The album opens with one of its
best songs, “Tularosa.” This is a wonderful folk-country song with some
fantastic lyrics. I was pulled in on the first line, “Listen to me quick now before I tell you some lies.” And check out
these lines: “And I learned all the right
ways to get it wrong/And taking my time took too long/When I see who gets ahead,
I’m glad I fell behind/Now I may be getting nowhere, but I’m starting not to
mind.” In a way, those are some depressing lines; yet, this music is making
me feel better about the world. And we all certainly need that today. I love
the work on fiddle. Plus, George St. Clair’s voice has a friendly vibe, which I
appreciate. It seems like everything here is working to tell us, as he sings, “everything is just fine.” That’s
followed by another of the disc’s highlights, “The Places Where They Prayed,” an
excellent folk song with some nice work on pedal steel. But again, it is the
song’s lyrics that really grab me, lines like “People used to love the land/In ways we’ll never understand” and “And how many forgotten ways of dreaming/Are
buried under all that asphalt steaming.” This is a song most of us can
connect to, or at least a song that most of will want to connect to. This is
really a song of our country, a song that our land itself would be singing. It’s
interesting, because it has a pleasant sound, when it could have easily taken
on an angry tone. “Liberty, she turned
away from those who could have used her help.” There is a spoken word
section at the end.
“Autumn 1889” tells a captivating
story about Native Americans, and the colliding of worlds and ways and beliefs.
“They started chanting and swaying all
through the night/They were calling for the spirits of every Indian that
died/Through the tears that they offered up every night/And they’d been run out
from the dens where they’d fought to hold back the tide/Of our numbers and our unyielding
desire.” And toward the end there is some beautiful blending of voices. “And now they’re dreaming of a morning/When
they can open their eyes/And the plains and the mountains/Will show no trace of
our kind.” “Good Times” has a delightful, good-time country groove, getting
you tapping your toes and so on. Then its first line is “I don’t know how you can keep on having good times,” which almost
for a moment seems directed us for having a good time with this very song. An interesting
effect, and it pulled me in. This is a really good song, featuring some nice
work on piano. And, like every other song on this album, it includes some good
lines. “You keep on having good times though
you don’t seem to see/That you’re only feeling better since you’re better off
than me/You think that those good times came to you for free/Or they didn’t get
that good until you got the best of me.”
“Lie To Them” has a light, pleasant
country sound and more nice work on backing vocals. “Deny what you have to do to save your skin/Now go and sharpen up your
knives/That’s the only way that they’ll grow in/Let them do the bleeding.”
And here is an interesting line, which is repeated: “They’re lying to you/Lie to them.” In this, the sixty-third year of
Donald Trump’s presidency, it is sometimes difficult to remember what honesty
is like. We have grown used to being lied to because we are lied to by our
so-called leaders all day, every day. Republicans are dirty, mendacious cretins
who care nothing about their hypocrisy or about this country or about anything
other than money. Sad, but true. Also sad but true is that Democrats are going
to need to start fighting dirty too. “They’re
lying to you/Lie to them.” “New Mexico” is another really good track. I
love the line that the border “Divides
Spanish and English billboard signs.” It shows that difference in language
is fairly unimportant, using the depressing imagery of billboards and the fact
that we have them in common. The CD concludes with “Talkin’ Mesquite,” a
traditional-sounding folk song delivered as basically spoken word, in the loose,
talking blues folk style. “They don’t need your love and they don’t need your care/Just a couple drops of rain a couple times a year/They don't mind oil fumes or car exhaust/Or the bottles or beer cans that drunk drives toss.”
CD Track List
- Tularosa
- The Places Where They Prayed
- Autumn 1889
- Corridors
- Good Times
- Cynthia
- Up To Fail
- Lie To Them
- Cimarrones
- New Mexico
- Pedro Paramo
- Talkin’ Mesquite
Ballads Of Captivity And Freedom was released on March 2, 2018.
Fantastic Review for an amazing album!
ReplyDeletePedro Paramo is a magnificent track if you read the extraordinary 1955 Mexican novel,one of the 20th century masterpieces by that name,
ReplyDelete