Erynn Marshall & Carl Jones, Sweet Memories ... Never Leave (Dittyville, 2015) Pharis & Jason Romero, A Wanderer I'll Stay (Lula, 2015) I first encountered the Romeros and Erynn Marshall when they comprised the entirety of a magnificent oldtime string band, the Haints, whose CD Shout Monah I reviewed here on 3 April 2010. Since then Marshall has moved from British Columbia to small-town Virginia, where she married fellow folk musician Carl Jones. Pharis & Jason Romero continue to reside in a rural village in their native province, where they craft quality banjos. Sweet Memories ... Never Die is the first release to bear Marshall & Jones's joint byline. The Romeros have issued three previous recordings under their own names.
Oddly, several of the originals sound a bit like Gillian Welch songs, in the written, sung and produced meanings. I don't intend this as a criticism, but it's a little surprising given the Romeros' deep background in the same traditions that inform Welch's (and companion David Rawlings') approach. This can't have been on purpose, and it's probably no more significant than the influence Bob Dylan exerted, consciously and unconsciously, on a previous generation of even the most sophisticated folk singers. In any event, these are, undeniably, intelligently crafted songs. The title song is a particular beauty, and "Ballad of Old Bill" tells an engaging story with particular wit and grace.
A student of the late West Virginia master Melvin Wine, Marshall is a superb fiddler able to call gorgeous tones and sinewy, stick-in-the-ear melodies (e.g., "Camp Chase," "Piney Woods," her own "Rocky Point") out of her instrument. Jones's charmingly gruff vocals come with an old Southern drawl that draws the listener into the lyrics. I also love Jones's evocative parlor style finger-picking on "Rambling Gambler," related to "Danville Girl." On an album of nothing but stellar moments, the couple both honor oldtime music and find their own distinctive place within it. While it's familiar in one sense, in another this is very much Marshall & Jones, not to be mistaken for anyone or anything else. More than ordinarily gifted, they find new truths in a musical style already notably devoid of falsehoods. You don't hear something like this that often, and if I were you, I wouldn't let it get past you. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 6 June 2015 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() Click on a cover image to make a selection. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |