Tag: Gordon Lightfoot

Review: Chris Richards’ Goldenwest

By Ken Paulson

— It’s not a surprise that a songwriter who’s logged time in Wisconsin, Nashville and now LA would travel throughout his new album Goldenwest, beginning with “Rubblefields,” a reassuring tale of a road trip gone right.
Richards writes smart, compelling narratives and delivers them with a voice and cadence that may bring Gordon Lightfoot and an earlier generation of singer-songwriters to mind.
Many of the songs are about journeys, personal or literal, and highlights include the affirming “Let’s Show ‘Em How It’s Done,” “Cried Like a Steel Guitar.” and the haunting “Brilliantine.
Goldenwest is available at Chris Richards’ site.

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Review: Jason Boland & the Stragglers

Rancho Alto, the new album from Jason Boland and the Stragglers, offers up traditional country music with a contemporary perspective.
Although comparisons to George Strait and Merle Haggard are inevitable and appropriate, Boland also brings to mind a young Gordon Lightfoot, combining traditional sounds with a resonant voice and a strong sense of narrative.
There are stories laced throughout Rancho Alto, from the trapped miner in “Down Here in the Hole” to the sweet sentiments of “Mary Ellen’s Greenhouse.”
The songs are strong throughout, particularly the final two tracks.
“Forever Together Again” should be the last dance at the roadhouse, a “Tennessee Waltz” for a new generation: “Singers and dancers, late night romancers, good-timin’cowboys and girls are looking for trouble through tiny beer bubbles that burst when they hit the real world.”
The closer is Greg Jacobs’ “Farmer’s Luck, a song about a man who is about to lose his farm to a recreational lake project. It’s a stirring work, somehow melding heartbreak and eminent domain.