Posts Tagged ‘Shelby Lynne’

Cratedigger: Various Artists, “The Village” (Win a Copy!)

The VillagePlease read to the end for information about how you can win a copy of this album.

The Village in question is Greenwich, and 429 Records has gathered together an accomplished cast to celebrate the music that shook the world from that corner of New York City in the Sixties. Lest you think my use of phrase “shook the world” is an overstatement, I offer the first three songs on the album as evidence. Bob Dylan’s “Subterranean Homesick Blues” finds Rickie Lee Jones putting a pin in the balloon of pretension that surrounds Dylan these days. Though not of his making, it marks his every movement. Jones jabs at it with, of all things, a slide whistle, returning the humor inherent in the song.

Songs two and three are Dylan covers too, albeit more serious in tone. There’s nothing funny about “It’s Alright Ma I’m Only Bleeding,” and Winnipeg band the Duhks perform it with requisite intensity and respect. Lucinda Williams makes Dylan’s bitter rant “Positively 4th Street” her own by bringing it from a less angry, more heartbroken place, and very few people do heartbreak like Lucinda Williams.

Sixpence None the Richer contribute a wonderfully inventive take on the traditional “Wayfaring Stranger,” and John Oates’ retelling of another traditional song, “He Was A Friend of Mine,” is something of a revelation. The extremely underrated Philadelphia singer/songwriter Amos Lee closes out side one with a typically understated, soulful version of Fred Neil’s “Little Bit of Rain.” (more…)

CD Review: Kristina Train, “Spilt Milk”

Kristina Train - Spilt MilkKristina Train’s debut album for Blue Note Records, Spilt Milk, acquired its title honestly: As the final recording sessions were about to begin, a once in a lifetime computer glitch occurred during file backup and deleted much of what had already been accomplished. Instead of crying over the proverbial spilt milk, Train went back into the studio and recut the erased material. “I don’t think anything was lost,” Train says, “I don’t think there was one magic moment that we could never recapture. I love what it is today.” There’s no telling now whether anything was lost to technology, but what does remain is the fact that in its final version Spilt Milk is one of my favorite albums of 2009.

Train was born in New York City, but raised by in Savannah, GA by single mother who kept Kristina from television and pop radio. As a result, she listened to a lot of classical music, opera, jazz, and blues, and took music lessons. Her ability to create the timeless music on Spilt Milk is the result of being raised apart from the influence of shifting trends.

There is a line of female singers that runs from Dionne Warwick and Dusty Springfield, through Aretha Franklin, on to Shelby Lynne, and now to Kristina Train. What all of these singers have in common, in addition to their extraordinary voices, is a thorough grounding in southern soul and gospel music, and an unerring ability to convey the emotion inherent in a song. Each of these artists also had the advantage of working with an empathetic producer who brought out the best in them, whether it was Jerry Wexler with Aretha Franklin and Dusty Springfield, Burt Bacharach with Dionne Warwick, or Phil Ramone with Shelby Lynne. Kristina Train has been fortunate enough to ally herself with producer Jimmy Hogarth, who was also responsible for recent efforts from Duffy, Corinne Bailey Rae, and James Blunt. (more…)

The Popdose Interview: Raul Malo

It’s nice to see Raul Malo back in the spotlight. The onetime Mavericks frontman hadn’t exactly gone quiet, but over the last several years his big voice has been muted somewhat by label difficulties and diffident promotion (not to mention an underwhelming reunion with his former band). Fortunately, that’s all changed with last week’s release of his new album, Lucky One, which is receiving a welcome reception from critics and a nice push from his new label, Fantasy. (Yes, that Fantasy Records, which is now part of the Concord Music Group and is building a nice little stable of Americana artists to go with prodigal — if not fortunate — son John Fogerty.)

Malo co-wrote every track on Lucky One, which brings together the myriad influences that have long kept his work so interesting. The swinging “Moonlight Kiss” is equal parts Bob Wills and Dean Martin, and recalls the jazzy sound Malo brought to a set of classic-country covers on his last album, After Hours. (That disc had been Malo’s third consecutive covers album, and followed a collaboration with legendary producer Peter Asher that had the misfortune of being released by the Sanctuary label just before it collapsed in 2006.) Another key track on Lucky One, “Lonely Hearts,” allows Malo and producer Steve Berlin (Los Lobos) to immerse themselves in their beloved Latin rhythms. Then there’s a pair of big ballads, the epic and haunting “One More Angel” (inspired, if that’s the word, by the death of a friend’s daughter) and the lovely “So Beautiful,” which is proving a highlight of the sets on Malo’s current tour.

Malo rolls into Austin for SXSW gigs this Thursday and Friday, 3/19 and 3/20. Popdose caught up with him last Friday as he was preparing for a show in central California, on the heels of a two-day whirlwind through SoCal’s two Houses of Blues and a Wednesday-evening stopover to perform “Lucky One” on the Tonight Show.

Was that your first late-night booking in awhile? And more important, did you get to hang out with the kid from Superbad [fellow guest Christopher Mintz-Plasse]?
Yeah, it was my first time with Jay Leno … actually my first late-night show as a solo act. I did get to meet him – he’s a real nice kid. Of course, later that night my boys were like, “Dad, you hung out with McLovin!” I was an instant hero. (more…)