Josh Ritter : The Beast In Its Tracks

Cover of The Beast In Its Tracks (LP)

 

Josh Ritter  : The Beast In Its Tracks

(2013 Pytheas Recordings/YepRoc Records)

Josh Ritter’s return after the lushly produced and arranged So Runs The World Away from 2010 is a much more restrained affair, featuring the usual bunch of talented musicians, nowadays known as The Royal City Band.  As it is a break-up album, written and recorded after his marriage with fellow singer/songwriter Dawn Landes fell apart, it’s supposed to sound much sadder or more depressed than The Beast In Its Tracks actually does.

Yes, the arrangements are a quite stripped down and many of the songs are slow – but despite the lyrics reflecting the theme of a break up they don’t really sound all that melancholic. Take Nightmares for example – it’s a splendid song with a lovely tune and some fine solo acoustic guitar work by Josh Ritter himself augmented by a bit of keyboard and a bass guitar. What I always liked a lot about Josh Ritter is his voice, at once sounding resonant and full as well as neutral, with none of the extreme characteristics of people such as Bruce Springsteen or Tom Waits.

The album starts with the (very short) acoustic guitar/vocal song Third Arm, which nicely fades into second song Evil Eye, like almost all songs on The Beast… dominated by an acoustic guitar and a great tune. Next song A Certain Light is probably my fave song on the album, one of the loveliest – in a bittersweet kind of way – songs I heard in a long time, the lyrics telling about a new love he found, but as ‘she only looks like you in a certain kind of light’ implies, he’s still thinking about the love he lost a great deal.

Hopeful is probably the only song on here I don’t quite like too much, although it’s pleasant enough on its own right – but it’s just not AS good as the other songs. New Lover is one of the most fully arranged songs (together with Joy To You Baby and Hopeful) in a conventional Folk-Pop/Rock sense, with proper drums and intertwined guitar lines almost giving the song a nice Ambient-ish feel. I also love the last line ‘… but if you’re sad and lonely and you got nobody true I’d be lying if I said that didn’t make me happy too’.

Heart’s Ease features no less than four guitars all played rather delicately, so it’s by no means a rock-song. In Your Arms Again is maybe the most folky-sounding song on the album, slightly up-tempo with a light, airy feel to it. Maybe even more of a fave of mine than A Certain Light is The Appleblossom Rag, albeit in a very different way. It’s just a quiet song with just an acoustic guitar, Ritter’s voice and some kind of background noise, according to the liner-notes ‘gossip’, but actually more sounding like noise made in a kitchen, with rattling cups and such. I could listen to it for ages (I do that, actually). Afterwards, things get a tad more lively, starting with Bonfire, again a slightly folky, acoustic song, but more up-tempo and with equipped with a gorgeous tune.

Next track In Your Arms Again is as muck Rock as it gets on The Beast In Its Tracks, featuring almost a full drum set, although it’s only a bass and a snare drum (if I am not mistaken) and some background vocals giving it a rather full sound, compared to most of the other tracks on here. Next to last song Joy To You Baby is a summery, laid-back Folk-Pop tune and album closer Lights might be the most obviously melancholic track on the album.

As I mentioned, the direction is a bit of a surprise after So the World Runs Away, but nevertheless The Beast In Its Tracks is once again a fully convincing album by one of the best of the current young-ish crop of songwriters, and one I while most definitely be enjoying for ages.

Sam Doores + Riley Downing & The Tumbleweeds : Daytrotter Studio 4/10/2013

Sam Doores + Riley Downing & the Tumbleweeds

I have been following Sam Doores & the Tumbleweeds for quite some time now, but still have to buy their first album Holy Cross Blues. So this Daytrotter session will have to do for the moment, but it’s a mighty fine one in any case.

None of the four tracks on here does disappoint: I already was familiar with the first one on this session (from the band’s Reverbnation/Facebook music player)  Throw Another Cap On the Fire , it’s reproduced here immaculately. It’s a swinging Country & Western tune dominated by a steel guitar, with a harmonica solo and a super-catchy hookline. The lead vocals are by Riley Downing, who’s got a husky, smoky voice of the Tom Waits variety (although not quite as gruff), very much suited to the Cowboy lyrics of the song (‘as I stared out ‘cross the prairie searching for what I can’t say I know, Bourbon won’t you warm my soul like sunshine’).

The next song Alligator Shoes is a slowly shuffling and slightly brooding track with a  spooky guitar solo. Alligator Man (the band are from New Orleans, in case you haven’t guessed so already), in contrast, is more up-tempo and upbeat with the happy fiddle providing the outstanding musical flavor – it’s short, snappy and could surely be a first rate feelgood hit – in a backwater world with good taste at least.

I Got Found is a slow song steeped in gospel stylings and I can’t help thinking about the chain gang scene at the beginning of the Coen Brother’s O Brother, Where Art Thou? listening to it – it should also be a sure highlight in their live set.

With this short 4 track session Sam Doores + Riley Downing & The Tumbleweeds prove to be an outstanding and highly original new act on the Alt-Country scene, with a sound clearly informed by their hometown. And, as should also be evident, a highly entertaining live act.

http://www.samdoores.com/

Greg Brown : If I Had Known (Essential Recordings, 1980 – 1996)

Greg Brown : If I Had Known

(2003 Red House Records)

Greg Brown (b. 1949) has been releasing records for a very long time (his first album Hacklebarney was released in 1974), how I managed to miss all of his (most probably) fine records all those years is a mystery to me, but better late than never, as they say.

When I finally made up my mind to buy one of his CD’s after paying his home state Iowa a visit in March of 2013, I stumbled upon this collection. Being a visually oriented person it didn’t take much convincing to buy the CD/DVD combo, containing the 1993 documentary, Hacklebarney Tunes The Music Of Greg Brown. So when it arrived in the mail, watching the 46-minute DVD was pretty much the first thing I did after opening the package. Having watched it a few times since, it still fascinates me as much as it did the first time I watched it. Sure, the visuals feel a little bit dated, having been filmed in the early 1990’s/late 1980’s, and the clothes being worn by the people shown in the film are slightly cringe worthy, (I’m not trying to make fun of anybody here, I, like mostly likely you reading this, wore the same styles back then, regrettably).

But what is shown and especially to be heard here, is anything but. I can’t really think of a documentary about a musician that inspired and enthralled me half as much as Hacklebarney Tunes (I am thinking about the very boring one about Gram Parsons and the rather touching one about Townes Van Zandt which I would very much recommend to anybody reading this, but I can’t remember the title, sorry) does.

It shows first and foremost a first-rate singer/songwriter well versed in a number of styles, all firmly within the Folk/Roots music field, with Folk being the most prominent, but unsurprisingly for somebody that has released a lot of records (his Wikipedia page lists about 25), there also have been other styles creeping into his recordings (as far as I can tell at this point in rather moderate doses though). It also shows a person being firmly rooted in his native Midwest/Iowa and seemingly at ease with his place in the world and his musical career (at one point sitting in his car on the way to go fishing he states ‚I’ve got so low ambition nowadays, it’s amazing to me’), there’s none of the depression of the likes of T. van Zandt on show, and no self-destruction in evidence – which I like a lot (although his is certainly no happy-go-lucky music and is thematically often quite serious).

Being produced by the University Of Iowa it starts of with some nice shots of the Southern Iowa countryside accompanied by a splendid version of Folk standard Pretty Boy Floyd with him, Bo Ramsey on guitar and a bass player, (an equally excellent version of Hank Williams’ Lost Highway from the same session can be seen later in the film).

His dad being a minister, the family moved quite a few times in the Midwest in Greg’s childhood and youth (as being recounted by his dad in the film). When he grew up he (like a lot of people) left to live in places away from his roots, but his love for the areas he grew up in is obvious as is the respect and love for his family. There’s a sequence of the older generation of his family and including his uncle Roscoe Brown (who’s interviewed in the film too), making music together in a living room with (what I believe to be) his grandma on the pump-organ and his granddad on the banjo, Roscoe Brown on the guitar and a fiddle player  – very old-timey and lovely. Apparently he bought his grandparents farm around the time the documentary was filmed, although he seems to be living in Iowa City now with his second wife, fellow singer-songwriter Iris Dement.

Interviewed too is his childhood-friend Jimmy Chapman, telling the story of the catch they did in Earlville, Iowa’s Plum Creek while out fishing, told about in the compilation’s title-song If I Had Known. Also shown are some of the various places in Iowa he lived in growing up, small, rural farming towns with all their attendant problems, a theme recurring in a number of his songs. Ample room is given to various live versions of his songs – indicative of his recording style is perhaps the fact that these live versions often don’t vary all that greatly from the recorded versions that can be heard on the CD, (with the exception of Canned Goods which I like better in the faster and more stripped-down version in the film). Evidently he’s very entertaining live (haven’t seen him playing live, sadly), just note the live rendition of Poor Back Slider (from 1992’s Down In There) about guys trying to stay away from booze after visiting church – but ending up drinking even harder after a couple of months abstinence.

I also love the scene where standard Will The Circle Be Unbroken is sung by a church congregation – a true insight into, what I as a European at least, believe to be small town religious US-American life. As mentioned before, the struggle of people living in these small towns face is a theme of many of his songs, for example what is at the moment, my favorite of his songs Our Little Tow’ (from One More Goodnight Kiss) which can be heard here interspersed with photos from Earlville, IA (where his dad was a minister at one point). It’s a simply arranged song with just his deep, resonant voice and an delicately strummed acoustic guitar – all he needs in fact to stun you/me – very beautiful, if troubled, you simply cannot make Folk music any better than this.

Our Little Town is also featured on the 17 track CD. Unsurprisingly the songs on the CD vary quite a bit stylistically and one or two of them don’t work that well in my opinion, especially arrangement-wise, for example Good Morning Coffee (although the unusual pan pipes are not without a certain charm), and I am not too fond on the clarinet in Downtown either, a quite dark song in theme and sound also featured on the DVD in an acoustic guitar and harmonica version which I prefer, mainly for the haunting harmonica.

But the songs to be loved are by far in the majority, starting with the compilation’s title tune If I Had Known. Another highlight for me is Ella Mae an acoustic-guitar-and-voice-only live recording from 1982, originally released on the One Night album (1983), it’s an ode to his grandmother and not one bit mushy or overly sentimental – it’s honest and all the better for it. Canned Goods is bemoaning the fact that said canned goods haven’t got the sunshine in them like his grandma’s used to have – it certainly IS sentimental (and maybe arranged a tad too sweetly for my taste) but I love it nevertheless.

Laughing River (which can also be heard in the documentary in a scene where we see Greg Brown fishing) is another song much to my taste – folky, slightly up-tempo and showing Greg Brown at his best. The song is dealing with an artist longing for a place after spending a long time on the road – so it is tying in nicely with the documentary and one can assume is rather more autobiographic. As is clear for a Brown-novice like myself from watching Hacklebarney Tunes, he can make almost any song work with only his voice and acoustic guitar (which is of course a sure sign of any exceptionally talented singer/songwriter)

Worrisome Years is probably the most pessimistic song on the compilation, about a guy living in a small town, clearly not happy with his life and in some sort of economic tight spot ‚ …can you please tell me when does the good part start?’ clearly he’s run out of options ‚I think about leaving, but where would I go? How would I get there? I don’t know…’. Actually it doesn’t really sound that depressed, it’s a rather lovely folk-tune with a beautiful fiddle and backing vocals by Shawn Colvin.

