Four years after the release of the tepid
Old Friends,
Guy Clark signed to the newly revitalized Elektra Asylum label seemingly dedicated to recording and marketing American roots music. Teaming once again with producer
Miles Wilkinson,
Clark delivered an ambitious, soulful, and state-of-the-art batch of songs. There is an all-star cast here, as per usual. Nonetheless
Clark and
Wilkinson solidified their vision, and here it works seamlessly, and virtually all of the musical arrangements and sounds serve the songs. Players and singers included
Jerry Douglas,
Sam Bush,
Verlon Thompson,
Foster & Lloyd,
Marty Stuart,
Emmylou Harris,
Rodney Crowell,
Suzy Ragsdale,
Brian Ahern, and drummer Kenny Malone. The opener, a light country shuffle flavored with the blues entitled "Baton Rouge," is catchy in the same way that "Homegrown Tomatoes" was nine years earlier. The tile track, written with
Thompson, is an intimate look at what goes on inside a man's mind when he works with his hands and the universe he encounters there.
Douglas' slide guitar solo and the gorgeous
Thompson harmonies deepen the impact. "Picasso's Mandolin," co-authored with
Foster & Lloyd, is a lilting number with hand percussion,
Bush's mandolin playing sad and sweet, and three-part harmonies by
Clark with
Foster & Lloyd. What strikes the listener in the first five tracks is how spare everything is, no matter how many or few instruments are on a given cut.
Wilkinson sculpts the sound around
Clark's stiletto fine lyrics. Perhaps this is best encountered on "Hey, Where'd You Get This Number." It's a humorous funky country tune with a quartet and no backing vocals, and
Clark's wit sizzles in the mix, full of cruelty and irony. But it also comes through in the tender and moving "I Don't Love You Much Do I."
Stuart's mandolin and
Thompson's guitar wind around one another, framing
Clark's creaking and elegant lyrics as he sings them in his usual slow, deliberate manner, getting every ounce of insight and emotion from the syllables. It took four more years to get another record out of
Clark, but it's a winner all the way around. ~ Thom Jurek