde, immediately come to mind in this context, artists unfortunately unlikely to achieve the commercial recognition they richly deserve. Matt Patershuk, on the basis of this delightful offering, is yet another Canadian to richly impress.

I Was So Fond Of You follows Patershuk’s debut, the Western Canada Music Awards nominated Outside the Lights of Town released in 2013. This album is a collection of eleven songs, in the main dedicated to his sister Clare, tragically killed by a drunk driver in 2013. It’s an album that has the listener immediately seeking out the lyrics to some beautifully written songs from the understated title track to the equally moving and saddening Prettiest Ones.

Equally impressive is the quality of the musicianship throughout. Fiddle, banjo, accordion, mandolin and guitar are contributed by Nashville resident and one of America’s finest, Fats Kaplin. Gary Craig adds drums and percussion, with backing vocals, to beautiful effect, by Ana Egge, an extremely talented singer-songwriter in her own right. The album was produced by Juno Award Winner Steve Dawson who also adds some elegant steel guitar throughout and was recorded at Dawson’s Henhouse Studio in Nashville 

Sounding decades beyond his years (elder statesmen Guy Clark and Jerry Jeff Walker come to mind) Patershuk’s baritone vocals throughout cannot be described as melodic but are controlled, disciplined and magically suited to his lyrics. Melancholy may be the overriding tone of the album yet it’s not without humour.  Pep The Cat Murdering Dog tells the tale of Pep the Labrador sentenced to life without parole by a State Governor for killing his wife’s cat and Burnin’ the Candle is straight down the middle honky tonk. 

Despite these lighter moments it is the material dealing with its core subject that remain with the listener. The previously mentioned and understated title track, the wonderful Tennessee Warrior ( his lines weren’t straight but his heart was true, papa said girl he was meant for you) relating to a horse owned by Patershuk’s sister and the evocative Prettiest Ones standing out in particular. 

Noteworthy also is the striking packaging and artwork on I Was So Fond Of You which is better described as a sharing of thoughts by Patershuk than simply an album. Highly recommended indeed.

Shane Joyce An Introduction Self Release

Briefly fleeing the nest from his duties as lead singer and frontman with The Midnight Union Band, this five track mini-album emphasises the song writing ability of Joyce, whose career kicked off not so many years ago busking on the streets of Kilkenny.

Making no apologies for his love in particular of the heavyweight songwriters Dylan, Cohen and Van Morrison the main focus on the five songs  is on the lyric with the vocal always out in  front in the recordings. Opening track Blame tells of unrequited and lost love in Leonard Cohen fashion with a simple hum along chorus. The Same Old Song is a modern day protest song (‘’ pretty soon they will tax you just for living in your skin’’) a reflection, written from the heart, of the profound difficulties for survival in an austerity driven environment 

Those Who Pay The Rent, the absolute  standout track on the album and also released as a single by Joyce last year, is a beautifully constructed piece of music, perfectly paced an including some heavenly  harmonies aided  by Jan Ramsbottom. Again, very obviously, Leonard Cohen influenced but also delivered in an individualistic style quite recognisable from Joyces’ work with The Midnight Union Band. 

Peter Flynn and John Wallace from The Midnight Union Band contribute guitar, bass, piano and drums with acoustic guitar on the album, with harmonica and Hammond organ from Joyce. 

Where Joyce particularly excels is in his live performances as punters who have enjoyed The Midnight Union Band gigs will be aware of.  He is a confident frontman, who possesses the required intensity and natural ability to immediately engage his audience - not always an easy task. I certainly look forward to hearing the songs from this most impressive debut solo effort live in the near future and if he can continue to create music as imposing as Those Who Pay The Rent then the sky is the limit for this young man.

Teddy Thompson & Kelly Jones Little Windows Cooking Vinyl

What do you get when you mix UK music royalty with Californian power pop? An outstanding result on the basis of this delightful collaboration between Teddy Thompson and Kelly Jones. The combined vocals on all ten original compositions are heavenly with the lead melodies being shared between both artists.  

Interestingly only one of the songs clocks in at over three minutes and recalls an era when such beautifully countrified rock and roll music was aired regularly on daytime radio performed by musical dignitaries such as the Everly Brothers, Sam Cooke, Buddy Holly and Roy Orbison. Thompson and Jones first sang together at LA’s Club Largo in 2011, performing a George Jones song and sowing the seeds for Little Windows. The songs were subsequently written and developed while Jones resided in LA and Thompson in New York.

Having recorded five solo albums to date Thompson, the son of the legendary Richard and Linda Thompson, Little Windows is the first collaborative venture that Thompson has pursued, following in the same vein in terms of two part vocal harmonies as those perfected by his parents and indeed by his sister Kami and her husband James Walbourne (The Rails).

Jones, for her part, has recorded with Daniel Lanois  Buddy Miller and Brian Blade during her musical career which has seen her move from her childhood residence on a Washington horse farm to Nashville via Manhattan and finally to LA where she presently lives. 

The collection of musicians who contribute are household names within roots music circles and  include guitarist Steve Elliot, Ryan Adams keyboard player Daniel Clarke, Davey Farragher of Cracker, John Hiatt and The Imposters fame on bass and Pete Thomas of The Attractions (Elvis Costello) on drums. The album was recorded live to an analog 16 track tape machine by Mike Viola. Linda Thompson acted as executive producer.

Stand out tracks are the opener Never Knew You Loved Me Too, which would hold its own on any Everly Brothers album, Don’t Remind Me which enters Emmylou and Gram sacred ground and Make A Wish On Me the highlight being some captivating keyboard playing by Daniel Clarke.

At 26 minutes the album is regrettably on the short side but given the absolute quality on offer sometimes less is more.


Reviews by Stephen Rapid

Dave Insley 'Just the Way That I Am'  Self Release

David Insley is a man who loves the sounds and imagery of country music, no doubt from his days growing up in Arizona. He has a long history of making roots music, including stints with cowpunk band Chaingang and the more traditional slant of The Trophy Husbands. In recent times Insley has lived in Austin and plays a regular Saturday night gig there at the White Horse Saloon. He has released three previous albums under his own name that including his 2005 debut Call Me Lonesome. Now comes his latest release Just the Way That I Am and it is a career peak. As well as his regular band, the Careless Smokers, he has gathered some friends who enhance the songs with their strong contributions. These include Rick Shea, Kelly Willis, Elizabeth McQueen, Redd Volkaert, Danny B. Harvey and Dale Watson.

Still, it is Insley’s show, with his voice with, its hint of Willie Nelson, and his songs front and centre. The songs are a mix of the classic county themes; lonesome heartbreak, the appreciation of real love and its attributes and the temporary anaesthetising effects of alcohol. The titles pretty much sum up some of these feelings: Drinkin’ Wine and Staring at the Phone;  Win, Win Situation For Loser;  Call Me If You Ever Change Your Mind; No One to Come Home To and We’re All Together Because of You. Most of these are songs written by Insley but on a couple he has co-written, one with Rosie Flores and another with Rick Shea and Paul Lacques. Adding to the basic guitar, drum and bass core, Insley employs brass effectively with Matt Hubbard adding a lot to Drinkin’ Wine and Staring at the Phone with his trombone and piano interludes. Later on Arizona, Territory, 1904 Jimmy Shortell adds depth with trumpet and accordion accompaniment to the tale of two brothers who took opposite directions in life. Shortell’s trumpet also adds to Dead and Gon,e with it’s opening funereal melody. Elsewhere fiddle and pedal steel segments underline the traditional aspects of Insley’s music.

For all that Insley is no retro artist, he plays regularly and he continues to explore his muse without stepping too far outside of recognizable country music. Insley, as a family, seems to play fairly close to home and his Saturday night gigs sound like a real treat. Those who have come across Insley before will delight in this latest addition to his recorded output. Those who are coming to him for a first time should enjoy this well packaged album which puts a lot of releases on major labels to shame. It is not really going to appeal to those who are in thrall to the current chart acts, rather those who appreciate good Americana music and playing allied to some thoughtful and often humourous lyrics will see that Insley being himself is just the way we like him.

Dori Freeman 'Dori Freeman'  Free Dirt 

This is an engaging folk-country debut from a woman from the small town of Galax, Virginia. On the strength of hearing Freeman via Facebook, fellow singer/songwriter Teddy Thompson agreed to produce the album. Thompson made an excellent country album a while back and he is known for his love of the form. The album was recorded in New York with some noted musicians from the area, including guitarist and pedal steel player Jon Graboff with a rhythm section of Jeff Hill on bass and Rob Walbourne on drums and percussion. Erik Deutsch adds occasional keyboards. The core here though, is voice and guitar with subtle additional playing. For instance, there is a full band on the closing song Still a Child, yet it is played with a subtle grace that underscores the sentiment of the songs and allows Freeman’s voice to ring true. And that voice is clear and alluring and suggests something special. The opening track You Say, states that from the off with just a bass guitar under Freeman solo. Where I Stood alludes to the brother harmonies of yore, as Thompson joins with her to create a strong vocal presence. The most underplayed song here is Ain’t Nobody, that has the feel of Sixteen Tons ; we hear just the sound Freeman’s voice and snapping fingers. 

Elsewhere, as on Go on Lovin’, the feel is that of a classic traditional country song, with piano and steel an essential part of the song’s broken heart. Tell Me is also a forceful song that insinuates itself into the memory with its chorus and keyboard motif. Freeman is a songwriter who is already accomplished, and she should only get better with time and more life experience. Not that these songs are without depth as Ain’t Nobody considers the nature of hard work and those who toil in a factory, in a prison or at the kitchen sink without either recognition or proper compensation. So the words and voice are integral but there are also special which is why I have returned to this album more often than I have to most. 

There are deep roots here and also inspirations from doo-wop, swing and 60’s pop. The end result is a sound that incorporates all of these into something that sounds organic and natural for Freeman. This is the sound of someone who understands that life can offer a lot, but that it also has a darker side which equally needs to be examined. This is an outstanding start, one which deserves to be heard and hopefully will be. Free Dirt, her label, have packaged the album well and given us a release that includes the lyrics. These show how an album can be worth much more than just a download of one or two songs. This is a debut worth owning.  

Robbie Fulks 'Upland Stories' Bloodshot

Lately Robbie Fulks had moved towards more acoustic musical settings and while that is largely true here, there are some of the flavours of his earlier work with Bloodshot Records, the label who released some of his earliest albums. The players on Upland Stories include bassist Todd Phillips who has worked with David Grisman, Jenny Scheinman on violin, guitarist Rob Gjersoe as well as multi-instrumentalist Fats Kaplin. 

Fulks possesses a singular voice that is immediately recognisable. He is an adept songwriter too, as the opening song Alabama at Night and the later, A Miracle, attest. The first is written from the viewpoint of James Agee, the noted journalist who, with the photographer Walker Evans, captured the lives of migrants and sharecroppers in the late 30s in the South; the second takes a similar theme and angle in its direction.

There are also songs that are tender such as Sarah Jane, others such as Aunt Peg’s New Old Man and Katy Kay (about a cute girl who, if she wasn’t loved, would probably have to be shot!) are lighter and show a humorous side. It is an album full of character and characters. People you can identify with and through Fulks’ words gain insights into their lives. That is the mark of a storyteller who understands his craft. Folks can bring these songs to life in their most natural setting of just voice and guitar or with a fuller group behind him. Needed is the former, while the version of Baby Rocked Her Dolly has a full band including steel which gives it additional depth.

The banjo and fiddle of America is a Hard Religion give the song a harder edge that the lyrics need to give it the feel of earlier times and of current time too. 

Overall Fulks delivers these songs with a softer edge, one that is not as strident as his earlier Bloodshot albums. Robbie Fulks has a devoted following for his music and Upland Stories won’t disappoint those who have followed his music from the insurgent days to the more considered and less frantic songs that are featured here.

Nate Currin 'The Madman and the Poet' Archaic Cannon

For his fourth album Georgia native Nate Currin has recorded in Nashville with producer Matthew Odmark and it makes its mark from the get go with the immediate appeal of the overall sound. This is something that in the past would have been labeled alt-country. It is essentially a singer/songwriter record built around Currin’s concept song cycle and his voice, both of which are good. The album is divided into sections, with the first 6 songs under the heading of The Madman. These are more roots rock with hints of blues which lend a feeling of darkness with songs such as Another Love Song, which talks of upbringing and good and evil. City of Angels considers belief. It is an uptempo song with an insistent chorus that is effective in its catchiness. That contrast with a slower building mood of the Ballad of a Horse Thief which is equally compelling in its more restrained delivery which, like the story itself, builds in intensity. 

The title track starts the second set of songs under the overall theme of The Poet. These songs are all based on a more acoustic foundation, but while they are lighter in overall sound, they are not without a certain sense of melancholy. The final song Let Grace Fall Down on Me is call for forgiveness that contrasts Currin’s vocal with that of Molly Parden (who with Audrey Assad and Ryan Horne add vocal harmony on several tracks), over a cello and acoustic guitar that underline the poignancy of the song. We All Need a Love Sometimes picks up the pace and delivers a universal need. Ship with No Sea is summed up by the line “without you, I’m a ship with no sea”. Throughout the assembled musicians play guitars of acoustic, electric, baritone, lap and pedal steel varieties, with keyboards, bass, drums and strings adding depth and texture to the songs that brings them to full flower.

I had not heard of Currin before this album, but on the strength of The Madman and the Poet, he is an artist well worth discovering. This is something that becomes apparent fairly quickly and in this case Currin certainly gains approval. This is a thoughtful, well recorded and performed album that is packaged in a way that makes it a testimony to an artist caring about his work as a lasting contribution, rather than an exercise in economy and disposability. It was funded by those who believe in him and it shows that there are many who still want and believe in beautifully crafted musical endeavours.

The Waco Brothers 'Going Down in History' Bloodshot

 The first line of the opening song DIYBYOB is “this is the first track from the last album” and so it heralds the (possibly) final release from the Waco Brothers, the insurgent country band who mixed a sense of punk rock urgency with their country leanings. Indeed they would have made an reasonably appropriate opening act for Eric Church. The influences here are as much Clash as Cash, but also take in some garage and glam rock along the way, as well as a little of the 60s mod beat with a cover of the Small Faces’ classic All or Nothing which is as much a tribute to that band’s keyboard player, the late, Ian McLagan as anything. 

The band sounded spirited and energised on this, their 12th (or so) album since 1995. They feature a bunch of expats such as Jon Langford, Alan Doughty and Tracy Dear alongside Joe Camarillo and Deano to make up the current line-up. The ten track set never lets go of their angry agenda, summed top by the credo that they have “had about enough” (Had Enough). They mix their political views with a more personal sense of close-to-the-edge living.

And the Waco’s solid fan base will find themselves rockin’ along to the wolfman howl of Lucky Fool as they will to the title track, as they propose that you need to “bite the hand that feeds you.” If this is their final will and testament, it is one of strength and snarl and one that sums up the intent and nature of the band.

The Blazing Zoos 'Chocks Away' Corinthia

This album shares its title with another album by a London band who dabbled in country. The Kursaal Flyers album of that title was released in 1975 and now some 40 plus years later The Blazing Zoos take on country is also imbued with some humorous intent. For instance Still Up at Five begins with “It’s four in the morning and I’m listening to Four In The Morning.” Mentioning the Faron Young classic, it also recalls the early songs of Hank Wangford. In other words the music is done with a tongue-in-cheek reverence that raises a smile.

The songs are largely from the pen of guitarist/vocalist Andrew Mueller. Bass guitarist Lara Pattison adds harmonies and lead vocals on Brighter with Your Love. The two remaining members Jeremy Jones and Gen Matthews (guitar, keyboard and drums) are joined by guests Neil Bob Herd on steel guitar and Paul Fitzgerald on banjo. All bring skill to the proceedings and the whole thing is good fun, but not to be taken too seriously given the lyrical themes and the wonderful Ed “Big Daddy” Roth illustration on the sleeve. 

Mueller is a well know writer. One of his subjects is writing about rock and related music, so it is interesting that his occasional nighttime pastime is playing country music. In Country Drinking Song he set the record straight by admitting that “I don’t wear a hat, I can’t ride a horse, I’ve never been in jail (but then these days who does.)”. It’s just one of those songs that testifies to a love of country music without ever living a life that is associated with the cliched ‘supposed’ lifestyle. None of that matters if you enjoy poking at the form on this, the band’s second album. However there is no doubting that the collected members of The Blazing Zoos have a few Faron Young, Hank Williams and Willie Nelson albums in their collective collections.

Taken in the right spirit this is a foot-tapping and enjoyable slice of country roots rockin’ that entertains as much as it amuses. Those with fond memories of Mr. Wangford’s musical endeavours (which went from outright laughing up a musical note embroidered sleeve to something more serious in time) will thoroughly enjoy this. Likewise the Zoos may well shift focus in time and use their talents to something more akin to tribulations of the heart than cover tributes. For now Chocks Away  represents a good night out and diverting night in that is preferable to some of the Music Row produced music where the joke is on us.

 

 

Reviews by Declan Culliton

 

 

The Paul Benjamin Band 'Sneaker' Horton 

Some albums take a few listens to kick in, others hit the spot on first listen. Sneaker by The Paul Benjamin Band certainly inhabits the latter territory. The Paul Benjamin Band are a hard working touring band, renowned for the quality of their live shows. They have, without doubt, recreated that live sound with an album that scarcely contains a weak moment. Sneaker is the band's second album following their self-titled debut released in 2010.

Recorded at Fellowship Hall Sound in Little Rock Arkansas and unapologetically recalling the Tulsa sound of the mid 70’s, much of the album brings to mind in particular the work of the legendary JJ Cale and also of Leon Russell, although delivered in overdrive rather than Cale’s customary laid back style.

Estoy Loco positively grooves along with a jazzy rock feel, Ball and Chain rocks along with slick guitar licks from Benjamin and formidable pedal steel from Jesse Aycock (also a member of Hard Working Americans). Auburn Road slows the pace down beautifully, evidence of the versatility of Benjamin. Monticello Honeymoon drifts along sublimely and includes some wonderful piano playing by Jeff Newsome complimenting Benjamin’s guitar riffs.

Sneaker, sounding both fresh and nostalgic in equal measures, is an album that I’d happily slip in to the car CD player for a summer road trip, windows down and volume up and enjoy this refreshing mix of rockabilly, country, rock and roll and blues.

Franc Cinelli 'The Marvel Age' Song Circle

Recorded at Song Circle Studios, London The Marvel Age was written by Cinelli over a two year period while on the road touring the UK, USA and his native Italy. Having engaged Danton Supple (Morrissey, Coldplay) to produce his debut solo album I Have Not Yet Begun The Fight, Cinelli has taken the decision to record and produce The Marvel Age himself together with the vocal, guitar, keyboard and harmonica duties. Laurence Saywood plays bass and Drew Manley is on drums and vibraphone.

Cinelli cites his musical influences being his mother’s vinyl collection which included Springsteen, The Police, Dire Straits, Pink Floyd and Bob Marley. Whatever about the other artists noted, the influence of Springsteen is particularly recognisable on Blindsided, a delightful song accompanied only by Cinelli on piano.

Breaker, the most convincing and strongest track on the album, is undoubtedly Tom Petty territory with a powerful driving guitar riff throughout. In contrast Blue is a delightful love ballad and the closing track Leave Here Running, with its spoken lyric is full of promise, optimism and rediscovery that is "drawn from life with open arms, I welcome in The Marvel Age."

Kreg Viesselman ‘To The Mountain’  Continental Song City

Kreg Viesselman earlier work gained him a reputation as a singer songwriter capable of creating sparse yet beautifully atmospheric music, delivered in his trade mark grizzled and craggy vocal tone. His albums demanded and rewarded repeated listening, none more so than his self-titled album released in 2003 which resulted in him sharing the stage with noted admirer Taj Mahal.

The Minnesota born Viesselham, while residing in Norway, released two further albums The Pull (2006) and If You Lose Your Light (2012) with a similarly stripped-back arrangement before commencing work the same year on To The Mountain which took nearly four years from conception to release and finds the artist enticing the listener down an altogether more upbeat journey than his previous efforts.

Much of the credit for the diversion is the introduction of Bjarne Stensli as producer whose influence appears to have rejuvenated Viesselman and encouraged a more fuller and accessible sound on the album.

Having written the songs in draft format he further developed them by spending a week with his band in a remote cabin in Norway where the final versions were pieced together before being further honed on a UK tour in 2014 to bring the proposed material before a live audience.

The material has most definite leanings towards UK folk both musically and lyrically, understandably painting pictures of Scandinavian and British landscapes on many of the eleven tracks. The opening track Garland could have been penned by Richard Thompson and The Disciples Song (Summer Leaves), a beautiful piece of music, would have comfortably adorned any early 70’s Caravan album. Similarly in the Summer, in Oslo succeeds in evoking music from that era.

Many artist are currently recording music heavily influenced by UK Folk, some more successfully than others, Viesselman undisputedly does the genre justice with this offering.

Danny Barnes ‘Got Myself Together (Ten Years Later)’  Continental Song City 

Few, if any musicians occupy the same territory as Danny Barnes. Often criticised for not taking himself seriously enough, the Austin born banjo picker and talented singer songwriter has flitted from solo recordings to forming the suitably named bands The Bad Livers and Danny Barnes and The Old Codgers, to several collaborations with noted artists such as Tim O’Brien and Dave Matthews. Barnes also tours as part of Robert Earl Keen and Bill Frisell‘s bands. Robert Earl Keen says of Barnes "I’ve said many times that he is the world’s greatest banjo player."

Got Myself Together (Ten Years Later) sees Barnes returning to possibly his strongest recording Get Myself Together which was released in 2006, an album that lyrically entered doom laden territory with tales of alcoholism, drug addiction, troubled existences, wasted romances and opportunities lost, all delivered with a certain degree of tongue in cheek attitude. The primary motivator in revisiting the album was the amount of fan mail received by Barnes in relation to the album which is unavailable as a result of the record label going out of business.

Rather than offer a richer and fuller recreation of the original album Barnes has headed in the opposite direction and recorded versions of the songs which to the listener might sound to be original demos or the material in its infancy prior to the final mix. Recorded in his kitchen with all instruments played by Barnes, he confesses that his technical ability as a musician is in a better place now that ten years ago, another reason for the ‘bare to the bones’ approach to the songs.

Quirky lyrics and impeccable picking dominate the album. Titles such as Get Me Out Of Jail, a traditional drunkards lament, Rat’s Ass and Big Girl Blues are timeless and depict scenes containing banjos, dungarees, front porches and jugs being passed around.

Reviews by Stephen Rapid

David Ramirez ‘Fables’ Thirty Tigers

The latest album from the troubadour is full of his rich baritone voice and sweet pedal steel guitar. A mix that emphasises his sense of aloneness and understanding of how the nature of his working life allows little in the way of a personal and private life. There is a certain romance in that life but it is one that creates a certain way of thinking (and acting). It also leads, in time, to a growth in terms of maturing and his understanding of himself and those he interacts with.

These ten songs need time to get truly acquainted with but reward that perseverance. The album opens with Communion, a song that hopes for the development of a relationship, which might end up with participants finding a space of mutual consent and closeness. Sonically you are immediately immersed in the textured guitar of producer Noah Gunderson (an artist in his own right who recently released his album Carry The Ghost) and the pedal steel guitar of either Greg Leisz or Brian Douglas Phillips. These sounds are played over the solid foundation of the rhythm section of Micah Simler and Jonny Gundersen. Abby Gunderson also joins the musician line-up on violin and cello. Something of a family affair for the Gunderson’s then.

The songs have a context that moves from track to track evoking a selection of feelings that are often melancholy or morose in attitude, while at the same time being uplifting by dint of the overall musical conviction in which they are rendered. Harder To Lie, Rock And A Hard Place and Ball & Chain - the latter considers the life of a traveling independent musician - are all titles that give clues to the lyrical themes being expressed. Despite these downbeat drifts, a song like That Ain’t Love has a positive musical spirit that centres around a memorable chorus that will soon have you singing along. There are other songs that are more up-tempo but still hold some hard thoughts like with Hold On where the subject seeks something, however small, to hold on as he walks the line between “cocaine and communion wine.”

This album will take time to bring out the best in these downbeat songs and dissolute attitudes but that does not take away from a sympathetic production, sterling playing and a voice that has the ring of truth. That, for many lives, is not easy as we create our own fables of existence and entertainment.

John Moreland ‘In The Throes’ At The Helm

This is Moreland’s debut album, now available in these parts, via At The Helm. It comes as his recentl (and reviewed here) U.S album High On Tulsa Heat, also hit the shelves. This album was also produced by Moreland himself and again features his talents as a multi-instrumentalist on many tracks. He is also joined on three tracks by an additional pianist, bass and drummer and pedal steel player. As with his current album this shows the strengths that Moreland has as a songwriter. One who bares his soul in a fairly relentless but open and honest description of emotional pain.

Nobody Gives A Damn About Songs Anymore has a pedal steel threaded through its melodic heart and a rumination of a songwriter existing on the fringes of indie land Americana. As a writer he is not about the simple verse and chorus patterns of many a chart chasing song. These songs are wordy and worthy and the simple setting of some, largely just guitar and voice based, like 3:59 AM or Blacklist, allows them to take centre stage. Many will find that they bear a similarity with the more stripped back songs of Bruce Springsteen in their depiction of life’s rougher edges and the characters who try to survive in such circumstances. Though, equally, he can up the tempo if not the honest brutality on a song as in Oh Julia.

In that respect, there is little of the light relief or band-backed big choruses that you would find in much of Springsteen’s more crowd pleasing music. But then again maybe Moreland isn’t looking for that kind of recognition at this point of time. He has played, produced and written these songs so presumably this is the way he wants them to sound. That is something you, as listener, will either find favour with or simply not particularly want to share space with.

John Moreland is from Tulsa and proud of the fact judging from the fact he has Oklahoma tattooed on his knuckles. He is no pretty boy with a pop upbringing, rather he came up through the punk and hard-core scenes. Something that, no doubt, is part of his no compromise approach to how he makes his music. That music has already appeared in shows like Sons Of Anarchy and it is easy to see how it fits that show. He is not without his fans and admirers and his most recent albums are testament to his talent. In The Throes is not for everyone and should be ignored by those who like their music light. For those who like more light and shade, who give a damn about songs, they should take John Moreland as seriously as he does.

Austin Lucas ‘Between The Moon And The Midwest’ At The Helm

Unbroken Hearts, the song that opens Austin Lucas’ third album, starts with some ambient sound before he sings the lines “I’ve been told to walk away nearly every time I make an album.” Given that this album was reportedly originally done for but rejected by his former label New West,underscores the tedious nature of making music either as an independent artist or one signed to a major label. The title of the album is a line from the song about how dreams and ambitions can be so easily crushed. About how Lucas feels beaten but has an unbroken heart for his music.

Lucas worked with Joey Kneiser on the album (who recently released his own album The Wildness) which has the feel of some of the new traditionalists of the late 80s. Sensible songs that are fuelled by steel guitar and a pinch of the psychedelic stylings associated with an even earlier decade of country-rock. The promo copy supplied has no credits for the musicians involved but from reading online it would seem that helping out are Cory Branan, John Moreland and Lydia Loveless dueting on Wrong Side Of The Dream and presumably on the other songs where female backing vocals also appear. There are many other strong songs here such as Pray For Rain, The Flame and Call The Doctor wherein the protagonist feels that the doctor, the preacher and even higher powers won’t be able help him.

Lucas is another artist who has a punk rock background and uses that platform and directness to inform his writing. The playing is strong with guitar, piano and steel over a solid and driving rhythm section on a set of songs that vary tempos and emotions. For instance, Next To You is a mid-paced song, while The Flame turns up the heat, contrasting again with the acoustic and stripped back essence of William. All of which make for a satisfying album. The latest in a long line of recordings that have won him fans and friends. That Lucas has not sustained his deal with one of the more established labels may mean that recognition in a wider context may be harder. Equally his music is perhaps better placed with a label that believes in him as much as he, obviously, believes in his music. Between The Moon And The Midwest is an album deserving of attention and is solidly within the boundaries of alt-country broader pastures. Lucas possesses a voice that is right for these times.

Cale Tyson ‘Careless Soul’ Clubhouse

Lauded as one of ten country stars you need to know by Rolling Stone the Nashville based, Texas-born singer/ songwriter is about to release his debut album Careless Soul, which was recorded  at the legendary Fame Studios in Muscle Shoals. He previously released two EPs in the States which were combined for release in the UK by Clubhouse Records. Fame Studios has lately attracted some contemporary country artists through its doors seeking to combine the essence of country storytelling with some soulful spiced ingredients.

Producer Michael Rinne has gathered together a selection of players from Nashville alongside renowned musician like Dave Hood, long associated with the Fame Studio. The Music City players include Skyler Wilson, Jeremy Fetzer from Steelism and some players who are set to accompany him on his upcoming tour of these isles - Smoking’ Brett Resnick on steel guitar alongside Peter Lindberg. Jordan Leaning was the man responsible for the string and horn arrangements

The music is imbued with a relaxed, southern vibe throughout but especially for the first three tracks with rolling brass and smooth backing vocals. Easy then kicks up the tempo and gets a bit more rowdy with some twangy guitar that leans towards a hint of funk too. Travelling Man is a steel guitar infused country ballad that highlights the expressive nature of Tyson’s voice. The addition of strings and horns adds a new dimension to his work and sounds like a big step forward in many ways. There are no writing credits on the promo pre-release so I assume that they are original songs though Pain In My Heart sounds not unlike the Otis Redding song of the same name. Things get more honky-tonk orientated then with Railroad Blues. Dark Dark sounds like a second cousin to the song Dark Moon while High Lonesome Hill has the feel of a traditional song that could work in a bluegrass treatment but is here inhabited by the soul of Hank Williams Sr.

Piano and brass then give Gonna Love A Woman a certain jaunty stance while Pain Reprise is a short instrumental version of Pain In My Heart. The album closes with another big ballad on which Tyson again shines with an emotive vocal performance. The song opens with strings then slowly builds with acoustic guitar and steel guitar. Like the other songs here the theme is of a love that is lost, found or strayed. Songs that are easy to understand and empathize with their universality and with the overall connnectiveness of the production and performances here; that further underscore why Cale Tyson is being picked as a name to watch for in country music circles in a way that makes the music thoroughly progressive with resorting to making it into with rap, pop or light weight faux metal. Tyson on this showing is packing a heavyweight punch.

Reviews by Paul McGee

The Wainwright Sisters 'Songs in the Dark' PIAS

Sixteen tracks spread over the best part of fifty minutes heralds the first collaboration between half-sisters Martha Wainwright and Lucy Wainwright Roche. There are five lullabies that their respective mothers,  Kate McGarrigle and Suzzy Roche, sang to them as children, plus songs by Townes van Zandt, Richard Thompson, Woody Guthrie, Jimmie Rogers, and a few traditional tunes (Long Lankin / All the Pretty Horses / Go Tell Aunt Rhody). Their shared father Loudon Wainwright III enjoys international recognition and his relative skills as a father have been chronicled elsewhere by both extended family members and media alike.

The tracks that have been described as "dark, mysterious, and beautiful" interpretations of songs.

El Condor Pasa, a musical composition from Peru and made popular by Simon & Garfunkel on their Bridge over Troubled Water record is included and there a couple of songs by Loudon and Terre Roche (Screaming Issue / Runs in the Family). Two songs, Lullaby and Lullaby for a Doll, were written by Wainwright III and Kate McGarrigle respectively.

So, the family features quite predominantly throughout and the stamp of the past is carried with great aplomb by the two main performers. Their vocal harmonies are beautifully intertwined into the simple song arrangements and melodies.

Baby Rocking Medley was written by Rosalie Sorrels and is a deliciously wry, tongue-in-cheek piece about the plight of babies in the mind of what can only be described as a twisted imaginary mid-wife.

End of the Rainbow by Richard Thompson is altogether a far darker inclusion with its refrain of ‘There’s nothing at the end of the rainbow; there’s nothing to grow up for anymore’.

Not a release that everybody will naturally gravitate towards but the understated playing and lovely harmony singing are very appealing. Quirky, different and speckled with some moments of magic; a little like the family history. 

Wendy Webb 'This is the Moment' Spooky Moon

This is the fifth release from Wendy Webb, a native of Iowa who now resides in Florida. She is a very accomplished singer-songwriter and her wonderfully rich voice contains tones reminiscent of both Carole King and Joni Mitchell. The song arrangements are very much in a contemporary Folk style and are filled with superb playing, excellent melody and rhythm.

She has elements of jazz and blues incorporated into the rich production by Danny Morgan and John McLane, which is bright and full of space for the musicians to stretch their talents. The co-producers also play on the eleven songs here and cover a diverse range of instruments including guitars, horns, organ, strings, and percussion. They are joined by Jay Heavilin (acoustic bass) and Wendy  herself playing piano and acoustic guitar.

The sweet, moody flow of tracks like My Beating Heart, Homespun, All the Boys on Saturday and I Will Remember set the atmosphere into one of gentle seduction and a knowing empathy with the melting pot of life.

Big Blue Sky is her road song about striking out for the horizon and letting life unfold along the way. Long Day in the Sun closes the record in fine style with the lines; ‘But I believe in the miracle of my life; loving endlessly, I’m forever free’. This is a fine record and the mark of a gifted, mature and talented artist.    

Silver Shoes 'Another Time Around' Mid Ear

Silver Shoes is comprised of Maureen Finlon (vocals, acoustic guitar) and John Finnigan (vocals, accordion, acoustic guitar, harmonica). For this release they are joined by Mead Turner (fiddle, harmony vocals) and guests Rick Richards (drums, percussion), Don Richmond (acoustic guitar, banjo, mandolin, weisseborn) and Jack Saunders (acoustic guitar, banjo, resonator, upright bass, harmony vocals).

Together they make a very organic sound and these eleven songs skip along, filled with plenty of fine interplay and harmony singing. The fiddle is high in the mix and adds some lovely melody lines to many of the tracks.

Call it folk-rock or alt-country, it doesn’t really matter what label you use, the overall feel is very evocative and captures simplicity in the arrangements that seems timeless. Sunrise on the Canyon is an instrumental tune and Gibson Land, Full Circle and You’re the One That I Need, have a distinct Bluegrass groove. Mother Nature’s Son (Lennon/McCartney), I’ll Be Here In the Morning (Townes Van Zandt), Tennessee Blues  (Bobby Charles)are excellent cover versions that Silver Shoes make their own and the final Stories We Could Tell(John Sebastian) takes the wheel full circle with a gentle strum and the image of back-porch gatherings. A very pleasing release and full of excellent moments in these well-chosen songs.  

Mark Davis and the Inklings 'Because There’s Nothing Outside' Bitemark

A resident of San Luis Obispo, California, this musician has 2 previous releases that have gained him a reputation as a contemporary Folk artist with a sense of reflective calm in his tunes.

This is a gentle walk through 10 tracks that have religious undertones and a sense of self searching. Mark sings with a sweet tone not unlike Neil Finn in places and the understated playing fits perfectly with these reflective mood pieces.

Your Photograph is a song about the impermanence of time and The Ground is a relationship song that fits snugly alongside Only You, another look at love, complete with string section and rising melody. Black Cloud is a track that questions our ability to embrace life and get outside ourselves. The final track Untitled brings a quiet end to affairs with soft stings and a sense of time lost in the melody. A very pleasant listen.

Reviews by Stephen Rapid

Tim Houlihan   ‘Another Orion’   Self Release

This Minneapolis, Minnesota based artist has released a debut album that has shades of The Eagles and Crosby Stills and Nash in the overall feel. Though it is released under Houlihan’s name, he is joined by his band throughout, who bring a more organic sound to the proceedings. They are featured in a group photo on the cover and are Todd Lester on drums, Paul Madsen on bass and guitarist Jon James Benson. They are joined by some guests, notably producer Kevin Bowe who is a interesting artist in his own right, recording with his band the Okemah Prophets.  Other guests include vocalists Sarah Morris and keyboard player Charlie Peterson. All in all they deliver a full, warm sounding, non-edgy, easy-to-like set of original songs.

Houlihan has composed all the songs, with a couple of co-writes, and they cover a range of tempos and moods to good effect. Producer Bowe also plays guitar and does programming on a number of tracks and generally makes sure to get the best from the songs. There is the melodic drive of the 12 string electric guitar driven Beneath The Surface Of The Well, together with the rockier takes of What’s Gonna Happen To Me and Fair Retreat. Guitars are fairly fundamental to the overall sound along with Houlihan’s confident lead vocals and the vocal harmonies which support him. All are executed with an understanding of the songs and give them their heart and soul.

There isn’t a duff track among the ten featured and while there is no one immediate stand-out there is a constancy to the album that makes it largely work in context. Nothing you have not heard before but equally for the same reasons, one that is comfortable without ever being bland. An album where the songs grow with greater familiarity and soon sound like some old friends.

John Moreland   ‘High On Tulsa Heat’   Thirty Tigers

A writer whose songs have some real depth and (broken) heart. This is Moreland’s second album after his debut, In The Throes. Moreland has again produced this set of songs and there is little gloss or application of the ‘big sound’ to the recording. Many of the songs are stripped back in instrumentation which brings them down to the essence of Moreland’s words, guitar and voice. With his leaden grey sky of a voice for the ages these songs seem filled with hardship and hard luck. That voice however is a deep and resonant vehicle, one that changes little from song to song. The arrangements are equally simple and direct - yet effective. Having said that its appeal may be limited by a certain sameness of the tempo and mood. There is little relief over the ten songs.

But like the blues there are those who will find solace and reward in these songs. It is a compelling enough album to hold your attention if you let the crafted wordsmith’s lyrics sink in and the CD has a lyric booklet that makes for a compelling read. They are opaque at times but, as such, allow one to draw subjective meaning from them.

“Baby Lay down your price break poems, while I sit and mumble at your feet. Am I a stone or a stoned kid dreaming up a closet full of crumbled teeth.” These are the opening lines of Sad Baptist Rain and are indicative of his poetic writing style. Yet, as with all the best lyricists, they make perfect sense delivered on the album either in a stripped down setting or with a full band behind him. American Flags In Black & White, another song here, tells of a reminiscence of a favoured person captured in an old photograph. Here Moreland plays all the instruments involved - guitars, bass and drums. Elsewhere he brings in upright bass, pedal steel, guitar and dobro. The latter played by Jared Tyler who also plays with another highly individual and uncompromising songwriter Malcolm Holcombe.

There is no doubt that John Moreland has his advocates as well as those who would dismiss this music out of hand. The title track and final song shows that Moreland can be musically more adventurous (there is a synth included on one track, for instance, that broadens the sonic scope of the song) and that his music is well capable of developing in different ways.

It all depends largely where John Moreland wants to take his music and what he might be comfortable with. In the meantime both his albums are rewarding excursions into an inner soul and a truthful reading of what can be found there and how a listener can find the empathy to enjoy Moreland’s personal take on life.

Aaron Watson  ‘The Underdog’  Big Label

This Texas musician has made numerous albums largely for his fan-base in the States who appreciate his take on country music. Something more rooted in the country music of the 80s and 90s than that of today’s charts. So it was interesting that this album went to the top of the Billboard country charts on its release. This is his 12th album and he is not likely to be going to change his essence at this point. Veteran producer Keith Stegall (Alan Jackson) is at the helm here with Watson and they give the album an upbeat and full on production. It was recorded in Nashville with some of the A-team players like Eddie Byers, Paul Franklin and Brent Mason.

Watson has had a hand in most of the songs either on his own or with a number of other co-writers. Names like Stegall, Troy Olsen or Jim Beavers may be familiar to some. These are songs that Watson can relate to in his life such as Bluebonnets (Julia’s Song) written his deceased child. Perhaps though the final song Fence Post can be said to sum up his whole raison d'être. It deals with his rejection by Music Row and the music they wanted him to perform. “I’d rather sing my own songs than be a puppet on a string … I’d rather be an old fence post in Texas than the king of Tennessee”.

He tells of his return to Texas where it took him a mere ten years to be an overnight sensation. Watson has stuck to his guns (or guitar) and created something he feels comfortable playing and singing. It’s country music for sure. Not the most edgy or adventurous you might find nor is it outlaw orientated but it is solid, dependable, enjoyable and versatile.

Songs like The Prayer, That’s Why God Loves Cowboys, That’s Gonna Leave A Mark and Rodeo Queen all make an impression as standouts. Real country music made for Texas dancehall and for country fans worldwide. Aaron Watson probably has enough work to keep him busy in the States but would doubtless find many fans on this side of the water too. His album equally would be well received by those who still see country music as a genre in its own right not adulterated by rap, pop and hair rock. Every underdog should have its day.

 Vince Gill  'Down To My Last Bad Habit'  MCA Nashville

I looked forward to this album. Gill’s Dublin date a while back was an exercise in how to play country music live rather than heavy rock disguised as such that we had witnessed from other Nashville big label artists. One quick listen will make you realise that this is really not just a country album, rather it is a mature take on a R’n’B sound that sees Gill give his usual customary performance as both a guitarist and singer. But, in truth, it is a far cry from some of his earlier work. It is smooth, soulful and sincere; just not the country of his previous work such as his last Bakersfield tribute album with Paul Franklin.

But Gill sounds comfortable here and listening to the songs you can see that they easily could be shifted down the dial to a more countrified setting. But as producer (with Justin Niebank) this is what Gill wanted the album to sound like. The rhythm section of Willie Weeks and Steve Jordan is bound to set the foundation for the sound. Over that you have his friend and country player Paul Franklin mixing his pedal steel with other less obvious players like Dean Parks on guitar, among others.

Vocally Gill gives a sterling vocal performance that is totally suited to his range and delivery. Perhaps one of his best in years. The songs, as mentioned, could have been tracked in several ways but here he has taken the blue-eyed soul route. A sound that he has touched on before but never to the degree he uses it as a foundation, as witnessed here. It is mature, accomplished and perfectly acceptable music that will please many of his fans with an open mind to what he places before them. At this point in his career he is perfectly entitled to engage himself with his music in any way he pleases. It will still doubtless register on the country charts but be warned that, good as it is, The Time Jumpers it ain’t.

Brothers Osborne  'Pawn Shop'  EMI Nashville

These brothers have been working and playing in Nashville for some time before getting signed to EMI Nashville. A big deal you may think but despite touring with label mate Eric Church it has taken some time for this debut album to get released. That was on the back of some success with the single Stay A Little Longer. Which itself took a long time to register in the upper reaches of the charts. Now comes the album which may best be described as more rootsy rock that country. Something that Jay Joyce’s production places (delete) emphasises. There are a lot of loud guitar breaks from brother John while J.T. is the lead vocalist. Both have presence and deliver in their own right as well as a duo. There are quite a few clips of them playing on You Tube as a duo and acoustically from which you can judge them, prior to all the studio and production shine, has taken them to a much bigger place - music wise at least.

Joined in the studio by a full band that includes guest vocals from Lee Ann Womack. These players are not the usual A-team whose names you see on most releases but a set of musicians who none-the-less deliver the necessary goods over the eleven songs. The brothers have written all the songs with a large variety of co-writers and some work better than others. Rum is another fairly typical drinking song while American Crazy is a little generic in its depiction of a common man ethos.

But in context these songs fit with the overall sound and some standout from the rest such as Stay A Little Longer with its long guitar coda at the end, something that was edited on the single version. The title track opens with acoustic instruments before kicking it up a notch or two and has a bluesy feel built around the repeat title refrain.

Loving Me Back contrasts J.T’s deep baritone with Womack’s sweeter harmony. There is more than a touch of 80s country with Greener Pastures which also works well. The penultimate song Heart Shaped Locket has a more generic structure with both brothers singing and the acoustic instruments too the fore. It is the only song other than Rum not produced by Joyce and may give some idea of how the album may have sounded in the brothers hands.

With the success the Zac Brown Band and more recently Chris Stapleton it might just be the right time for Brothers Osborne to gain some more consistent radio play and to be viewed in a more open minded way by a wider audience. While overall, though it can’t really be classified as a country album in the classic sense, it will be seen as such by many; but there is no doubt that some of these songs, with the duos musical and vocal talent, could have easily been cut that way in a different time. For now this is an album that, on its own terms, is not without its accessibility and pleasures.

Courtney Yasmineh 'Red Letter Day (Unplugged)'  Stupid Bitch

Taking the unusual step of releasing two albums of the same title this New York based singer/songwriter offers two perspectives on the same songs. It is the 5 track mini unplugged version of the songs that has gained the most attention here. The expanded 9 track full band version is not without its merits in its slightly roots, more indie rock setting, but while some the players common to both full and the unplugged versions. It is the latter that seems to give the songs more space to breathe.

It opens with Stupid With Your Love which despite lacking amplification doesn’t lack power. Something that is true of the rest of the songs here. Recorded in Minneapolis and produced by fellow player Rob Genadek the four players do Yasmineh’s self and co-written songs justice. There is percussion, bass and some electric guitar as well as acoustic guitars behind Yasmineh’s convincing and expressive voice.

I assume that it is Casey Smith adding the harmony vocals as she is not listen on the full band album. The songs are built around some solid melodies and the words are memorable enough to make an impression. These are observational songs that take love, life and travel as an axis to build the words around. Stupid With Your Love and Friend Of Mine are immediately memorable here and the other three titles are not far behind, all of which have made me return to this version many times. However if you want all more electricity and drive in the delivery also check out the far more rollicking takes on the main album too.

Yasmineh could well appeal to a wide audience with either of these two albums as her songs and expressive voice have the potential to appeal across the board in different settings. Whether you're keen on the likes of Lucinda Williams or Liz Phair or somewhere in between, then throw an ear her way.

 

Reviews by Paul McGee

Sugar Brown 'Poor Lazarus' Self Release

The Blues is open to all styles of interpretation with different players bringing their own unique take on what is one of the oldest forms of human expression. Born in Ohio to a Japanese father and a Korean mother, Ken Chester Kawashima, stage name Sugar Brown, sounds like he just walked out of a southern cotton-field and sat, guitar in hand, on a front porch stoop to exorcise some personal demons.

These are fourteen tracks of wonderfully restrained playing, sparse accompaniment and a production that feels just timeless. All of the tracks were recorded live-off- the- floor using analog recording techniques and in addition to a number of striking original songs, this release contains a number of covers from RL Burnside (Goin’ Down South) to Willie Dixon (Weak Brain and Narrow Mind) and Tom Waits (Get Behind the Mule). There is also a Lewis Carroll poem interpretation, The Mad Gardener’s Song Parts 1 & 2, that is very special. 

This artist gathers some wonderfully gifted musicians to accompany his unique song arrangements and the harp playing of Bharath Rajakumar, rhythm guitarist/upright bassist Joolyah Narveson, drummer Art Maky, vibes/percussion Matt Phillips - all combine to give the recording an atmospheric, authentic, laid-back groove that stays long in the memory.

Po’ Lazarus was a folk song written in 1911 and revived in the early 1960’s by both Bob Dylan and Dave Van Ronk. Moved to revisit the song in the wake of the Missouri shooting of Michael Brown and give it a modern relevance, Sugar Brown has not only served the call for social equality but also involved us in a lasting testament to the reality of blues music from its roots to the way we live in society today. A superb work and well worth checking out. 

Kristina Stykos 'Horse Thief' Thunder Ridge

Living in Vermont and working from her Pepperbox studio, this talented artist is a music producer, recording engineer, songwriter, radio host and performer. Her recording studio is solar, wind and generator powered and fully off-grid. She is founder-owner of Thunder Ridge Records and has released upwards of 20 albums for her label. So when it comes to focusing her creative muse, Kristina Stykos has plenty of experience to call upon.

This is her sixth solo project and her American roots, folk influenced rural sensibilities are fully realised by her fine musicianship on various instruments such as acoustic and electric guitars, banjo, mandolin, keyboard and bass. Great words flow out of Kristina in a stream of consciousness way on songs like Me, Myself and Moi, Talk to Me and Let It Run, with its spoken word approach.

The 13 songs on Horse Thief examine love and aging together with the strength of living a singular life on the edge of questioning our human fragility. The isolation of rural living can be fuel to the fire for a sensitive artist and these songs, with titles such as It’s Over, Heart in the Wreckage, You’ll Never Love Me and point to the direction that challenges the desire for human connection .

Sounding like Lucinda Williams meets Patti Smith in her vocal delivery is no bad thing when it comes to the passion and conviction displayed in the vocal performance here. Mix in the groove of Ani DiFranco and you have a signpost as to what is on offer. The beautiful arrangement and solo playing on  As If Tears Could Say segues into the final track, Remembering, an instrumental that highlights the great musical talent on display here. This is music of depth and vision that comes highly recommended.

Caroline Aiken 'Broken Wings Heal' Self Release

Nietzsche said ‘What doesn’t kill you makes you strong’ and the true meaning of these words was never more evident on this 12 track release from Caroline Aiken. She has released 8 albums over a music career that has seen her develop into an artist of some renown in her home city of Atlanta, Georgia and beyond.

This new release examines the relationship between mother and daughter in close up, motivated by the sad tale of her own daughter, Sarah Page Dukes, who is currently serving 10 years in prison for armed robbery. Here is no holding back in the sentiment and honesty that is on display here and if there is to be a cathartic element to the artist bearing her soul to this extent, then it has been well earned.

Deeply personal songs such as Fragile, Razor Wire, Broken Wings Heal, Everything Can Change and Saving Grace give a sense of the anguish experienced by a parent who sees their child go astray but there is also a universal element to the songs that call out to everybody who has faced difficult challenges in life. The symbolism contained in the album’s artwork of a bird being released from a cage is key to the optimism that is at the heart of the project as the artist looks to the future.

Production duties are by John Keane, who has worked extensively with R.E.M., Indigo Girls and Widespread Panic among many others. He also plays a range of instruments quite superbly on this project and is the real glue that binds everything together. Joined by a list of excellent players, including Randall Bramblett on keys, piano and saxophone, Emily Saliers of the Indigo Girls on vocals and acoustic guitar, Caroline Aiken delivers a powerful performance in her clear vocal and playing and places her talents among the best of contemporary folk singer-songwriters.

Reviews by Declan Culliton

The Whileaways ‘Saltwater Kisses’  Self Release

 The Whileaways comprises of Galway musicians Noriana Kennedy, Nicola Joyce and Noelie Mc Donnell. Kennedy and Mc Donnell had both previously recorded solo albums while Joyce sang and recorded with the folk group Grada. They combined their collective talents to record their critically acclaimed debut album Dear My Maker in 2013 to excellent reviews. Saltwater Kisses follows in a similar vein with eleven tracks, both Kennedy and Joyce have individually written four songs each and Mc Donnell three, all showcasing their exquisite three part harmonies.

By their own admission the songs are uncomplicated, delicate, intimate and easy listening with the lead vocal shared between the band members on the eleven tracks recorded on Saltwater Kisses. Very much a summer album, the breezy back porch Wake Up Sleepy Head works particularly well as does Family Well with hints towards Van Morrison in his more melodic moods. The albums strongest offering is possibly Fruit On The Vine sung by Nicola Joyce who also contributes Baritone Uke on this radio friendly song. 

The album was produced by Liam Caffrey and Eamon Brady in a lakeside house at Glencorrib near Headford Co.Galway. The listener may find the vocal sharing resulting in the album sounding a trifle disjointed but the quality of the vocals generally and the song writing should overcome any reservations.

The Blood Red Mountain Band ‘Far From Daylight’  Self Release

Delightful and refreshing debut album from Dublin five piece The Blood Red Mountain Band combining divine harmonies, fine musicianship and impressive song writing. The band consists of Mark Flynn (vocals and guitar), Sarah May Rogers (violin, strings and vocals), Alison Byrne (vocals), David Keegan on (drums and percussion) and Joeby Browne ( bass and vocals).

The album comprises twelve tracks, eleven written by band members together with a splendid cover of Maybelle Carter’s Fair and Tender Ladies. Their sound is a well-structured mix of folk, blues and country bringing to mind the dream like sound of Simone Felice’s Duke and The King on All The Times, I’ve Got You (On My Mind) and ‘Till The Wheels but also more than capable of moving up-tempo with the more rockier My Sweet Rose and Lucy Jackson (Don’t Break My Heart). The standout tracks are the haunting Trial and the beautiful cover of the aforementioned Fair and Tender Ladies.

The majority of the songs are delivered with duo or harmony vocals, not unsurprisingly as four of the band are credited as vocalists and enhanced throughout by some exquisite violin and strings by Sarah May Rogers. All in all a fine piece of work.

Hidden Treasures ‘Singer Songwriters From Home’ Hemifran 

The term singer songwriter originated from an album titled The Singer Songwriter Project released in 1965 and featuring the music of four obscure US artists, David Cohen, Dick Farina, Bruce Murdock and Patrick Sky. Prior to this recording solo artists who performed their own material were simply identified as folk singers or in some cases protest singers. 

Hidden Treasures commemorates the fiftieth anniversary since the release of The Singer Songwriter Project and aptly titled features four highly respected artists some of whom have been recording for decades but have remained somewhat under the radar. 

The artists in question are Greg Copeland, Keith Miles, Barry Oldman and Bob Cheevers and their varying styles contribute to what is a wonderful seventy minutes of roots music. Greg Copeland has been recording for many years and has co-written with Jackson Browne. Among the artists that have recorded Copeland’s songs are The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Peter, Paul and Mary. His 1982 release Revenge Will Come was produced by Jackson Browne and was followed over twenty five years later by the Greg Leisz produced Diana and James.

Nashville resident Keith Miles has recorded two albums, What It Was They Became (2006) and Beyond the Headlights (2009) both on the House of Trout label. His tracks for the Hidden Treasures album were recorded in Nashville by Poco member Jack Sundrud and Bill Halverson.

Barry Ollman recorded his debut album What’ll It Be in 2014 and features Graham Nash and E-Street Band bassist Garry W Tallent. Ollman recorded his contributions to Hidden Treasures in hometown Loveland, CO.

Austin resident since relocating from Nashville in 2008, Bob Cheevers was awarded the accolade of Singer Songwriter of The Year in 2011 for his album Tall Texas. Hardly an overnight success Tall Texas was Cheevers eleventh album but his first recorded in Austin whose music scene was more sympathetic to Cheevers style than that of Nashville.

The albums list of contributors is certainly impressive featuring Jackson Browne, John Fullbright, Bill Harverson, Greg Leisz, David Lindley, Spooner Oldham, Tim O’Brien, James Raymond, Patrick Sky, and Garry W Tallent among others.

The songs performed by Greg Copeland feature his relaxed spoken like singing style very much in keeping with that of Leonard Cohen, particularly of the song Mistaken for Dancing. Patrick Sky, one of the artists featured on the original 1965 album, plays uilleann pipes on the opening track by Copeland (Wait for Me).

Bob Cheevers contribution to the album include The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, possibly the stand out track on the album. Other Cheever’s songs Progress are delivered with his trademark vocal style, very much in the style of the Willie Nelson vibrato.

The inclusions by Barry Ollman, in particular Longtime Friend and Murmuration, are rooted in more commercial territory than the other artists work. Beautifully crafted with catchy hooks similar in sound to the work of Gary Louris.

Of all the four artists featured on the album Keith Miles is probably the most traditional in the singer songwriter genre. Uncomplicated songs such as Kerouac, Playing Your Guitar and a Cab Calloway sounding Ask Me Tomorrow are included. All have divergent styles yet a surprisingly coherent body of work that is well worth investigating.

Bettysoo ‘When We’re Gone’ Self Released

When We’re Gone is the seventh album released by Texas resident Korean-American Bettysoo. She has been recording for over a decade at this stage without unfortunately making the commercial break through that the quality of her output deserves. 

Similar to her earlier work, the album deals  primarily with tales of loss, desperation, loneliness, strive and break up. Very little of the upbeat for the listener but all beautifully crafted songs, often dominated by the silky cello playing of Brian Standefer who together with Bettyloo produced the album at his studio in Buda Texas. Other notable Texas musicians that appear on the album include Glenn Fukunage on bass, Dave Terry on drums, Will Sexton on guitar and Lloyd Maine’s who adds pedal steel on Last Night.

Bettysoo’s often fragile vocal is so well suited to her material. 100 Ways of Being Alone opens with lyrics that set the scene for much of what follows: It’s the brother that never writes anymore /The uncle you never heard mentioned before / The dad you didn’t know left when you were born / A mother who leaves her child behind the store. 

Much to enjoy on the album in particular standout tracks being 100 Ways Of Being Alone, The Things She Left Home With and Love Is Real, all of which bring to mind the work of Kathleen Edwards, hardly a bad thing.

The album signs off with the beautiful and haunting Lullaby which closes with a particularly striking cello and flute instrumental.

Reviews by Stephen Rapid

 

Rod Picott ‘Fortune’ - Welding Rod

At this point, some eight albums into his career, Rod Picott is something of a veteran of the trials and tribulations that face the independent working troubadour. A lifestyle that is often not conducive to steady relationships or a settled life. But what it does is to give Picott a personal insight into the lives he sees around him, as well as his own. Such events that occur are distilled into a set of songs that speak true to the turmoil and equal tenderness that we all can encounter along the way. 

The first song here, is Maybe That’s What It Takes, allows that the knocks received can often be a catalyst to something else. Equally This World Is a Dangerous Place sums up the caution required to navigate through an uneven path. I Was Not Worth Your Love admonishes a former partner for trying to make him something he wasn’t until the relationship turned him into something that ironically might have fit the requirements. 

Later in the album things get a little more positive in outlook with I’m On Your Side but overall the gaze is cast downward. Uncle John refers to a relative who was a charachter but with whom he no longer has any contact. Jeremiah is also about loss. Spare Change shows how a little money might have helped in certain situations. These are songs that on the surface might seem to be drawing down the darkness. Something perhaps summed up by a line in Drunken Barber’s Hand (“…this world has been shaved by a drunken barber’s hand” - something it is not hard to agree with). However Picott has enough inbuilt humanity in his music to make these songs a simple, life-affirming experience.

Produced by Picott and Neilson Hubbard it has a a selection of players will to make these songs work in a stripped back but effective way. Will Kimbrough is a player well used to using his talent to best find the emotion of the songs. He is joined by the rhythm section of Lex Price and Hubbard himself on drums. They create a suitably unsettled setting for these songs which are essentially built around Picott’s voice and nylon stringed guitar. The end result is one Picott can be justifiably be proud of and one that draws the listener in to, in turn, get much out of.

Johnny Selfish & The Worried Men ‘Calle Salvaje’ - Rivertale

This Italian band have made a joyous, uptempo fun album that they describe as a tribute to inspirations such as Hank Williams Sr, Ennio Morricone and Mano Negra as well as movie heroes like Clint Eastwood and Sam Peckinpah. This is the bands fourth album. A nine track mix of covers and what I assume are original songs (as there are no writing credits included). The covers include Williams’ Alone and Forsaken and the Bill Monroe associated A.P. Carter song Working On A Building. These songs are delivered in English while others such as Vaquerito and El Gringo are in Spanish.

There is a mix of instruments used from electric guitar, banjo, double bass through to kazoo and Mariachi-styled trumpets. The end result is varied enough to keep the whole thing moving along in a spirited, almost Pogues-like folk/punk take on their influences. There nothing particularly ground breaking going on here, rather it is the spirit and energy with which the songs are performed that makes it a diverting listen and one that should bring a smile to your face. Can’t ask for a lot more than that sometimes.

Malcolm Holcombe ‘Another Black Hole’ - Proper

Following hot on the heels of his RCA sessions album comes this new one from Mr. Holcombe. He seems very prolific of late with a whole bunch of new songs delivered in that battered, gritty and distinctive voice that is uniquely his. It is a folk/blues Americana mix that brings together his usual crew of Ken Coomer, Jared Tayler and Dave Roe alongside Drea Merritt on some vocal harmonies and Tony Joe White on some swampy guitar.

Those who know (and love) Holcombe’s work will be happy to get know these new songs. As in the past there are others who can’t get passed the voice. All has been brought together by Brian Brinkerhoff and Ray Kennedy’s sturdy production. The latter also engineered, mixed and mastered the album. The playing through is top notch and gives added depth and texture to these songs that look up to the sky and higher, from a position that is much closer to the street and those that live there. People who may just get by, who have few expectations but somehow manage to see some grace. This feeling may well be summed up in Siobhan Maher-Kennedy’s cover illustration.

The hard-scrabble blues on offer may not appeal to all but it has dignity and a purpose and the assembled players know how to bring the tales of woe to a sunnier side of the street even if Holcombe’s voice seems to sit on the grittier side of Tom Waits. He offers nothing here but his own truth and his hard held beliefs and some very credible music. Something that has always given Malcolm Holcombe his edge with his coterie of admirers and friends.

Jimmy Ruggiere ‘A Heartache Couldn’t Happen To A Nicer Guy’ - Blue Streak

A harmonica player who recorded a lot with Travis Tritt steps up the the centre mic for his debut album. The album is produced in Austin, Texas by Chris Gage. Gage is a multi-instrumentalist who is no stranger to the studio as artist, player or producer. He has gathered together some equally seasoned players such as Paul Percy on drums and percussion, Warren Hood on fiddle and Lloyd Maines on pedal steel to bring their individual talents to these self-written songs.

Ruggiere has a solid warm vocal style that may not be a totally distinctive one but is one well able to deliver his songs, which fall into an easy to like feel but also ones that have their fair share of heartbreak themes. As witnessed by songs like the title song, I Want To Wake Up Stoned and I Cried All The Way To Fort Worth. There are songs that find him wanting to get back to his lady (Ninety Miles From Nashville) as well a tribute to a man who was an important part of everyone’s life - not just Ruggiere’s (Going Home to Say Goodbye To Dad).

He is obviously a skilled harmonica player and the instrument features throughout the album to good effect as does his acoustic guitar. There are a mix of tempos over the album as well as some nice textures from Jimmy Shortell’s trumpet, c overing different moods in Sunday’s Broken, which has a late night feel, or the border overtones of There’s One Too Many Pretty Girls in Tucson.

A Heartache Couldn’t Happen To A Nicer Guy is an accessible and easy listen given its’ undemanding or non-edgy style of country music. In itself it is one that would please a wide audience with it’s solid production, playing and personality. Jimmy Ruggiere comes across as a man who enjoys making this music as much as many will enjoy hearing it. So any success his debut album might find likely couldn’t happen to a nicer guy.

Reviews by Stephen Rapid

Gill Landry ‘Self-titled’ - ATO

For his third solo album the former Old Crow Medicine Show member explores some of the same ground that influenced that band but also further expands his horizons. He produced this album of largely self-written songs performed with a select group of players that include Jamie Dick on drums as well as Ross Holmes on fiddle and Skylar Wilson and Robert Ellis on guitar. Landry himself plays guitar, bass, pedal steel, harmonium and harmonica as required. But it is the songs that resonate with everyone involved serving those.

The album opens with the slightly ominous Funeral In My Heart a song that asks the question “why do good things have to die” in a tone that suits that sentiment. Just Like You which follows takes an opposite view given it considers in an uncertain time the thing that helps most is “knowing someone just like you is alive.” The songs are all essays on trying to figure life out in a way that makes sense and while they are at times opaque and poetic, the overall feel suggests that the heart wins out. Throughout Landry’s vocal is both powerful and poignant. He uses the experience he has gained to this point to illuminate the songs with a restrained and pained passion. Lost Love, Bad Love and Long Road are all songs that attest to the force and follies of love.

The music is infused with dust and faded light but manages to illuminate some of the darker corners that the songs suggest. Musically it is innovative and touches a variety of moods and incorporates with the mainly mid-paced songs of both the past and future. Particularly attractive is the sultry border feel of Fennario with its border brass, Spanish guitar and heavy percussion. Overall, an album that will establish Landry as being at the forefront of contemporary Americana.

Jane Kramer ‘Carnival Of Hopes’ - Self Release

Her debut album was rooted in folk music but for her second album has taken that music as a foundation to build on. At the heart, these songs come from that tradition but the textures and brushstrokes are broader. Producer Adam Johnson embellishes the songs with the sounds of brass, keyboards upright bass and drums as well as a selection of guitars, dobro, mandolin and banjo.

Kramer has a voice that has a number of tones within its range that give the songs their personality. No doubt an extension of Kramer herself. She is the author of all the songs here other than Down South which was written by Tom Petty. A good choice that fits well with her songs and is in itself a standout that highlights the strength of Petty’s melodic writing. A highlight of her own writing is the song Good Woman, outlining the negative qualities of the lady in question who herself understands the reasons, but who would still like to be a good woman.

In other songs she looks for Truth Tellin’ Eyes, for Truck Stop Stars and truth learned from Highways, Rivers & Scars but all with a need to explore the Carnival Of Hopes. Songs that build around such emotions, use that folk setting to create the heart of the songs while the acoustic instruments entwine with the rhythm section and effective use of occasional jazzy brass (Why’d I Do That Blues). All of which makes for an interesting album that rewards a closer listen and suggest that Kramer is an artist who will steadily grow.

The Nouveaux Honkies ‘Blues For Country’ - Self Release

The title track outlines the perceived dilemma for the band on the opening song. Deciding that they are too blues for county and too country for the blues. Not however that many listeners will have that problem with this accomplished band. Fiddle is well to the fore as are the voices of the band founding duo Tim O’Donnell and Rebecca Dawkins. They are rounded out by Pat Manse on percussion, Nate Rowe on double bass and guest Lloyd Maines on pedal steel for three songs.

The blues side of what they do however is not predominately evident and the honky tonk side is the one that largely holds sway. The blues is an influence in the way that jazz was a big part of western swing but that music still had its own individual identity. The duo’s voices blend well together and Dawkin’s violin is a mainstay of the sound of a band of very accomplished players. The songs are a mix of originals (largely by O’Connell) and some covers such as a straight up but evocative version of Townes van Zandt’s Pancho and Lefty.

The couple have been plying their trade for some time now and their extended life on the road is the subject of several songs from the title through Life Ain’t Easy and Two Doors Down From Paradise - a song which features twice at the end of the album with the reprise version being an extended instrumental coda that runs as one continuous piece. It’s a tale of recovering from the of work and unwinding  from a previous night and slowly getting one’s self back to a place where function and reason returns  - at least till that night.

The Nouveaux Honkies play around Florida and surely have built up a following in the region but on the strength of this, their latest album, could easily gain a wider following. They are not a retro recreation of the sound of an earlier era but rather have developed a sound that is grounded in a traditional sound but one that incorporates sounds from other genres and times to create something that is distinctive and a delight.

Lori Yates ‘Sweetheart Of The Valley’ - Self Release

This album finds Lori Yates at her best and in total control of her creative output after the experience of being signed to a major label (CBS) in the US back in 1989. Then the Steve Buckingham produced album had songs from interesting writers like Nick Lowe, Paul Kennerely alongside some co-writes from Yates herself. It was a fine debut but didn’t take her to stardom. Now it would seem she is continuing making traditional sounding country music and doing so with heart and soul and doing it her way.

For this album, which was produced by Yates and David Gavan Baxter, she teamed up with the members of Hey Stella. They were a band that Yates was a member of from the late 90s to the 2002. That included Baxter as well as Blue Rodeo bassist Bazil Donovan and drummer Michelle Josef who played with Prairie Oyster. Add to those players such guests as Steve Wood on pedal steel and guitarist Stephen Miller and you have a pretty ace unit to deliver Yates songs.

Here Yates particularly shines with her own songs with her measured, focused and thrilling voice. One that has matured into a distinctive and individual instrument. The songs range from Trouble in the Country which reflects on her time in Nashville and a less than welcoming meeting with Billy Sherill. Then aside from some effective ballads there are more up-tempo rockabilly tempered workouts. Much of which reflects the more open attitudes that prevailed in the mainstream as the 80s turned to the 90s and wider range of influences broadened the horizons of the genre with losing sight of its traditional base.

There are many highlights here from the effective guitar that underscores Call My Name to Corktown where Yates’ voice is joined by a chorus of Tequila lubricated throats recorded live in a hospitable tavern. There are songs that come from a very personal place such as Shiloh about meeting her father for the first time when she was 40. The atmospheric What The Heart Wants is another brooding ballad that conveys a desperate passion with conviction. 

Sweetheart of the Valley is an excellent album all round and just makes you wonder just how much such good music can pass you by. But don’t let this one do that as it is very easy to fall for this particular sweetheart.

Texas Martha and The House of Twang ‘Long Way From Home’ - Self Release

This Texas born singer songwriter now lives in Bordeaux in France. There she fronts her own band The House Of Twang and they play an intoxicating blend of country, country rock, blues and folk, a true amalgamation of American roots music. An acoustic sideline is to be found with Mountain High, a band she also fronts. She is planning a new release later this year but her current album Long Way From Home is a summation of her music to date.

Martha Fields Galloway has written all ten songs here and fronts the band playing acoustic guitar and delivering with a strong vocal presence found throughout the album. The album was recorded in France and the band provides bass, drums, guitar, pedal steel and keyboards. They open with the driving riff of Born To Boogie a strong statement of intent. There then follows a selection of songs that are all powered by a tight energy that musically covers all the bases mentioned.

The title track takes the foot off the throttle for the first part of the song before picking up the pace. Lover’s Lane is a ballad that looks at the journey love can take you on. Johanna has some nice Hammond and is a mid-paced reflection on a person’s life. That mood is continued on Streets Of Bordeaux an ode to her new home sung partly and appropriately in French. One of the best vocals on the albums is delivered in Where The Red Grass Grows, a song that is about place and purpose.

Of the final three songs Strike has a bluesy, bar-room feel while Do As You Are Told has some effective pedal steel guitar for a song that asks that the lady in question follows the dictate of the title. Like the opening song the closing title Gotta Move has a solid groove that’s suits the title and the traveling on nature of the lyric. Overall a very commendable album that hits all the right notes and sets Martha Fields up for her next Texas recorded album Southern White Lies. She is making music that keeps on movin’ on.

Eric Church ‘Mr. Misunderstood’ - EMI

One of the more engaging of the current crop of Music Row mavericks Eric Church has delivered an unheralded album which arrives with no credits at all in the booklet. The only clue to the content style may be the Les Paul guitar featured in one of the photographs. Those credits however can be found online. The production is by Jay Joyce a producer often noted for his more edgy productions. However it is only on checking the lyrics online on his website that you can confirm that Church has a hand in all these songs. The sound is more towards a more heartland rock feel than anything traditionally country. There are no hints of pedal steel or fiddle here. Banjo being the only obviously non rock instrument to feature.

Given all that it is a strong album that continues Church’s progress to a more mainstream, crossover rock orientated sound with a more roots related feel to some tracks. Nothing wrong with that of course and this is a place where his audience is happy to follow him to. He underlines this, to a degree, in the title track where he identifies with those who were “always left out, never fit in”. The song also makes reference to Elvis Costello, Ray Wylie Hubbard and Jeff Tweedy while stating a love for his daddy’s vinyl collection. In Record Year another song that makes reference to musical influences he pays tribute to some country legends Jones and Jennings, Hank and Willie Nelson as well as James Brown in a song where a bad relationship sees the protagonist turn to his records for some much needed sympathy and salvation.

It is only by track 6 with Round Here Buzz that the song takes on a more obvious roots/country feel. Holding My Own is another song that has a less intense feel and again makes reference to loving blues and soul music while holdin’ his own space and track position. The album closes with Three Year Old wherein he looks to the simple needs and wants of a three year old to learn something for his own life. Its understated delivery closes the album on a note that resonates more quietly rather than ringing the ears that some of rockier tracks might. Mr. Misunderstood may well help Eric Church to a wider understanding of his aims, views and musical outlook. Something that he seems to have taken control of. Which can be no bad thing overall.