Jan Smith, 29 Dances (Landslide, 2006)
Like so much I hear these days, these songs, in the sorts of full (and fully, grimly sterile) arrangements packaged in the Nashville music factory, could be hits, or at least album cuts, for mainstream country stars. Either that, or for the women artists (e.g., Alison Krauss, Alecia Nugent) who are creating a smooth modern bluegrass that nods only passingly to the foundational sounds of Bill Monroe and the Stanley Brothers. Smith's songs are mostly variations on love desired, embraced or lost, set sometimes amid pastoral landscapes: valleys, mountains, rivers, birds, flowers, small towns. The respected producer Bill VornDick has assembled a band of solid pickers who fashion a kind of neo-stringband, vaguely bluegrass ambience, with an occasional modest bow to unhurried rock 'n' roll. Overall, 29 Dances seeks to define unambitious as a virtue, and succeeds. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 29 July 2006 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |