She opens the album with “Peace Of Mind,” and on this
track her voice reminds me of Nanci Griffith. “I don’t want to keep up with fashion/I don’t want to pick a fight/I don’t
want to say I love you/Just to make this feel all right/I don’t want to make a
buck/Just to spend it to feel fine/I just want some peace of mind.” I think
this song will speak to a lot of people. It’s been a rough couple of years, and
the end of the troubles remains just out of reach. And everyone I know is
bloody exhausted, and in need of peace of mind. “I don’t want to know about/The mess this world is in/And I don’t want
to cry/Or blame or say it’s such a sin.” Backing vocalists join in at the
end, as if to say, yes, we all feel this way. We are not alone.
“Peace Of Mind” is followed by “1 4 3,” a pretty and
bright-sounding folk song. The title is interesting, playing with our
expectations of it being “I am with you 1-2-3,” playing with the order, like a
step into the future, then back into the present, giving us a sense of the
eternal. It’s also a reference to “I love you” (one letter, four letters,
three). And so for me it seems like an unending love, untouched by death.
“Home On The River,” the album’s title track, is one of
the disc’s best songs. It has such a wonderful vibe, with some cool percussion
and an excellent vocal performance. Check out these lyrics: “There are rocks and stones/That hold the
house on the river/Where I have my home/And I’ll hold you there/In my arms by
the river/To keep from feeling cold.” Adding to the delightful sound of
this track are Putnam Smith on banjo and Annabelle Chvostek on fiddle. I also really
like Rob Morse’s work on bass. That’s followed by another of the album’s highlights,
“When I Think Of You.” It’s a gorgeous
country number, with something of a classic, timeless vibe at moments,
delivered directly to her father. “I’ve
seen the maps around your room/And I’ve seen the places they’ve taken you/Still
it’s just fine to feel so lost/My home is my heart and my heart is dust.”
There is something about “Can’t Stop The Waves” that
really works for me. This one has a more intense feel, is strangely pretty and
haunting. “I’ll be beside you when you
wake/I can’t stop the waves/Find me whole or find me frayed/I can’t stop the
waves.” Caroline Cotter reaches some great heights vocally, and this track
also makes good use of backing vocals. Caroline Cotter opens “Hey Mama” by
reminding her mother (and us) that it’s all right to cry, and then begins a
tale that might actually make us tear up. But it’s ultimately a
positive-sounding song, in part because of Jefferson Hamer’s work on mandolin.
It’s followed by another positive song, “Found,” a song I really appreciate. “I wake up next you/And say I’m excited for
today/The sky’s that shade of blue/Her beauty mirrored in the bay.” The
album then ends with its sole cover, a pretty rendition of “My Peace” delivered
a cappella. It’s an interesting bookend working with the album’s first track,
for she’s apparently found the peace she’d sought, and now wishes to spread it,
to give it to others, to us.
CD Track List
- Peace Of Mind
- 1 4 3
- Home On The River
- When I Think Of You
- Eternal Light
- Can’t Stop The Waves
- My Washroom
- Hey Mama
- Found
- My Peace
Home On The River
is scheduled to be released on February 9, 2018.
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