Melody Walker & Jacob Groopman, We Made It Home (Maker/Mender, 2013) California residents Melody Walker & Jacob Groopman lead a modernist bluegrass band called Front Country, unheard by me. We Made It Home introduces me to their music, highlighting their songwriting and harmonies. The esteemed roots master Laurie Lewis produces; resophonic guitarist Mike Witcher joins on two cuts and percussionist Linda Tillery on one. Aside from that, this is strictly a Walker/Groopman record.
Walker composed most of the songs, with the exception of Paul Simon's "Graceland," the traditional "Sweet Sunny South," and Peter Rowan's "Mississippi Moon," all done in considered, distinctive arrangements. The subjects of her originals sometimes range beyond the expected bluegrass and country themes, Particularly striking in this regard are "Black Grace," a kind of secular hymn, and "Betelgeuse," a meditation on events in the cosmos as glimpsed from one's distant place on Earth. "Billy the Champ" surely is the most unusual song, a true story of the career of a boxing chimpanzee. It is not a comic piece; the sadness is inescapable. You can hear it as a moral tale of human beings' curious and unhappy relationship with their nearest relatives in nature, or to nature in general. It is amazingly affecting, and one of those songs whose truths require more than one hearing to reveal themselves. Walker & Groopman play with grace and blend voices expertly. All of this is carried off with manifest understatement and sincerity, not to mention brains and heart. ![]() ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 1 February 2014 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |