Rolling Country 2014

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And as for the other country singer getting press, Sturgill Simpson has apparently meshed his more traditional sounds with lyrics:

Inspired by the writings of American psychonaut Terence McKenna and Carl Sagan’s “Cosmos,” Simpson sings about the bardo of Tibetan Buddhism in the baritone of Waylon Jennings.

“I’ve been reading about the idea of cyclical lives — it matches up to the idea of string theory and a multiverse,” he says in a deep, dead-serious voice. “So I wanted to write a record about that instead of another song about broken hearts and drinking.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/sturgill-simpson-a-country-voice-of-and-out-of-this-world/2014/03/31/46277cce-b8f9-11e3-899e-bb708e3539dd_story.html?tid=hpModule_1f58c93a-8a7a-11e2-98d9-3012c1cd8d1e

― curmudgeon, Tuesday, April 1, 2014 9:31 AM (1 week ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

The first track and single, "Turtles All the Way Down," is now up on Spotify (http://open.spotify.com/track/5AlmqxIrxgiNBKItTM5L5J). Per the article linked above:

During the album’s opening track, “Turtles All the Way Down,” he encounters Jesus Christ, Buddha, a hit of DMT, an angry God and “reptile aliens made of light.”

Indexed, Friday, 11 April 2014 17:16 (ten years ago) link

@nn P0w3rs (who thinks it's a great record) told me on facebook that she thought "poptimists" would have trouble with the new Church album, since (she says) he's obsessed with being "authentic" (or something like that). (I didn't know whether that meant she thought I was a poptimist or not. I also still don't believe there's any such thing, but that's old news.)

Well, the words "poptimists" and "authenticity" are broad, vague, confusing, and contested, which doesn't mean that they're necessarily defective. (I'd say that words like "rock" and "pop" and "country" are just as broad, vague, confusing, and contested and that for them these are virtues.) By "broad" I mean they refer to a lot of disparate content, by "vague" that you can nail them down to a set of characteristics, by "confusing" that people mean different things by the words and the various things they mean are sometimes at odds with one another, and by "contested" that people use the words in arguments, that they argue about how to use the terms, and that one of the uses of the terms is to start arguments over how to use the terms. But it does mean that if you yourself use the words "poptimists" and "authenticity" you very likely will have to elaborate further if you want to actually say something that will get us thinking. Fact checking cuz's "i think the general ILM position on 'authenticity' is fairly well understood, and i am in general agreement with that piece of the hivemind" just screams for elaboration -- e.g., what is the hivemind's position on authenticity?

What happens with the words "poptimists" and "authenticity," though, is that they way too often get used as buzzwords, so that the people who use the words will often just wave them around, feeling that by doing so they've identified a position or a set of people or a set of characteristics and feeling as if they've made a point; and the conversations that follow go round in narrow circles. Anyway, I've stated that there's no such thing as "poptimism," and Chuck quoted this in Rock And Roll Always Forgets -- though note that what I said was conditional ("unless by 'poptimism' you mean every interesting critic ever"), so I'm not saying that the word "poptimism" is meaningless, even if there's no such thing. But I'll set that discussion aside, to focus on a different point, which is that I don't think we can get away with saying there are no poptimists.

The analogy I use would be that though there are jocks, there isn't a "jockism" or a jock ethos or a jock ethic. Of course, you can claim that there is one, but my point is that there doesn't have to be for "jocks" nonetheless to be a meaningful term and for it to potentially identify actual human beings. And back in the late '60s and early '70s there were freaks who used to hang out in front of the drugstore across the street from my high school, smoking cigarettes -- it was as if they were on stage -- without there being a freakism or a freak dogma etc. Which didn't mean that, e.g., John Koniar and Tim Page and Winn Biesele had nothing in common, but it did mean that you couldn't predict from the attitude of one of them what the others' attitude would be, and you couldn't predict in advance what their common attitudes would be. They were perfectly capable of challenging each other.

So, in the '00s (and occasionally still, I think) there was a club night in London called "Poptimism," many of the attendees having first come to know of each other on ILM or Freaky Trigger. And both Freaky Trigger and ILM were started by Tom Ewing, who had a column at Pitchfork called "Poptimist" and I think was also the person who started the (now moribund) poptimists community on LiveJournal, though Kat Stevens and Starry and several others were as important to that general LiveJournal cluster as Tom was. But certainly there are actual, identifiable people who posted at "poptimists" and who did and do frequently converse with Tom and crew online. And I was/am one of them, even if people like me and Lex Macpherson tended to be cantankerous and at odds with others on many subjects (and Lex actually made a point of leaving the community at one point); but that just means we're human beings. So in that sense I'm a "poptimist" even if I don't identify with a lot of positions that get attributed to poptimists. I mean, I wouldn't call myself a "poptimist," but someone else calling me a poptimist because I run with other people they also call "poptimists" isn't exactly being ridiculous in doing so. Anyway, there's one nexus of "poptimists" consisting of people who hang with Tom, and then there's a different set, people like Ann Powers and Jody Rosen, who also embrace the word as a self-description (or at least did so in the past), this set maybe including Carl Wilson and some others. I'm not as up with Ann as I used to be, so don't know where she much less they are now with the word.

So there are identifiable people you can locate as "poptimists," whether the word helps or hinders our understanding of what this set or sets of people actually do and say. I probably need to expand on this subject more, but not right now. But anyway, it's -- obviously -- not a given that a "poptimist" would dislike the Eric Church album, or, if she did, would do so on the grounds that Eric is attempting to be "authentic," if indeed that's what he's doing. (I still haven't listened to the thing.)

Frank Kogan, Sunday, 13 April 2014 23:27 (ten years ago) link

by "vague" that you can nail them down to a set of characteristics

I meant to type "by 'vague' that you CAN'T nail them down to a set of characteristics."

Frank Kogan, Sunday, 13 April 2014 23:40 (ten years ago) link

Rodney Crowell's Tarpaper Sky starts with a stilted Big Sky perspective "The Journey Home," which come to think of it, fits with this set's family resemblance to the kind of Dylan album, like most of 'em this century, for instance, which occasionally backfires but then glides along the scenic route as gracefully as a Model T, or Model A, anyway. He doesn't sing Dylany, but he's got a taste for juicy, sometimes dusty notes and seemingly offhand words that fall into place, like over drinks, on postcards, or maybe elsewhere: sure would like to hear Pistol Annies cover "God I'm Missing You," but it's not strictly necessary, considering the way he does it, conversing with someone who may be next to him, or miles/years away--then there's "Somebody's shadow/Is making me erect/Somebody's shadow/Like a noose around my neck." "Jesus Talk To Mama" mostly plays it straight, lyrics-wise, though a few bits like "Last night I beat the Devil to the draw" and def. that bone-rolling guitar have me thinking 'bout the kind of Saved gunmen to be found in Boardwalk Empire and Justified. "The Flyboy and The Kid" incl. a light-fingered skim/improvement of "Forever Young."
Mind you, this is unmistakably a Crowell album, but does suggest Dylan as a mostly good influence, not so far in effect from RC's actual collalbums with co-writer Mary Karr--their Kin also recruits a rich variety of other singers--and of course Emmylou (oh yeah, and his production of Chely Wright's Lifted Off The Ground, in which they display mainstream pop-country, fully-formed and new and true and gay as and when and how it wants to be, minus excess drama or dilution).
Streaming here, with good 'uns by Carlene Carter, Jon Langford, and others I haven't checked yet:http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/arts/music/pressplay.html?_r=0

dow, Monday, 14 April 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link

That there Carlene album, Carter Girl, is something I'm not totally into yet. but it certainly is better than I feared, when I heard she was going to salute the roots, with Carter Family chesnuts. I mostly know her from my ancient, scruffy-sounding twofer, Musical Shapes & Blue Nun, where she and Nick Lowe tried for Bakersfield/Beatles (and I guess Rockpile)appeal: rocking country, rather than country-rock, Also, she had a rave-up with NRBQ-to-Nashville guitarist-songwriter Al Anderson on Austin City Limits. This album, produced by Don Was mixes old and new songs and beats in an overcast atmosphere, never anachronistic nor murky. The rhythm can be a guide, though not a cheerleader, in "Lonesome Valley 2003," where she goes to and from several funerals, and even slaps butts on "Me and the Wildwood Rose," a road song about childhood rolling with Carter ladies and little sister Rosey, later a true desperado (track record not mentioned, but the song visits her funeral). Carlene and Elizabeth Cook leave a life of crime to settle down, attended by angels and what sounds like a tumbleweed full of mechanical bulls. Elsewhere, she may lope or trot or (once) waltz through variously challenging situations, incl. those associated with outlaws, but she's always adapting, with no self-congratulation.
Hey:just give her those flowers right now, even if you think, with her own track record, you might not have long to wait for yet another send-off; and furthermore, "Kind words are no good/In a bed too narrow." Lots of family, incl. Johnny and June, sing along on the finale, "I Ain't Gonna Work Tomorrow," where she's ditched again, but on the other hand, see title; and also, "Pretty girls are dancin' on the cold, cold ground," so that helps too (far as I'm concerned).

dow, Monday, 14 April 2014 21:15 (ten years ago) link

Eric Church's xpost latest isn't on Spotify, but migt check the 2013 live album they have, since I enjoyed piecing The Outsiderstogether on YouTube, from official studio and exemplary audience recordings. Fun band, springy tunes, some Zep-hop and (on "Devil Devil") bar band metal distilled to one-note solos for the climax. But the voice, even with studio padding, is really thin and so nasal he seems to be trying to reassure--himself?---that this is still country, not goin' too wild, despite all the slightly distanced, kind of tentative portents of storms and wrecking balls (saw a couple interviews where he mumbles something to the effect that he wasn't too sure, early on, about some of the producer's ideas).

dow, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 05:20 (ten years ago) link

Oh yeah: it's the rhythm, mainly the bass, not Carlene personally (unless she's playin' bass, thus) slappin' butts on "Wildwood Rose."

dow, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 05:38 (ten years ago) link

From the EMP Pop Conference 2014 thread:

I dunno who else was at Carl Wilson's country panel, but the back and forth between the panel and audience was among the most intelligent and edifying experiences I've had in four years of attending these things.

― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, April 27, 2014 6:27 AM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Sounds like a good panel, Alfred

Heartlandia
Anthony Easton, "Hurry to Get Done: Chasing Deer and Chasing Class in Contemporary Country Music"
Jewly Hight, "Drag and Slide: Country Connotations, Clogging Steps, and the Power of Breaking Routine"
Tom Smucker, "When Michigan Moved to Tennessee and Texas: Regionalism and Globalism, the Rust Belt and the New South in the Music of Toby Keith and Brad Paisley (and Ted Nugent and Kid Rock)"

― curmudgeon, Sunday, April 27, 2014 3:59 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Guessing it was much better than the Lefsetz emails I just read on the huge Stagecoach country music fest out in Cali (where Coachella is held)

― curmudgeon, Sunday, April 27, 2014 6:00 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I admit that that country panel was the one time all weekend that I switched rooms mid-panel, as I was just not processing Anthony's lexicon at all. But it was clear to me that that was me, so I'm very glad to hear that other people made sense of it!

― glenn mcdonald, Sunday, April 27, 2014 6:26 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Well, the discussion ooncretized, if you will, Anthony's paper. The discussionists by the way: Ann Powers, Jody Rosen, me, Josh Langhoff, Jewly Hight.

― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, April 27, 2014 9:37 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

curmudgeon, Monday, 28 April 2014 13:45 (nine years ago) link

Would like to see a summary of your comments, Alfred.
So far, the folk country of Hurray For The Riff Raff's Small Town Heroes has me thinking "Snorah Jones" more often than not. While the actual Norah invokes her nickname while diligently trying to get past it, Alynda Lee Segarra tends to steer her capable l'il crew right into the warm milk lullabies. Some reference to "Southern Gothic" in their Wikipedia etc; maybe this is meant to be more normal.(Live sets, like in NPR's Newport archive, can be perkier.) Still, it's got its moments, like a perfect version of "San Francisco Bay Blues," floating like a blooming branch, in the beauty of memory and desolation (see what you're leaving behind, Babe). Also, the title song and a couple others toward the end, where she, almost as an afterthought, mentions how and where the bodies are, traces of who screwed who, guess you could call that Southern Gothic, or local history, or just small town talk, don't believe a word, though the way she undersells it when she's really cooking, is something I can't dismiss. What a flukey gift.

dow, Monday, 28 April 2014 14:53 (nine years ago) link

I was underwhelmed by my sole listen to Ann Powers' fave Hurray for the Riff Raff. Nice backstory about Segarra's move to and life in New Orleans (with ocassional busking on the street), but yeah "Snorah Jones" folky-country that is only intermittently impressive

curmudgeon, Monday, 28 April 2014 15:17 (nine years ago) link

Lefsetz with more emails about the Stagecoach Fest:

BEST T-SHIRT

"Stagecoach is Coachella with SONGS!"

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 13:34 (nine years ago) link

http://www.npr.org/2014/05/04/307746474/first-listen-sturgill-simpson-metamodern-sounds-in-country-music

I only heard Sturgill for the first time a few weeks ago when I finally clicked on this thread. This one looks interesting - eye-catching title anyway.

jmm, Monday, 5 May 2014 12:05 (nine years ago) link

I meant to pop in here last night and ask if Rolling Country thinks Sturgill's album is as great as I do. Man...it's great.

alpine static, Monday, 5 May 2014 17:14 (nine years ago) link

Alpine, I was just listening to a Sturgill track off his upcoming record, over at Nashville Scene.

As I've said before, I've talked to Sturgill, good guy, and I also wrote about his old band, Sunday Valley, whom I quite liked. But so far, I'm just not getting what is all that distinctive about his voice or delivery--it's good country singing (reminds me as much of Jerry Lee as it does Waylon, and maybe that's part of my problem with Sturgill: I am not a big Waylon fan) but...it seems like another version of retro country, to my ears, well done. Americana. I guess I could say the same thing about Carlene Carter's new one, which I enjoy, but does it bring anything new to the discussion? Not sure about that.

Edd Hurt, Monday, 5 May 2014 22:16 (nine years ago) link

I don't follow the discussion, so I have no idea. What I'm hearing is great singing and really cool light psychedelic touches. It isn't experimental, but there's a kind of retro-experimentalism (an evocation of past experimentation, like maybe the White Album) that I like.

jmm, Tuesday, 6 May 2014 11:43 (nine years ago) link

That may be overstating it though. It's really just "It Ain't All Flowers" that has the spacey backwards guitar. Most of this stuff is straightforward.

jmm, Tuesday, 6 May 2014 13:29 (nine years ago) link

Yeah. and like I said, there's a refreshed quality, incl the rhythmic appeal, and she's seen her way through various losses, acknowledged directly and somewhat indirectly (the latter being more traditional and traditional-sounding, involving violence and romance), with stoicism and vitality, some cautious hopefulness, wryness. Her version of wised-up outlaw country, matter-of-fact rather than flaunting what a badass she is (of course I'm mixing in vague memories of tabloid headlines and gossip, but she allows for that, invites it, anyway finds it inevitable, sounds like).

dow, Tuesday, 6 May 2014 13:46 (nine years ago) link

(My posts there were on SS not CC)

jmm, Tuesday, 6 May 2014 13:57 (nine years ago) link

Yes, sorry about that, jmm, Carlene's album keeps cueing up again in my headbox; dunno why.
Just checked that xpost First Listen stream of Sturgill. Initially, I'm put off by the way he loses the end of lines, especially on the early originals: why make an effort to write distinctive lyrics, his own true testimony of outlaw country zigzag wanderin', if you're gonna drop 'em into [unintelligible]. I thought of Jerry Lee several times before I saw that Edd picked up on the similarity too: it's a slightly louder or higher, anyway harder, rising attack (no Waylon vibrato, although that's also true of the mellower tracks that sound more like Waylon). Still, neither of those guys had a diction problem. It's def not part of the country tradition, any of 'em.
Really, really liked the one about hearing voices, the main prob being that they don't have much to say, and will go on talkin' 'til the end of time. I know those voices (in terms of social commentary, that is). Perfectly followed by the truck tape chestnut about being "somewhere, tryin' to find the end of that white line."
Thee weirdness times realness of these two is seen and raised by "It Ain't All Flowers," where he cogently reflects on mental-emotional-logistic traffic jamz, eventually resolving into a hick-hop groove with somewhut Pink Floydian morphology, also country-appropriate, since Dark Side of The Moon is a trailer park favorite from way back, fairly frequently replaced after parties. I know this from having worked far too long in record, tape and CD shops (also not-working in trailers). "Pan Bowl" is poignant, but emphasizes the looking-back overview a bit generically. Oh well, as he says, "Me and the boys are still workin' on the sound," and I'll listen some more, workin' on gettin' used to the diction, for a little while longer, anyway. look forward to his next, and will check out previous (incl. xpost Sunday Valley, hopefully; thanks for the tip).

dow, Wednesday, 7 May 2014 17:06 (nine years ago) link

Speaking of weirdness times realness, there are five or six keepers on Dolly Parton's Blue Smoke, also streaming at First Listen. Following current post-Album Age album protocol, the worst ones are all up front: run the gauntlet and it gets better--in this case, not just by comparison. Once she slows down a little and thinks the verses out loud, it works, especially in that silvery, pinpoint delivery, which don't hurt a bit, though she knows you know it so could. But life hurts enough, so why get redundant. "If I Had Wings" and "You Can't Make Old Friends" have as many airborne shades of blue as necessary (also "From Here To The Moon and Back," with Willie, which is also a good wedding ballad, as xhuxx noted in Rolling Stone last year, when it first showed up on Willie's To All The Girls). "Put Your Hands On Me" is an erotic gospel song, riding the supernal mountain freeway tide, with the populist goddess's more reassuring inspirations.

dow, Wednesday, 7 May 2014 17:35 (nine years ago) link

She cranks up some good mainstream country/rock anthems too.

dow, Wednesday, 7 May 2014 17:37 (nine years ago) link

I'm with Edd re Sturgill:

I'm just not getting what is all that distinctive about his voice or delivery--it's good country singing (reminds me as much of Jerry Lee as it does Waylon, and maybe that's part of my problem with Sturgill: I am not a big Waylon fan) but...it seems like another version of retro country, to my ears

curmudgeon, Thursday, 8 May 2014 13:27 (nine years ago) link

Starting to get caught up with xxhuxx's March postings of his Rhapsody playlists, starting with the electro-hoedown:http://www.rhapsody.com/playlist/pp.139659102"> http://www.rhapsody.com/playlist/pp.139659102
I see by this outfit that I'll have to check out the rest of A3's Exile On Coldharbour Lane, among quite a few of others. "Sweet Home Alabama" sounds perfectly at home on the Moog. "The Safety Dance" is the only one that seems out of place here (although I've never welcomed it anywhere). Got some of these, and sure wish I hadn't sold that 90s Rednex-led comp of Euro country techno pop, supposedly evidence of a whole scene, with girls dancing on hay bales in strobe lights (and dazzy duks). It seemed too harsh and trebley, which may well have actually been the fault of my neurotic 90s speakers. Sure hope the Mekons get back to their jokey smokey take on this approach, one of these decades.
(Those Electro Shine mixes on my Scene ballot's singles list, posted upthread, still sound pretty good too.)

dow, Thursday, 8 May 2014 20:37 (nine years ago) link

Don't know why the hell xxhuxx's list got pasted twice; click on the second.

dow, Thursday, 8 May 2014 20:39 (nine years ago) link

I really like the second Sturgill Simpson album much more than the first.

MV, Saturday, 10 May 2014 04:59 (nine years ago) link

Agghh I need help! There's this country song by a woman/women's group that references Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings. Not sure in which way but there's clear references to those guys. The song is about 2/3 years old (i think?)

