Martin Simpson, Home Recordings (Topic, 2020)
Home Recordings, which is exactly what the album amounts to, features Simpson's solo guitar and banjo, plus his marvel of a baritone voice and 14 well-chosen songs and instrumentals. It came into being this past September as he lived restlessly in quarantine from the virus that has changed all our lives. He usually has a band with him, but here he carries himself along alone. The stark atmospherics that arise from the recording speak to an extraordinary interpretive gift, even on cuts as well-traveled as Dylan's "The Times They Are A-Changin'" and -- especially -- the venerable Child ballad "House Carpenter" (done in a distinctive banjo arrangement) which, as often as I've heard it by everybody from Clarence Ashley to Joan Baez, actually scared me this time around. There is a riveting reading of Robin Williamson's often-sung "October Song" as well as the late John Prine's "Angel from Montgomery." These are both exceptional numbers in nearly any circumstance or by any artist of reasonable competence, but Simpson's rich approaches call up their respective emotional cores in a way that makes each seem almost freshly conceived. I was surprised to see Lyle Lovett's "Family Reserve" as the opening cut. I would have sworn I'd be the only one who remembers it, a recitation of cousins, uncles and other relatives who have died in bizarre accidents occasioned by their own inattention, drunkenness or carelessness. It will draw a chuckle out of your throat even when somewhere else in your personal moral universe you understand that this is, in fact, the horror section. Some originals and traditional numbers, English and American, evoke a range of moods and sounds, each with its own pleasures to share. It'll have you feeling something other than in captivity. ![]() ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 9 January 2021 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |