Re: [報馬] Lucinda Williams - West
看板CountryMusic (鄉村音樂)作者loveyourself (I Still Believe)時間18年前 (2007/02/03 17:01)推噓1(1推 0噓 0→)留言1則, 1人參與討論串2/4 (看更多)
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http://harpmagazine.com/articles/detail.cfm?article_id=5108
Lucinda Williams:
The Last Word
By Mark Guarino
“This is the last batch,” Lucinda Williams says of the songs on West, her
new album.
But don’t call it a swan song. The new songs confront, rail against and
ultimately find solace alongside loneliness and death, the two themes
burrowed inside all of her songs in a lifework of 28 years.
This “last batch” are the songs Williams found cleaning out the closet of
her personal history, in the dust hairs of wrecked relationships, ones which,
when clumped into a single ball, revealed a consistency. “All my boyfriends
were rock ’n’ roll guys, and some of them were younger,” she says. “That
wasn’t really what I needed, obviously. I guess it’s an immaturity thing;
you keep trying to find what you need and you have to knock on a lot of
doors. And finally, you have to say to yourself, ‘I keep knocking on the
same door and it’s not working. Maybe I should try a different door.’”
Through that untested door stood Tom Overby, director of marketing for
Fontana Distribution, an independent arm of the Universal Music Group, and
Williams’ fiance' since last March. They plan to marry near the end of 2006.
The almost three-year relationship arrived suddenly and with particular ease.
“I just knew. There’s just no question. You don’t have to analyze. I wish
it happened sooner, but part of that was my growth. I had to get past a lot
of old ideas and old expectations, old patterns that weren’t serving me well,
” she says.
Remnants of that destructive grind — “I would just lose myself in the
relationship and then I would resent it and then I would want to get out” —
end up on West. Amid the subdued tension of “Rescue” she reminds herself
in listed refrains all the things her lover can’t do for her, not because he
doesn’t want to, but because it’s an insurmountable task. “He can’t save
you/ From the plain and simple truth/The waning winters of your youth,” she
sings.
“I’ve since written some happy love songs, if you can believe that” she says with a laugh. “But I had to let these last ones out.”
“I’ve gone through a lot of growing and changes that I think are evident in
this record,” Williams, 54, declares. It’s a process that can best describe
how she somehow got here in the first place, from a university poet’s
daughter to a vagabond folkie to a songwriter who today just doesn’t have
the respect of an industry that, in the not-so-distant past, was content to
throw her away; she is the rare songwriter who can claim literary grit.
School kids can study these songs just as diligently as hungry,
eager-to-absorb songwriters at open mic night. In the illuminated images of
her lyrics, the sensuality of their presentation and the vulnerable roughage
of her voice, she twists together elements of blues, country, spirituals and
sometimes a dirty roadhouse backbeat into a near-mystical genre of
confessional storytelling of which she is the single living definition.
“Lucinda set a standard for a lot of people,” observes independent
Nashville singer-songwriter Joy Lynn White, who covered two of Williams’
songs on her 1997 album The Lucky Few. Williams returned the compliment by
enlisting her to sing background harmonies on 2001’s Essence. “I can’t
tell you of all the girls who are in the Americana genre of music that
constantly refer to Lucinda as their mentor,” White says. “If a reviewer
puts you in her genre, that’s a real lucky thing.”
“One thing I’ve always noticed about her is some of her songs are so simple
but in just those few words and the way her melodies are, they’re so
effective. It’s just a natural thing,” says songwriter Jim Lauderdale, who
has sung harmony vocals and played guitar with Williams since the mid-1980s.
“It’s very hard to write a song that seems so simple but in just those few
words, it says all that it needs to. There’s not really any extraneous stuff
going on.”
If West is a reaction to the turmoil on its heels, then she’s right on
target. Williams earned her reputation as a prickly perfectionist by default:
one who will fight until the sound in her head is also coming out of the
speakers. When a producer added drums to her second album in 1980 against her
will, she vowed never again; the radar was up. When critical favor and
commercial success met at a crossroads that was Car Wheels on a Gravel Road,
her breakthrough album in 1998, it was accompanied by magazine articles that
detailed the sweat equity it took to finish it, a process that ground through
a prolonged cast of musicians, producers, studios and sessions over a period
of years.
Of course, the characterization can be taken another way: the defensive
offense.
“I heard through the grapevine that she would chew up guitar players and
spit ’em out. I was willing to go out there and give it a run,” said Doug
Pettibone, the guitarist in Willliams’ current band. To survive, he learned
to read body language. “If she moved her body towards you but didn’t look
at you but looked at your amp like maybe there’s something wrong with [it],
that’s when you knew she didn’t like it. You knew she liked it if she would
turn around and be smiling like a kid in the candy store. And those were the
moments you’d go after. She knows exactly what she wants.”
Lauderdale sees Williams as “very sensitive” about how she wants her songs
to translate. “That must be one of the reasons why things are so powerful
when she records and performs,” he says. “She’s one of the few writers and
singers I know who moves me to tears and at the same time, another song
later, will move me to this mystical experience. When I sing with her, I’m
sort of transported somewhere.”
West was likewise recorded, then torn apart and stitched back, toyed and
tinkered with, until it became what it is today: her spookiest record. These
are beautifully bleak songs even with such dim lights of resolve. While known
for ballads eliciting heartache, these songs buck their hind legs hard.
Williams’ voice is particularly gnarled; atop the creeping grooves of “
Unsuffer Me” she delivers bruising lyrics (“My joy is dead/ I long for bliss
”) with no salve remaining in her voice. On “Come On,” the album’s
biggest rock moment, she scalds a former lover by blaring a repeated sexual
innuendo. The quieter moments find her drained. On “Learning How to Live”
she sings of finding a way to go on after being abandoned even though the
weariness in her voice tells us the chances are slim. “All I have left is
this dime store ring/But I wouldn’t trade it for anything,” she sings.
Those vocal scars, more cragged as she gets older, are exactly what made
iconoclast Chicago songwriter Robbie Fulks campaign for Williams to share a
duet with him on his 1998 album. “There are a lot of singers who can hit the
notes and convey conviction … but her particular value is in all the ‘wrong
’ things she does, in terms of modern commercial music, anyway: singing in
between and around notes, not hiding her regional accent, revealing herself
to a sometimes less-than-glamorous effect, the folksy vibrato,” Fulks said
in an email interview.
For recent fans who discovered Williams through Car Wheels, West can be a
heavier listen, one that relies less on the story narratives of her past
albums and more on personal moods. The songs are textured and less
straightforward. Hal Willner, the eclectic producer known for working across
the spectrum, from Marianne Faithfull to Allen Ginsberg, is credited for
bringing in an ensemble of inventive players that included jazz guitarist
Bill Frisell, drummer Jim Keltner, bassist Tony Garnier, keyboardist Rob
Burger, string player Jenny Sheinman and others whom Willner thought of as musicians second and experimental stylists first. The first
thing he did was strip Williams’ demos of everything except her vocals and
Doug Pettibone’s guitar. Then he rebuilt.
“We did have somewhat of a credo at the beginning: no steel guitar. We
thought ‘Let’s do this differently.’ Lucinda’s just so much more than
that,” Willner says. “I love contrasts, taking Lucinda’s voice which is
just so emotional and direct and raw, and contrasting that with strings. The
effect is more.”
That is definitely the effect of a song like “Wrap My Head Around That,”
nearly 10 minutes of electro-blues featuring Williams groove-talking to
Pettibone’s hardnosed blues guitar riffs, countered by Frisell’s spacey
accents. “Words,” a love letter to the art of writing, is presented in a
garden of subtle delights: slyly shifting percussion, flecks of accordion and
shimmering guitar chords.
“Everybody who played on the record really got involved in the musical
creative end of it,” Williams notes. “I really haven’t gone into a studio
with what I would call a quote-unquote actual producer. Everyone I’ve worked
with”—Gurf Morlix, Steve Earle, Roy Bittan, Bo Ramsey, Charlie Sexton—“
has been a musician-slash-producer. I always had this fear that a natural
producer was going to come in and overproduce me. I was still coming from
that rootsy, folksy place I started out in.” But as her most recent albums
broadened her musical boundaries, she said she was finally prepared for the
ambiance of West.
“I feel this album is really the one I always wanted to make,” she said. “
I wasn’t quite sure how to get there at the time. Or maybe I wasn’t quite
ready.”
The unusual setting led Williams to write songs at night and bring them to
the band the next day, a significant blow to the anxiety she endured in past
years when faced with writing songs on demand. The major revelation became
the two new songs referencing Lucy Morgan, her mother who died of aneurisms
three years ago in March while living in an assisted living facility in
Fayetteville, Ark.
Williams’ biographers tend to dwell on Miller Williams, her Arkansan poet
father who once recited his work at President Clinton’s 1997 inauguration
and with whom she shares her lyrics with before recording them. Her mother, a
long-time New Orleans resident, is less known. She was a living room musician
raised against a repressive Methodist backdrop in rural Louisiana. After she
and Williams’ father divorced when their daughter was 11 and Lucinda went to
live permanently with her father and stepmother, her mother turned to a quiet
life. Lucinda later discovered she was an avid reader of psychology, was
enrolled in therapy her entire life and was the owner of a library of books
by Jung and other leading analysts.
“My mother was an incredible, intelligent person,” Williams says. “She was
in trouble. Mental illness has run through the family on my mother’s side.
So some of [my songs], she wasn’t ready to deal with. ‘Bus to Baton Rouge’
[on Essence] really says a lot about all of this. I remember when I recorded
that song; she didn’t want me to put it on the record.”
A memento of her mother’s death is the new song “Fancy Funeral,” a drowsy
lament protesting the marketplace of grieving and the artifices pitched to
the bereaved. “No amount of riches/Can bring back what you’ve lost/To
satisfy your wishes/You’ll never justify the cost,” she sings.
Calling the song “a literal portrayal of what I’d gone through planning my
mother’s funeral,” Williams says her immediate family’s plan for a simple
cremation service in Arkansas was hijacked when her mother’s Louisiana
relatives insisted she be given a traditional burial in the family plot back
home.
“It really turned into a Flannery O’Connor/Eudora Welty/Carson McCullers
short story,” Williams explains. “I found myself in a funeral parlor for
the first time of my life shopping for caskets. It was the most surreal and
disturbing experience I ever had.
“Funeral parlors should all be shut down. They just suck you in. As soon as
you walk into that door you might as well forget it, you lost control over
your senses. In my case, my mother just died and I was the one paying for
everything and handling it all. And somehow I got talked into buying all this
stuff I knew my mother didn’t want. It was a nightmare,” she says, adding a
laugh. “I had to write that song.”
Lucinda Williams fans are familiar with the songwriter’s geography of grief.
In past albums, and especially on Car Wheels, her songs recount, memorialize
or address characters from her past who died unnecessary deaths or young
deaths, or abandoned their relationships in towns spanning the map of her
early wandering: Lake Charles, Lafayette, Slidell, Greenville, Pineola.
After Car Wheels made her a headliner and resulted in a Grammy win for best
contemporary folk album, Williams hit a writer’s block: “It was an
albatross around my neck because I was defined by that record.”
The laborious process she came to accept for writing songs was broken.
Instead, in a two-week sprint, she found herself in an unprecedented writing
spree, resulting in Essence, an album of songs that turned inward instead of
cataloging stories from the outside.
“They were so different in that I didn’t feel I had to work on them as
long. I remember consciously thinking, ‘Can I get away with this? Is this
OK? Don’t I have to work long, don’t I have to labor over them, don’t I
have to have more narrative songs on this record like the ones on Car Wheels?
’ I was really, really worried about it.”
With lyrics hinged on simple repetition, a crucial link to the blues,
Williams turned a corner. Through later albums, including West, she let
herself be open to different sounds, making room for influences ranging from
soul poet Jill Scott and the basement punk of Paul Westerberg to electronic
duo Thievery Corporation and the fuzzed-out North Mississippi blues of Junior
Kimbrough and R.L. Burnside. The space between albums slimmed, her
songwriting loosened, and her self-confidence grew.
Turns out the prime motivator for this creative renewal was a single album:
Bob Dylan’s Time Out of Mind, his blues-minded but gorgeously dark album
from 1997.
“I’ve watched his career for so many years, ever since I discovered him in
1965. I saw him go through the same kind of transgression from when he was
doing the older stuff—Highway 61 Revisited, Blonde on Blonde—all of these
heavy metaphorical and heavy narrative songs. And now, all of the sudden, he
comes out with Time Out of Mind, which is really open and moody and has real
simple lyrics. He almost gave me permission for what he’s been able to do,”
she says.
She met Dylan twice, once in 1979 when he gave her a kiss on the cheek after
watching her perform at a Greenwich Village folk club, just after recording
her Folkways debut. The second was 19 years later, in 1998, when he appeared
opening night to thank her for opening a leg on his never-ending tour. “He
had this very, almost nurturing, sweetness about him,” she recalls. “Then I
never saw him again for the rest of the tour.”
Still, they are linked. Dylan and Williams both understand how to filter
suffering in their songs—by revealing the real beauty within deep sorrows—
so it doesn’t translate as boilerplate misery. There is a process and,
unfortunately, there is a price.
※ 引述《loveyourself (I Still Believe)》之銘言:
: 官網:http://www.lucindawilliams.com/
: 新專輯West二月十三日在美發行,沒意外的話,台灣環球還是會發行~
: 曲目:
: 1. Are You Alright?
: 2. Mama You Sweet
: 3. Learning How To Live
: 4. Fancy Funeral
: 5. Unsuffer Me
: 6. Everything Has Changed
: 7. Come On
: 8. Where Is My Love?
: 9. Rescue
: 10. What If
: 11. Wrap My Head Around That
: 12. Words
: 13. West
: 滿喜歡新專輯封面,不過官網右邊那張照片猛然一看還以為是jo dee messina,嚇一跳。
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