I was thinking that it was either an Ashley Monroe or a Pistol Annies tune, but cannot find it on their albums. Desperate to find it!
Hope someone can help :))

rizzx, Wednesday, 14 May 2014 14:39 (nine years ago) link

not sure if it mentions Kristofferson, pretty sure Waylon and Cash are though...

rizzx, Wednesday, 14 May 2014 20:30 (nine years ago) link

Loving the Highwaymen right now. Not sure if that's credible enough for y'all but it's fantastic. Need more of it.

rizzx, Thursday, 15 May 2014 14:32 (nine years ago) link

Try the expanded reissue of Wanted: The Outlaws, which was the flagship of the Outlaw Country campaign in the mid-70s: Nelson, Jennings, Tompall Glaser, and (yay) Jessi Colter. If you like her tracks, check her comeback, Out of the Ashes. I'm not that big on Kris, but look for a couple of his early albums, The Silver-Tongued Devil and I and Jesus Was A Capricorn. Nelson, Haggard and Kristofferson have been working on a new album, out this year, mebbe.

dow, Thursday, 15 May 2014 14:43 (nine years ago) link

Oh yeah, Cash & Jennings did one called Heroes, apparently along the same lines as the Highwaymen series. Haven't heard it, but told it's good.

dow, Thursday, 15 May 2014 14:53 (nine years ago) link

Gonna look those up, thanks much!

rizzx, Thursday, 15 May 2014 16:19 (nine years ago) link

I like this song from Nikki Lane's new album, answering the musical question: "Nikki, when is the right time to do the wrong thing?" https://soundcloud.com/newwestrecords/nikki-lane-all-or-nothin-right/s-l71iv
Also digging the title song from her 2011 EP, which I was totally ignorant of!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PlwzdQRfM-4

dow, Saturday, 17 May 2014 01:25 (nine years ago) link

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/15/arts/music/sturgill-simpsons-metamodern-sounds-in-country-music.html?_r=0

expecting wire and complex reviews soon

j., Saturday, 17 May 2014 20:01 (nine years ago) link

wow, dow otm

Just checked that xpost First Listen stream of Sturgill. Initially, I'm put off by the way he loses the end of lines, especially on the early originals: why make an effort to write distinctive lyrics, his own true testimony of outlaw country zigzag wanderin', if you're gonna drop 'em into [ unintelligible ].

j., Saturday, 17 May 2014 23:09 (nine years ago) link

yeah so i found the song i was looking for! Is it country? Don't know. But it's First Aid Kit - Emmylou
http://youtu.be/PC57z-oDPLs

phew

rizzx, Wednesday, 21 May 2014 18:37 (nine years ago) link

congrats on finding it

curmudgeon, Thursday, 22 May 2014 14:45 (nine years ago) link

re sturgill simpson losing the end of his lines: ding ding ding. i like the new album quite a bit, but that's one of the things that's keeping me from loving it. also, in addition to the other comparisons that have been made in sturgill literature so far (waylon, jamey johnson, etc.), something about the particular way his voice drawls reminds me of early dwight yoakam.

fact checking cuz, Friday, 23 May 2014 05:04 (nine years ago) link

LEE ANN WOMACK PREMIERES FIRST SONG FROM
THE WAY I'M LIVIN' ON WSJ.COM

Album Produced by Award-Winning Frank Liddell,
First New Music in Over 6 Years
The Way I'm Livin' was produced by Frank Liddell (Miranda Lambert, David Nail), and features the songs of Chris Knight, Mindy Smith, Buddy Miller, Mando Saenz, Hayes Carll, Neil Young, Bruce Robison and one cagey cover lifted from Roger Miller. The album will impact at radio in June

Haven't heard that song yet. List of songwriters makes it seem too alt to "impact" radio, but yea, haven't heard it yet so who knows

curmudgeon, Friday, 23 May 2014 14:02 (nine years ago) link

Yes, "WSJ.com" is Wall Street Journal...

curmudgeon, Friday, 23 May 2014 14:03 (nine years ago) link

impact AT radio

j., Friday, 23 May 2014 14:05 (nine years ago) link

We need Alfred to teach them grammar

curmudgeon, Friday, 23 May 2014 14:29 (nine years ago) link

I'm still recovering from the Nunn daughter in Georgia using "to architect"

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 23 May 2014 14:34 (nine years ago) link

Speaking of xpost Nikki Lane (still haven't heard the whole album, but so far so cool)
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/pictures/nikki-lane-the-rise-of-a-country-rebel-20140523?google_editors_picks=true

dow, Saturday, 24 May 2014 22:45 (nine years ago) link

Well, no hobbling vocal mannerisms (Church as well as Simpson) from John Fullbright: he's got the flair of fellow Okies Garth Brooks, Toby Keith, and sometimes carried-away Carrie Underwood. But also, maybe with an ear to the longevity of Okie-once-removed Merle the Hag's best work, he knows about the appeal of self-restraint, when you've really got something to restrain. So, he breaks his projection into succinct sincerity, applying the reins as he starts to rise (a little wry twist, tightening the jaw and nostrils as he starts to wail, biting the words to make sure they jump a little more).

Good thing, because he knows he could make it on this sound times glib sentiment, each one alibi-ing the other.Especially since, when he adds drums, and keeps the keys, he doesn't even need a balancing act, he could just hit like country-as-early-70s-Top Forty, in there between Tumbleweed Junction Elton John and, say, Albert "It Never Rains In California" Hammond. We know he knows, because, early on Songs(May 27), he's got this song within a song within a song, seems like, where he starts out hoping to get by another day without a cliche, and then goes into several cliches, culminating with "keep hope alive." Then brood on a while, and suddenly he's "Little Lord Fauntleroy/In a La-Z Boy/Tryin' to keep hope alive." But past the irony and self-mockery and self=pity, he seems like he does want and feel the need to keep hope alive.

So, I'm thinking this, and *then* he actually comes up with one about "Writing a song/About a song/Write a line about the line within the line"! But again, not just round and round the navel, he's also thinking about "living the life you wanna live," like implying, is this--which amounts to living a life that's about living a life---The Purpose_Driven Life, yes thank you Rev. Rick Warren--is this any more or less something than writing a song about a song etc.? Maybe too good a question!
Anyway, he then hauls out the drums for good radio bait relief, then gets kind of abjectly romantic while of course still sounding good(but not quite good enough to cover the weepier lines), and then, just as my increasing discontent became aware of missing the perspective-finding shifts between first and third person, re the sometimes scary and always ambitious From The Ground Up(2012), he (spoiler alert) got his gears back together. But it was a close call, and there's still-smelly valentines in some of the previous songs, which may drive me away from many future listens. Though at the very least, it's yet another good(in this case, good-to-killer) EP trapped in an album's body. We'll see.
Oh yeah, it's still streaming here for a little while (and maybe on Spotify later, like the 2012 set) http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/arts/music/pressplay.html?_r=4&

dow, Monday, 26 May 2014 05:19 (nine years ago) link

What's Willie Nelson's best album? Or is that too broad of a question?
Can't get enough of The Highwaymen and Waylon, need more like this. Again!

rizzx, Monday, 26 May 2014 14:29 (nine years ago) link

8-song preview (does not include "Automatic") of Miranda Lambert's new record:

http://www.cmt.com/artists/miranda-lambert/

Indexed, Tuesday, 27 May 2014 13:49 (nine years ago) link

Maybe it's just the initial rush of getting new music from one of your favorite artists, but this sounds great. The production is similar to the last album (which I thought had both pros and cons), but there are some big, memorable melodies, more reminiscent of the first two albums. Standout for me is "Oh Shit," but there really aren't any obvious missteps in these 8 tracks. The Little Big Town guest spot could have been a train wreck, but instead is a lovely, anthemic singalong.

Indexed, Tuesday, 27 May 2014 14:53 (nine years ago) link

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/25/arts/music/country-music-opens-its-ears.html

Jon Caramanica's overview of country's interest in rap

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 27 May 2014 16:05 (nine years ago) link

What's Willie Nelson's best album? Or is that too broad of a question?
Can't get enough of The Highwaymen and Waylon, need more like this. Again!

Shotgun willie is one of my faves

Heez, Tuesday, 27 May 2014 16:51 (nine years ago) link


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