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Penny Lang, Gather Honey (Borealis, 2001) |
Fortunately, Gather Honey is more than an archive: It's a portrait of a remarkable singer, Montreal's Penny Lang. The first track is a somewhat noisy recording of Leadbelly's "In the Pines," made when Lang was a 21-year-old secretary playing for five dollars a night at Montreal's Cafe Andre. By the time track 16 rolls around, it's 1978, and Lang is assured, throaty, an all-out diva, growling "Goodbye, So Long" on a small-combo version of "Gather Honey." She is also near the end of the first phase of her musical career; soon after, she would retire to the Canadian wilderness until the late 1980s. (She is now recording and performing again -- few performers have the good fortune to enjoy two musical careers in one lifetime.) On one of two bonus tracks, we hear Lang interviewed about her childhood influences and singing a couple of them: Jimmie Rodgers' "Waiting for a Train" and the Scots traditional "One-and-a-Tanner." Gather Honey is a great introduction to a hardworking and gifted artist, an interpreter in a class with Raitt, Sandy Denny and Cass Elliot. [ by Pamela Murray Winters ] |