The third solo outing from the spell-casting Kentucky songstress,
Over and Even is a breezy, lyrically bold, sonically beautiful soft barrage of bucolic country-folk that evokes
Linda Thompson,
Joni Mitchell,
Vashti Bunyan, and
Hem. It would be easy to peg
Shelley and crafty six-string co-conspirator
Nathan Salsburg as the Bluegrass State's answer to
Gillian Welch and
David Rawlings, but they lack that duos' trad-folk stridency and penchant for dust bowl pageantry, and their particular brand of mountain music feels much more rooted in the immigrant-rich Appalachian traditions, where a misty morning is just as likely to invoke fog rising over the Shannon or the Thames as it is the Mississippi. Recorded in an old farmhouse with very few takes, the 12-track set feels rooted but not rootsy. Highlights like "Brighter Than the Blues," "No More Shelter," "Stay on My Shore," and the hypnotic title track are as spectral as they are homey, due in large part to
Shelley's unfussy, yet poetic lyrics and warm, open-hearted voice, which is easy like Sunday morning, but carries with it the burdens of the week prior.
Salsburg peppers each of these songs with tasteful runs seasoned with generous amounts of reverb, and between the two, it's a wonder that they manage to keep things from simply rising up out of the valley and into the ether, but like fellow Kentuckian
Bonnie "Prince" Billy, who lends his high and lonesome croon to three of the quietly magnificent
Over and Even's best cuts, there's a bold stroke of genial Southerness that runs through the music and keeps things tempered, honest, and effortlessly authentic, despite a predilection for eccentricity. [
Over and Even was also released on LP.] ~ James Christopher Monger