I also like The Train Carrying Jimmy Rodgers Home a lot, it’s an old-timey Country tune with the sound mimicking that of Rodger’s era and of course featuring some yodeling – good fun. Spring Wind is amazing too – an acoustic guitar, some wonderful background vocals, a little bit of bass and harmonica and understated yet highly effective percussion and a gorgeous tune. The Poet Game is another song I have to mention, the thoughtful, intelligent lyrics recalling various people and situations in his life, both sad (a good friend he doesn’t talk to him anymore) and nice (a particularly happy time with a girlfriend) coupled with a melancholic melody and a lovely electric lead guitar by Bo Ramsey.

Where Is Maria is only very slightly marred by a in my opinion somewhat inelegant chorus, but otherwise a very fine, understated, acoustic Folk song too. Boomtown is the one track on here standing apart quite clearly stylistically from the rest, being a sort of all-electric and slightly bluesy up-tempo R’n’R/Pop song, I like it very much, especially the oh-so-true lyrics. The two last tracks on the compilation Two Little Feet and Driftless do round up the album rather nicely, the first one a midtempo Folk track and the album closer another melancholic song with Bo Ramsey on both electric and a Weissenborn lap guitar – Roots music at its best.

Now the only question left to answer is which Greg Brown albums to get next first. I guess I will either be going for The Poet Game or One More Goodnight Kiss (mainly because it’s got Our Little Town on it), well, most probably both.

Dan Bern : Drifter

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Dan Bern : Drifter (2012, DBHQ)

Drifter is the first Dan Bern album I bought since his 2002 album New American Language, don’t ask me why (I mean why I haven’t bought any of his other ones, not why I bought this one). New… is one of my favourite records and there probably will  be a review about it in another blog post at some point.

True to my blog’s motto of only posting about stuff I like a lot, I have to get Drifter’s sole weakness out of the way at the start so I can celebrate its brilliance further on: The sound could be a bit more transparent, it’s rather muddy and often it’s quite hard to make out the various instruments being played, which is a shame as the arrangements are rather good. I realise it is a low-key affair without a large record label providing any financial muscle, but still, I believe, a producer like Joe Henry could have made this album even better than it already is.

But, now to the things to be admired about the album. First of all, and of course the most important thing in music: the songs – which are excellent, with only maybe one exception (‚Carried Away’ I just can’t warm to its Bar room Rock at all – but hey, 1 out of 15 isn’t bad, is it?). I also adore his intelligent lyrics covering a vast range of subjects and places, reflected in the song titles alone, songs about Luke The Drifter a Party By Myself, Raining in Madrid (the one in Spain), Haarlem (‚…not that one, the other one, the one with two a’s, the Dutch one…)‚ Capetown (the one in South Africa) and a Mexican Vacation.

By the time I first listened to the album starting with the first few chords and his expressive, slightly crooked and nasal voice (think Bob Dylan) on album opener Luke The Drifter, it became clear to me that this album will be a good one: A deftly strummed acoustic guitar and imaginative lyrics – maybe not quite in the Bob Dylan, John Prine league, but pretty damn near. 5 1/2 minutes of pure Folk-Rock bliss – at least to this listener’s ears.

Acoustic guitars aplenty, whether strummed or picked, accompanied by a wide variety of instruments such as banjo, trumpet, an autoharp, accordion, cello and a few more are what you can expect to hear used to fine effect on the album.

As I mentioned above, the lyrics are clearly one of Dan Bern’s strengths, take Party For Myself for example, the story of a lonesome dope fiend (,Six in the morning in my room at the Cecil Ninety Four Fifty a week stretches me out a little…’) holding on to his low-key desk job. Raining in Madrid is another fine example of is lyrical skills, not content with endlessly writing about the same old things, but rather being acutely of the now ‚… now that our economy is going to the dogs…’ (I wish he wouldn’t have name checked Rafael Nadal, though) – the music on Raining In Madrid is a lovely, stripped down, strummed acoustic guitar and accordion/background vocals, affair.

Capetown is probably my favourite of the 15 songs on the album. What sounds a bit like an Irish Folk-Punk song (it doesn’t really sound that Irish, maybe I just haven’t listened to too many Pogues songs in my life, if that were possible, that is), all raucous, uptempo and good-natured – a simple tune and a lot of fun (although I can’t help thinking he might regret using the term ‚…and I Googled people’) at some point in the future.

Another highpoint of the album, Mexican Vacation is nicely evoking the spirit of Jack Kerouac’s travels down this part of the world and imagining a world where Mexico and Canada are sharing a border (the USA is gone – imagine that for a moment, will you?) – it has to be described as epic – not in the tired old Post-Rock sense with the usual erupting guitars and such, it’s actually a jaunty, uptempo Country-Rock song, but the story told in the song is definitely epic. I knew from the moment I heard the first few lines ‚Three years before the surface of the earth was uninhabitable…’ that this was something special. The lyrics are dark and apocalyptic, with people holding slaves again, trains with flotation devices underneath their seats and the Atlantic having reached Indiana, and with about 6 minutes long the longest track on the album. Splendid.

There’s a few guest singers on the album I shouldn’t forget to mention, the most prominent of course being Emmylou Harris, she’s used in a melancholic evocation of a, what I take to be estranged, mother and son relationship – which is well thought through, given the age different between her and Dan Bern. The other guest singer is called Mike Viola (I wasn’t familiar with him before), he’s shring the vocals on a tune written by him, Dan Bern and one of my 80’s guitar pop heroes, Marshall Crenshaw – and the songs actually sounds a lot like Crenshaw’s best work on his 1989 album Good Evening.

The album closes with two rather short but gorgeous, folky acoustic songs Love Makes All The Other Worlds Go Round and These Living Dreams.

Fabulous stuff

Uncle Tupelo : The Seven Inch Singles

I am very happy to report that I finally own  this beauty

Uncle Tupelo Seven Inch Singles

For those of you that don’t know this, it features the following 7” singles released between 1990 and 1992

Sauget Wind (always one of my favourite Uncle Tupelo songs) b/w Looking For A Way Out (Acoustic) and Take My Word

I Got Drunk b/w (Gram Parson’s) Sin City

Gun b/w I Wanna Destroy You (R. Hitchcock)

and That Year b/w Pickle River, that 7” was never released before in this form (That Year is from a 1988 demo called Live And Otherwise  and Pickle River from another self released demo called Colorblind & Rhymeless)

Uncle Tupelo The Seven inch Singles

Backroad Bound: An Introduction on Mixcloud

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This is the first post on my newly created blog – a mix I did showcasing some of the artists you can expect to be covered on here in the near future:

http://www.mixcloud.com/ThatContainerGuy/backroad-bound-an-introduction/

Tracklisting:

Moonshiner : Uncle Tupelo

Tom Ames’ Prayer :  Steve Earle

Daddy’s Little Pumpkin :  John Prine

Border Radio : The Blasters

Luke the Drifter : Dan Bern

Indianapolis : The Bottle Rockets

Her Eyes Dart Round : The Felice Brothers

Sault Sainte Marie : Joe Henry

Looking For Lewis & Clark : The Long Ryders

Arkansas Traveler : Michelle Shocked

Thanksgiving Waltz :  Molly Mason & Jay Ungar

Big Whiskers : Otis Gibbs

Down To The River : Dave Moore

Mickey Of Alphabet City : Rave-Ups

Throw Another Cap On The Fire : Sam Doores + Riley Downing & The Tumbleweeds

Breakfast In Hell : Slaid Cleaves

Bus Station : Dave Alvin

Looking at the World Through a Windshield : Son Volt

I Hear Them All : Old Crow Medicine Show

If The Brakeman Turns My Way : Bright Eyes

Gracefully Facedown : The Devil Makes Three

Round Here : Counting Crows

Barroom Girls : Gillian Welch

American Hearts : AA Bondy