various artists, Christmas on the Lam & Other Songs from the Season (Red House, 2016)
If you're still with me, be assured that -- as its title ought to cue you -- Christmas on the Lam & Other Songs from the Season is not cynical product but the actual labor of respectable artists who have put some thought into what they're doing. So has the Red House Records staff, credited collectively as producer. In good part, this is a Christmas celebrated with such secular pursuits as partying, screwing, staring gloomily through windows at blizzards or shouting drunkenly at jailers. There's also a blue Christmas, accounting for "Blue Christmas," the one standard here, performed nicely by Larry Campbell & Teresa Williams who remind us, in case we'd forgotten there for a moment, that romantic disappointment can strike even at those times of the year when merriness is supposed to rule. The one song acknowledging Christmas's first syllable is Jorma Kaukonen's touching voice-and-guitar reading of "The Baby Boy," the African-American spiritual sometimes known as "The Virgin Mary Had a Baby Boy" or "He Come from the Glorious Kingdom." Ruth Moody's hymn "Glory Bound," done here with her group the Wailin' Jennys, sounds gorgeously 19th-century. Meantime, the Pines turn in a suitably wistful accounting of Gordon Lightfoot's "Song for a Winter's Night." Charlie Parr's "Slim Tall's Christmas on the Lam," equivalent to a crazed shout from the deepest well of the Delta blues, manages to be at once shocking and hilarious. A dozen cuts, 45 minutes of playing time, a generous mix of lovingly delivered folk, country, r&b and blues. Nothing anywhere, in short, to complain about. There are worse ways to prepare yourself for the holidays. ![]() ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 19 November 2016 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |