CD Review: Laura Nyro, “Mother’s Spiritual” (reissue)

Ken Shane July 16, 2009 22

Laura Nyro - Mother's SpiritualIt’s not something that I’m particularly proud of, and in retrospect, it was remarkably short-sighted, but when Laura Nyro, unhappy with attempts to market her as a celebrity, announced her retirement from the music business in 1971, I lost track of her until many years later. This despite the fact that she came back five years later with a brand new album called Smile *. Hell, five years is no retirement at all these days. It’s merely the normal recording cycle for major artists.

All through the late ’60s and early ’70s there was no more important musical voice in my life than that of Laura Nyro. For me, she was right up there with the Beatles, Bob Dylan, Neil Young, and Joni Mitchell. Still after her 1971 covers album Gonna Take A Miracle (recorded with Labelle), an album I adore, Laura left the music business, and when she came back I had moved on to other artists. It’s a damn shame, really. After Smile there was the live album Season of Lights in 1978, and Nested in 1978, and then another long break before Mother’s Spiritual in 1984. Then came Laura: Live at the Bottom Line in 1989 *, and Walk the Dog and Light the Light * in 1993. As I said, I missed a lot of great music. What’s worse is that Laura was no longer on my radar when she died of breast cancer in 1997. She was only 49 years old. Hers is a death that haunts me to this day.

Whenever a great artist dies you hear people say, “we’ll always have the music.” We’re all hearing it now about Michael Jackson. Cliches become cliche because they’re true. I not only will always have Laura Nyro’s music to love, there’s still music of hers that I’ve never heard. The album Mother’s Spiritual (Iconoclassic Records) is a perfectly good example. This album is the latest in the small Massachusetts company’s continuing program of Laura Nyro reissues. So far that program has yielded a reissue of Nested, and last year’s brilliant Season of Lights: Laura Nyro In Concert.

When Laura began work on Mother’s Spiritual, her son Gil was two years old, she had a new love in her life in Maria Desiderio, and she had retreated to a bucolic life in Danbury, Connecticut. All of these changes informed the songs on the new album. After early attempts to record the album at the Boogie Hotel on Long Island with producer Joe Wissert (Boz Scaggs) failed, Nyro returned home to Connecticut, expanded her home studio, and brought in her friend Roscoe Harring to produce, with help from another old friend, Todd Rundgren.

This is where I have to say that in some ways I am not the right person to review this album. Lyrically, this album is a message from a strong single mother to the women of the world. It blends a strong feminist consciousness with a burgeoning ecological awareness, and addresses issues that were heretofore unspoken in popular music. The subject matter is a far cry from the urban dramas that marked her early albums, but at the end of the day, the melodies are still fresh and appealing, and the whisper-to-a-scream soul of Laura’s magnificent voice remains intact. Some say that Laura had mellowed, but I don’t hear it that way. She had become a strong, powerful, confident woman, ready to climb the battlements and inspire other women.

There’s a lot to love here. I’ve chosen two songs, the original album’s first and last. One is a tribute to Laura’s young son, the other a tribute to her deceased mother. The opening song, “To a Child,” is dedicated to young Gil, and finds Laura struggling with the to cope with the stresses of motherhood, while at the same time reveling in the joy of her “miracle.” She says:

“Child I am here to stand by you
and you will find
your own way
hard and true
and I’ll find mine.”

The title track, “Mother’s Spiritual,” finds Laura remembering her own mother, now gone, while at the same time addressing her own concerns as a mother. It’s a staggeringly beautiful and powerful piece of music.

“Feel this love
my brothers and sisters
feel the season turn
She is the mother of time
It’s not war
It’s life she gives
and that’s where
mother’s spiritual lives.”

Once again Iconoclassic Records must be lauded for releasing one of this year’s best reissues. There may be bigger record companies, but none with bigger hearts. The new package includes a lovely essay by Laura’s biographer Michele Kort. There’s also a bonus track, a live recording of the song “Man In the Moon,” made in 1978, several years before the studio version that is a part of this album. Everything this company does is informed by their love of music. I’m looking forward to what comes next.

* Where there are no links provided for the albums, it indicates that they are shamefully out of print, though used and import copies may be available. Hopefully Iconoclassic can remedy this situation.

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  • EightE1

    I have a copy of this disc that I bought 12 or 13 years ago, and it is so poorly mastered, I think I've only listened to it twice. Judging by the sound of the songs you've included here, the Iconoclassic reissue has remedied this egregious fault. Nyro's voice deserves better than the treatment her records have gotten in the past. Thanks for the review.

    Rob
    EightE1

  • EightE1

    I have a copy of this disc that I bought 12 or 13 years ago, and it is so poorly mastered, I think I've only listened to it twice. Judging by the sound of the songs you've included here, the Iconoclassic reissue has remedied this egregious fault. Nyro's voice deserves better than the treatment her records have gotten in the past. Thanks for the review.

    Rob
    EightE1

  • EightE1

    I have a copy of this disc that I bought 12 or 13 years ago, and it is so poorly mastered, I think I've only listened to it twice. Judging by the sound of the songs you've included here, the Iconoclassic reissue has remedied this egregious fault. Nyro's voice deserves better than the treatment her records have gotten in the past. Thanks for the review.

    Rob
    EightE1

  • EightE1

    I have a copy of this disc that I bought 12 or 13 years ago, and it is so poorly mastered, I think I've only listened to it twice. Judging by the sound of the songs you've included here, the Iconoclassic reissue has remedied this egregious fault. Nyro's voice deserves better than the treatment her records have gotten in the past. Thanks for the review.

