Lefty

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  • in reply to: Got a favorite verse? #32309
    Lefty
    Participant

    And I’ll tell it and think it and speak it and breathe it,
    And reflect it from the mountain so all souls can see it,
    Then I’ll stand on the ocean until I start sinkin’,
    But I’ll know my song well before I start singin’,
    And it’s a hard, it’s a hard, it’s a hard, it’s a hard,
    It’s a hard rain’s a-gonna fall.

    – – Bob

    in reply to: Rilo Kiley #34606
    Lefty
    Participant

    Do you have the new one by RK, van? Haven’t heard anything from it, but it’s on my “to get” list. Jenny’s voice sends me… 🙂

    in reply to: Thanks to Lucinda, Band & Crew! #34595
    Lefty
    Participant

    Thanks to all who took the time to post comments, reviews, set lists, gripes & witticisms from and about the LA/NYC shows. As one of the unfortunates who couldn’t attend any of those special evenings, I enjoyed reading it all! 🙂

    in reply to: 10/2 Town Hall #34196
    Lefty
    Participant

    How boring a forum this would be if it were just one big lockstep love-in. Your candor is appreciated, Jack — by more than a few of us here, I bet. Hope you catch a good night tonight! It’s the uncertainty that makes it exciting, imo.

    in reply to: Emmylou Harris #34159
    Lefty
    Participant

    http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/kuar/.artsmain/article/4/1068/1156324/Pop/.Emmylou.Harris:.Songbird:.Rare.Tracks.and.Forgotten.Gems/

    Emmylou Harris: Songbird: Rare Tracks and Forgotten Gems
    Emmylou Harris delivers a second look at some of America’s most cherished songs in “Songbird: Rare Tracks and Forgotten Gems.” The lyrical archivist revitalizes songs from well-known artists like Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan, and Donna Summer.

    by David Dark

    Great voices create civilizations. They sing, compose, interpret, collect and appropriate living words, offering them up in songs befitting the occasions, events and epochs in the stories they sing. The great voices lyricize reality. They tell us what happened, what’s going on, and how it all feels. As Shakespeare put it, they give to an otherwise airy nothingness a local habitation, a name and a way of looking at our own life together.

    By now, no self-respecting listener of English-language music should require a persuasive word when it comes to the majesty of Emmylou Harris. Like Johnny Cash or Bob Dylan or Leonard Cohen, she is not of an age, but for all time. Now, with Songbird: Rare Tracks and Forgotten Gems, we’re made to understand that her awesome stature as a vocalist is part and parcel with her career as a lyrical archivist whose own songwriting is seamlessly connected to her role as a faithful steward of other people’s songs. Her voice gives life to other voices, creating new contexts for people’s stories to be told. Her records make a record of the times. Her songs are a summons to research. Her music bears witness.

    This 78-track retrospective, it must be said, is only the tip of the iceberg (one longs for her celebrated take on Donna Summer’s “On the Radio,” or Sinead O’Connor’s “This Is To Mother You”), but it’s the tip of the iceberg according to Emmylou. It’s as if the shifting logic and personnel of record companies finally gave light of day to the treasures with which they were entrusted. “Important gems in the string of pearls that each album strives to become,” Harris calls them.

    Never programmed to practice the music of the country as “country music,” she was never made to do it “the right way,” as she puts it. This freed her to make music the way that felt right to her. Beginning with a 1969 recording of “Clocks,” introducing us to the “funny little people dancing ’round my head,” we’re dropped into a wide-open space of democratic dignity where stirring renditions of The Louvin Brothers’ “Satan’s Jewel Crown” and Bruce Springsteen’s “My Father’s House” can reside next to live footage of a performance of John Lennon’s “Imagine.” She’s drawn to any and all primal longing, and Songbird covers a wide range of melancholy; all of it thick with human-interest stories.

    Hearing “Prayer in Open D” or Julie Miller’s “All My Tears” (included here in the Spyboy versions) it’s odd to imagine Harris—as a very young woman who sang Dylan’s “To Ramona” over and over again—writing to Pete Seeger to share her fear that she’d known too little hardship to sing songs of lament and suffering with conviction. Seeger wrote her back and assured her that a hard time or two was likely just around the corner.

    She credits Gram Parsons with giving her “whatever is unique in my voice” but the statement is belied by a moving version of Bill and Taffy Danoff’s “Falling In A Deep Hole” (heretofore unreleased, Harris has no memory of the recording, but it predates her introduction to Parsons). Longtime listeners will also be overjoyed to hear a Daniel Lanois-produced version of “In The Garden,” originally recorded for the All The Pretty Horses soundtrack.

    Like most musical luminaries whose work is associated with the country genre, the country-music industry has often responded to her best work with ambivalence at best and, at worst, blatant disregard. Back in 1975, long before “alt.country” became all the rage, Harris was recording Beatles songs and receiving a chilly critical response (“For No One” from Pieces of the Sky is included here). And while Nashville almost turned a blind eye to the proposed demolition of the historic Ryman Auditorium (now touted as the Mecca of country music), Harris recorded a live album there (“Get Up John” and “If I Could Be There” from 1992’s At The Ryman also appear). The record is widely credited with waking up Music City to its own legacy.

    Songbird reminds us of the scope of Harris’ creativity and how it’s always connected to her magnanimity, her deep affections and her deep concerns. Great music always defies genres. It won’t be boundaried by marketing categories. And the big music of Emmylou includes Dolly Parton, Beck, George Jones, Chrissie Hynde, Linda Ronstadt, Steve Earle and Johnny Cash. The sad, sweet old cosmos she channels, song after song, continues to defy commodification.

    in reply to: Last night at Irving Plaza #34181
    Lefty
    Participant

    A well-engineered commentary, paul. Thanks.
    And, thanks for the link, Ray (Link Wray?) 🙂

    in reply to: Got a favorite verse? #32308
    Lefty
    Participant

    “Ooh baby, that’s hard to change, I can’t tell them how to feel; some get stoned, some get strange, sooner or later it all gets real, walk on.”
    – Neil Young

    in reply to: Rarity #34143
    Lefty
    Participant

    A tip o’ the cap to gravel roads in the new album’s liner notes maybe?

    in reply to: LIVE CD UPDATE #33951
    Lefty
    Participant

    @Tim wrote:

    I’m just being honest, Lefty. They’re being advertised as the complete album played all the way thru. When you put the money down, take it home, and then find out there’s a song or two missing that smacks of a ripoff to me.

    “PAGING INSIDE JOB!”
    (I agree, Tim)

    in reply to: John Prine #34139
    Lefty
    Participant

    “It don’t make no sense that common sense don’t make no sense no more.”
    One of my favorite John Prine lines.

    A photo comes to mind, taken of Prine, Dylan and Springsteen back in the day – – what a troika! 8)

    in reply to: LIVE CD UPDATE #33948
    Lefty
    Participant

    You’re a tough customer, Tim! 😉

    in reply to: WHO IS "AMACKER" credited for lyrics on "WEST #32496
    Lefty
    Participant

    I appreciate your kind words, Lucy. I’m not sure what I do as moderator, frankly. The oracle of our friendly forum is “Inside Job.” Hopefully, he/she will see your post and favor it with a reply! 🙂

    in reply to: LIVE CD UPDATE #33936
    Lefty
    Participant

    It’s pretty easy to set up a PayPal account. It walks you through it…
    Even an idiot like me succeeded! 😮

    in reply to: Irving Plaza NYC Sept 29 #34134
    Lefty
    Participant

    Thanks for your comments, observations, setlist, visions.

    in reply to: excellent charlie louvin profile #34136
    Lefty
    Participant

    Thanks for posting, Ray. I’m sorry that Mr. Louvin’s bus broke down on the way to the Utica show this summer – – I was looking forward to his performance.

Viewing 15 posts - 1,306 through 1,320 (of 1,435 total)