Posts Tagged ‘Singer-songwriter’

CD Review: Matthew Barber, “Ghost Notes”

Matthew Barber – Ghost Notes (Outside, 2009)
purchase this album (Amazon)

The leadoff track of Matthew Barber’s Ghost Notes, “Easily Bruised” (download), kicks off with a sequence of sounds that perfectly sums up his overall aesthetic: A gentle acoustic guitar, a subtle organ, and high, slightly dusky vocals that suggest a Laurel Canyon vibe with a touch of Van Morrison by way of Marc Cohn. It’s a well-worn sound, obviously, but one that’s familiar for a reason — namely, that it’s just about perfect for talking about love, which is just as well, because that’s exactly what Barber likes to do.

So yeah, this is singer/songwriter music, and that’s become sort of a red flag in a marketplace glutted with the stuff, but rather than just tossing another acoustic guitar on the pile, Barber offers a mostly quite compelling reminder of why record labels are always looking for guys with three days of scruff and a few done-me-wrong songs. When it’s done right, this type of music hits the sweet spot between enduring art and widespread commercial appeal more accurately than perhaps any other genre — it’s why James Taylor’s first Greatest Hits has been an evergreen seller for decades, and why Jackson Browne can afford to arrange dolphin fundraisers or whatever the hell he does between releasing mediocre records once a decade. Matthew Barber doesn’t have a “Fire and Rain” or “The Pretender” in his songbook — at least not yet — and in fact, for a guy who so clearly evokes some fairly profound forebears, his lyrics can be downright weak. But he does have a gift for an easy melody, and unlike a lot of his peers, he understands the art of sequencing a record; though there’s certainly no shortage of soothing, gently swaying ballads on Ghost Notes, Barber mixes in some uptempo numbers to keep things interesting.

All in all, even if it doesn’t break any new ground, the album goes down so smoothly that it’s hard to be upset about its lack of originality. And though Barber’s lyrics are easily his weakest area, he does manage to get off a few nice lines — like at the end of “Somebody Sometime,” when he warns, “You gotta lie to somebody sometime / Better make it white.” It’s too late in his career to call this an auspicious debut, so let’s just say it’s one to grow on. I’m certainly interested in hearing what comes next.

Upcoming tour dates:
May 12 Living Room – NYC
May 13 Union Hall – NYC with Jill Sobule
May 14 Milltown – Carrboro, NC
May 15 Farm 255 – Athens, GA
May 16 Criminal Records – Atlanta, GA

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Don Dixon and Marti Jones LIVE!: The Official Bootleg

Marti Jones & Don Dixon, circa 1989For a few precious years in the late 1980s and early ’90s, the most communal experience on the pop touring circuit was a family affair. Recording artist-producer Don Dixon and his wife, the singer-songwriter Marti Jones, traversed the nation practically nonstop during those years, giving audiences in rock clubs and small theaters an irresistible two-for-one package: great tunes, of course, and the casual banter of two free – and kindred – spirits who were at the peak of their creative powers and clearly having the time of their lives.

This column represents a first for Popdose: our initial opportunity to post an “official bootleg” recording provided to us by the artists themselves. If you’re a loyal Popdose reader or Dixon fan, you hopefully recall the series of articles my colleague Will Harris and I devoted to him last autumn; in the coming weeks you may look forward to a similar series spotlighting Jones and her career. Today, we’re focusing on the unique alchemy Dixon and Jones created onstage, and the small but dedicated following they built during their touring years – a following of which I’m proud to have been a member.

The high church of the Don-and-Marti cult may have been Washington, DC’s old 9:30 Club, where the pair set up shop at least three or four times a year, often for multiple nights. Since the club’s capacity was only about 450, it wasn’t difficult to pick out some familiar faces at every show – the heavy-set guy who came alone, planted himself in the front row (slightly stage right) and sang along to every song; the slightly built, bespectacled guy who was always close (but not too close) to the stage and never looked like he was having too great a time, yet was always back for the next show. There were several couples we could rely on seeing as well, and my (future) wife Gwen and I would secretly (and competitively) keep count of their appearances at the gigs.

“Those shows at the 9:30 Club were definitely special,” Jones told me last week. “We loved those audiences, because they obviously knew our songs and they were so wonderfully warm to us. We felt like we attracted fans who were a lot like us, so a lot of times it seemed like we were in a roomful of friends. There were a number of places like DC and the 9:30 Club during that time – pockets around the country where we got more airplay and could play larger venues, where we could count on folks showing up who were actual fans of our music. But then there were also times like the show I did at a little club in Detroit, where the marquee said ‘Mary Jones.’ I mean, that’s my grandmother.”

The shows themselves were intimate yet rollicking occasions, Dixon and Jones trading the spotlight and sharing silly asides between songs. Jones would poke fun at Dixon and encourage his self-deprecation; she would even playfully mock his songs (a habit displayed to great effect on Dixon’s live Chi-Town Budget Show CD, on which Jones sings his “Heart in a Box” to the tune of John Denver’s “Annie’s Song.”) Dixon, inevitably, would at some point pick up a towel and wrap it around his head, Lawrence of Arabia-style. They seemed willing, even eager, to give their audiences a real sense of themselves and their relationship, and their set lists flowed almost as though they were being conceived on the fly.

Almost. “If that was the sense you got, that’s a great compliment, because those shows were always carefully structured,” Jones says. “We would put a set list together, we’d label it, and we’d keep doing that same set through a particular batch of shows. We’d organize them based on who had a record out at the moment – we would go on ‘Don Dixon’ tours and ‘Marti Jones’ tours, and whichever one of us wasn’t pitching something would get fewer songs. But then, when both of us were between records, we’d do ‘Don and Marti’ shows where we evened things out. Those were always the best shows, as far as I was concerned, because we had the least pressure on us and the most fun.” (more…)