    Rob
    EightE1

  • EightE1

    I have a copy of this disc that I bought 12 or 13 years ago, and it is so poorly mastered, I think I've only listened to it twice. Judging by the sound of the songs you've included here, the Iconoclassic reissue has remedied this egregious fault. Nyro's voice deserves better than the treatment her records have gotten in the past. Thanks for the review.

    Rob
    EightE1

  • EightE1

    I have a copy of this disc that I bought 12 or 13 years ago, and it is so poorly mastered, I think I've only listened to it twice. Judging by the sound of the songs you've included here, the Iconoclassic reissue has remedied this egregious fault. Nyro's voice deserves better than the treatment her records have gotten in the past. Thanks for the review.

    Rob
    EightE1

  • EightE1

    WTF just happened? Six of me just appeared …

  • EightE1

    WTF just happened? Six of me just appeared …

  • EightE1

    WTF just happened? Six of me just appeared …

  • EightE1

    WTF just happened? Six of me just appeared …

  • EightE1

    WTF just happened? Six of me just appeared …

  • EightE1

    WTF just happened? Six of me just appeared …

  • http://www.kenshane.com kshane

    Coming up next they have the Jefferson Airplane's “Thirty Seconds Over Winterland.” The Airplane is another favorite of mine from that era, so I'm looking forward to it.

  • husnain

    “They have great topics like this one on http://www.energytalkradio.com and donate 30% to charity! Check them out.”

  • rabdrake

    Great review.
    I love “Roadnotes” she sounds so in love.
    As you intimate so confidant in that love.

  • rabdrake

    Great review.
    I love “Roadnotes” she sounds so in love.
    As you intimate so confidant in that love.

  • rabdrake

    Great review.
    I love “Roadnotes” she sounds so in love.
    As you intimate so confidant in that love.

  • Yim

    I felt I must make some sort of comment here about your well written review and our mutual love of Laura Nyro. We seem to have similar tastes and similar guilts…you just express it well. I loved Laura Nyro's music from her first relaese…I loved the renditions rom 5th Dimention and Babs too, but Laura's were the most poinient…and fun. It is kind of embarassing, but I think I was actualy in love with Laura…personally. Something in her eyes and certainly in her mind and music. Had I ever met her and had the oppertunity, I'm sure I would have proposed. What still strikes me a odd is I am generally not like this and stars and or famous people have very little impact on me…they are just other people after all; vastly talented or powerful, but just folks at heart. For some unknown reason Laura Nyro affected me dramaticaly and on a very personal level and no other artist has ever generated feelings like this in me. It is still hard for me to see a picture of Laura without crying. When I heard she had died…it was waterworks city. I really don't understand this, but like many things in life, I just accept the fact that I was in love with her. Maybe her music made her self so transparent that even a listener could fall in love with her. I really felt I knew her and (probably foolishly or arrogantly) felt that if we had had the oppertunity to meet, she would have liked/loved me also. Not to dwell, but I have never even remotly felt connected to any other artist other than vast appreciation of course. Just her.

    For me, Christmas and the Beads of Sweat was and still is one of my favorite all time albums. Upstairs By a Chinese Lamp; perfect. I must say that I too lost musical touch with Laura after “Smile” since the album seemed to lack the elements I loved in Christmas. And like you I will continue to celebrate Laura by learning all the more modern Nyro…Thanks for some of the inspiration in your review. Sorry if this was a bit babbleish, but I felt compeled…

  • boogie28

    Yim, your feelings are staggeringly similar to mine. Since I saw her live performance of ‘Save the Country’ I was enamored.
    Her music speaks to my soul. There are absolutely no other artists, be it musicians or otherwise, who I feel this way about. Well, maybe Paul Thomas Anderson (a great filmmaker), but I don’t swing that way.
    I almost feel creepy (as I should) about loving someone who I’ve never met, but she was special. It’s nice to see I’m not alone.

  • Tony

    Yim,
    You have expressed feelings exactly the same as mine, there was something so special about Laura, to me she is god, her music connects to me like no other.
    There have been many things written about Laura and the effect she has makes one write as you say, in your terms babberish. I played “Christmas and the beads of sweat ” this morning as I do every Christmas. Her music will stay with me for the rest of my life, there will never be another LAURA.

  • Nyro Appreciative

    She was pretty special, and really something.

    There was something about this woman that got under my skin some years ago, and I can’t explain it. I don’t dare call it “love” because I didn’t know her, but it was a deep, mysterious connection that so many of the people who respect her have for her. Another similarity is the drifting away from Laura in the later years, due to erratic album releases with virtually no publicity, and Laura’s reluctance to do TV, videos or interviews. So she became almost twilight figure. When the news broke that she passed away, I felt the same way that I felt when I lost an old friend from college that I had not seen in years: Why didn’t I visit them? Now, I can’t. However, with Laura, I can catch up. And I am. This is one of the albums. There are really two phases of Laura’s work: the inital material that put her on the map (Eli, Tendaberry, Beads Of Sweat)–intense and emotional–and the material she made after she came out of retirement in the 70s after her divorce, her move from New York City to Danbury CT, the death of her beloved mother and the birth of her child. Oh yes, she turned 30. Her later post 1975 albums show this mellower, more serene Laura, but still a woman with strong opinions and those wonderful chord changes intact. Not to mention that great voice which never dimmed with age. Had she lived, I am convinced she would have had a renaissance in the early 2000s because many people from Elvis Costello to Elton John to Alice Cooper (!) to Rundgren and Becker and Fagen have all come out as being major Nyro fans.

    Anyway, God bless her memory, and bless this wonderful little company for releasing this underrated and underheard treasure.