The album opens with one of those covers, the oddest
rendition of “I’ll Fly Away” I’ve ever heard. It begins with a kind of slow,
mean sound, very different from the positive tones I normally associate with
this song. You wonder if she’ll really be able to fly away, as she claims she
will, and you get the sense she needs to. It’s a really interesting take on
this gospel tune written by Albert E. Brumley. And then suddenly there is a
somewhat pretty and uplifting instrumental section, with strings. John Philip
Shenale does the string arrangement. A somewhat similar approach is taken on
the band’s slow, haunted rendition of “Amazing Grace.” It gives more power to
the phrase “a wretch like me,”
because you really get the sense of her being wretched. And when she sings, “But now I see,” you get the feeling what
she sees isn’t maybe what she was hoping for. And like the version of “I’ll Fly
Away,” it is the instrumental sections of this song that have a more uplifting
feel.
“Deep Water,” the CD’s title track, is an original tune,
written by Elouise Walker. The harmonium and cello create an interesting
texture at the start of this one. And then the simple, repeated strumming has
such a sad, defeated sound, perfectly setting the mood before the vocals come
in nearly two minutes in, asking for help: “I’m
sinking fast/It’s murky and cold/Someone rescue me/I need a hand to hold.” But
at the same time she sounds resigned to her fate, not desperate or overly eager for the help
that likely won’t come. “I’m in deep
water/I’m going down alone/In over my head/I’m sinking like a stone.”
That’s followed by “Saturn Bar,” a fun, mean tune written
by Elouise Walker and Richard Dembowski. If you like Holly Golightly And The
Brokeoffs, check this out. I’m pretty sure you’ll love it. It’s a seriously
cool song. And the horns give it a dark New Orleans feel (Saturn Bar is a venue
on St. Claude Ave. in New Orleans, and the song’s lyrics mention Louisiana: “Along
worn down edges of Louisiana streets we ride/Straight to an atmosphere where
heaven and hell collide”). The horn arrangement is by David Stout. It
sounds like voodoo jazz. This is one of my favorite tracks on this CD. “I’m lost in purgatory well after closing
time.” I am also incredibly fond of “Black Horses,” which was also written
by Elouise Walker and Richard Dembowski, featuring some wonderful stuff by John
Chamberlin on Marxophone.
Richard Dembowski takes lead vocal duties on “Oh Lord,” a
song that he also wrote. I fucking love these lyrics: “Oh lord, you’re just too hard to please/And you ask too much of me/And
I ain’t gonna get on my knees/I ain’t get gonna get on my knees and pray/’Til
you and I’ve got a few things straight.” How’s that for a fresh take on
gospel? Richard Dembowski also sings lead on “I’ll Be Good To You,” a song
which features Old Californio’s Woody Aplanalp on lap steel. “Evil” is an
instrumental track featuring some gorgeous, sad work on cello and bass. “Evil”
was written by Michelle Beauchesne and William Bongiovanni. It’s followed by
the dark and thumping “Hurricane,” written by Elouise Walker and John
Chamberlin. “Coming back with a
vengeance/But your love’s already gone.”
Their cover of “Shadow Of The Pines” has a different
approach from the earlier covers. Sure, it is a bit slower than the Carter
Family original rendition, but it retains a kind of pretty folk sound, helped
by the addition of Colin Nairne on mandolin. And hell, it was a fairly sad song
to begin with. Elouise Walker sings, “All
our future is overshadowed by dark despair/And across life’s path, sun no
longer shines.”
The CD concludes with two more covers. The first is an
unsettling, haunting, creepy rendition of “Silent Night.” Man, if it had
sounded like this when I was a kid, it would have scared me. But it also might
have kept me interested in religion and all that. I will certainly be adding
this to my personal Christmas play list. Woody Aplanalp plays lap steel. And
then the second is a cool, raw rendition of Link Wray’s “Fire And Brimstone.” They
make it a wonderful bit of back porch bluesy folk, a strange lament sung by a
possessed evangelist.
CD Track List
- I’ll Fly Away
- Deep Water
- Saturn Bar
- Amazing Grace
- Shadow Of The Pines
- Oh Lord
- Evil
- Hurricane
- I’ll Be Good To You
- Black Horses
- East Jesus
- Silent Night
- Fire And Brimstone
Deep Water is
scheduled to be released July 15, 2016.
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