Enter a zip code
CD - Remastered / Bonus Tracks
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
Stung by critical barbs attributing her chart success to the pop elements in her music, Emmylou Harris responded in 1979 with a premeditated venture into pure, traditional country, Blue Kentucky Girl. By this time her Hot Band had solidified into a formidable unit, featuring the likes of Rodney Crowell and Albert Lee on guitars, Glen D. Hardin on piano, Ronnie Tutt on drums, Hank DeVito on pedal steel, Emory Gordy on bass, and Ricky Skaggs on fiddle, supplemented by perennial guests such as the legendary guitarist James Burton and vocalist Fayssoux Starling. With songs drawn from contemporary writers such as Crowell ("Even Cowgirls Get the Blues") and Willie Nelson (the album-opening stomp, "Sister's Coming Home," sparked by Skaggs' furious fiddling) and sturdy veterans such as Charlie and Ira Louvin ("Everytime You Leave," done as a torchy cri de coeur with Don Everly) and Leon Payne ("They'll Never Take His Love from Me"), Blue Kentucky Girl was instantly timeless and timely, as it is today. In both content and style its songs underscored a link between country's past and present (in spite of the mainstream trend, then and now), even as the subtle, low-key arrangements built on classic country sound signatures while injecting discreet, contemporary punctuation along the way. In the end, though, Harris's expressive voice tells the most important story, from the austere beauty of Jean Ritchie's "Sorry in the Wind" to the stirring, soul-deep ruminations on a vanished love in the extraordinary "Beneath Still Waters," a country chart-topper in 1980. Two bonus tracks supplement the original ten-song LP, one a duet with Glen Campbell on the bluesy "Cheatin' Is," the other a solid, Hank Cochranpenned lament, "I Know an Ending when It Comes" -- mere icing on a cake already rich in heart and soul. David McGee, Barnes & Noble