The Honey Dewdrops, Silver Lining (independent, 2012) Stylistically speaking, the Honey Dewdrops -- the married couple Kagey Parrish and Laura Wortman -- fall somewhere between Robin & Linda Williams and David Rawlings & Gillian Welch. Like the Williamses (whom I have long known and with whom I have written songs) the Dewdrops live in Virginia, where Silver Lining was recorded in a cabin in the remote mountain community of Catawba. Barry Lawson contributes bass and mandolin, and Caleb Stine plays guitar on one cut.
Silver Lining is impressive, no doubt. The Dewdrops know how to fashion memorable melodies, and Parrish and Wortman are superior vocalists. There is much to admire about this album. Even so, on repeated and more attentive listening, one notices that mostly, the words have little in common with folk themes in any ordinarily understood definition, even a loose modern one. In other words, no ballads (as in story-songs), no playful rural humor, no quotes or borrowings from aged words and tunes, little beyond the arrangements to place the material in a cultural, historical and geographical context. I wonder what the Dewdrops are getting out of the tradition. If it is a sound, is it missing the spirit that engendered that sound? That doesn't mean these are unworthy lyrics -- their subjects, in fact, are as often as not profound ones, eloquently expressed -- but to my hearing (yours will render its own judgment) they provoke some degree of cognitive dissonance. One can't help being nagged by this question: why go to the trouble of making these songs have the sonic resonance of something they otherwise aren't? Maybe the next Honey Dewdrops album will resolve what some will experience as a kind of aesthetic discord. Those who don't care one way or another -- perhaps most of the duo's audience -- and those who do, though, will agree that this is an album that in its many compelling moments communicates power and pleasure. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 29 September 2012 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |