Barry Abernathy & Friends, Barry Abernathy & Friends (Billy Blue, 2021) Sturgill Simpson, Cuttin' Grass, Vol. 1 (High Top Mountain/Thirty Tigers, 2021) Like jazz, recorded bluegrass operates at a presumed level of technical competence. Because it requires a high degree of skill, any album you make not intended solely for your own listening has to appeal to an audience that demands playing excellence. I've been paying heed to the genre for most of my -- and its -- existence. In that time, listening and reading about it have led me to the conviction that however well the music is performed, too many bluegrass songs are there only to provide a framework for the singing and the picking. They seem, in other words, a secondary consideration, and a good number amount to lazily tossed-together cliches of love gone wrong or right, affirmations of evangelical faith, memories of the old home place and a few more stock-worn themes. The sort of stuff somebody raised in bluegrass could write in his or her sleep, in other words. The melodies aren't much, either.
Barry Abernathy & Friends' new self-titled disc and Sturgill Simpson's Cuttin' Grass, Vol. 1 remind us of what a pleasure first-order bluegrass combined with strong material can be. A Georgia-born banjo picker and veteran of Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver, IIIrd Time Out, the bluegrass-turned pop-rock Mountain Heart and (with Darrell Webb) Appalachian Road Show, Abernathy writes none of the songs here but proves his good taste and interpretative talents in an 11-cut line-up that accommodates, to this listener's blissful surprise, two each by alt.country artist Julie Miller and the less known but no less gifted folksinger-songwriter Malcolm Holcombe. Simpson is best known to those who follow country music that isn't played on country radio; he's won a critical and cult following with an approach that you might say reimagines the genre as a form of hard rock, sometimes even psychedelically so. Here, however, he's hired some of the leading lights on the current bluegrass scene (e.g., Scott Vestal, Sierra Hull, Tim O'Brien and others) and cut a generous 20 numbers, all but one an original. Abernathy and associates put down a big sound. If these were electric instruments, they'd produce rock. Yet they never step outside the bluegrass tradition; their modernized approach comes from a deep place. The "friends" are respected genre veterans including Sam Bush, Doyle Lawson, Bryan Sutton, Rob Ickes and Ron Stewart (who handles banjo duties in lieu of Abernathy). Abernathy is responsible for the lead vocals which, though not emitting a high lonesome tenor, feel tough and perfectly suited to the material.
Sturgill boasts a pure country tenor that lends itself readily to hardcore bluegrass. It's put to superb use on Cuttin' Grass. So far, while I've respected what he's doing, I haven't followed his career more than casually, but I may have to change that. The album feels at once intensely faithful to the bluegrass ideal and also uniquely to Sturgill's strengths. One part of that is his ear for melody. These are not picking exercises but moods and emotions that swim in a musical universe, where tune and thought are more than usually entwined and no note is wasted. Not everything is gloomy, but enough of that has taken up residence here to keep you from being able to relegate it to background sound. In somebody's imagination it could be -- to quote Sturgill, who conjures up a Nashville producer's complaint -- that it is "too sincere." I guess that's why my tastes don't run in the mainstream. I've never understood the appeal of songs that aren't sincere in some sense. Sturgill and I must be kindred souls. There's a whole lot of good stuff here. A few random examples: "Life of Sin" is what Hank Williams could have written if he'd been born a few decades later and been able to dissociate reckless behavior from incessant guilt. "Old King Coal" excoriates an industry's exploitation of Appalachia's people and landscape, maybe the best of its kind since Billy Edd Wheeler's "Coal Tattoo" more than half a century ago. On the other hand, nobody has tried to write a bluegrass song titled "Turtles All the Way Down." Nor (as in "Just Let Go") has one ever started a song with the sentiment "I woke up today and decided to kill my ego," which admittedly isn't as odd as waking with bullfrogs on your mind (as Mississippi bluesman William Harris reported in his 1928 "Bullfrog Blues") but arguably in the same spirit. The single non-original is the late Buford Abner's truckers' anthem "Long White Line," which Simpson has rescued from obscurity twice, first as country, now as bluegrass. And if he covers it again even if he has to drop acid to do it, that one will be just as welcome in these quarters. If not the only neglected hillbilly masterpiece, it's definitely one of them. Only in my most morbid moments do I sink to such despair as to contemplate removing current bluegrass from my life. Something always comes along to rescue me from such folly. Thanks to Abernathy and Sturgill for doing it this time. If you need your bluegrass batteries recharged, they offer their services. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 10 April 2021 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() Click on a cover image to make a selection. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |