- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
- Spend $25, Get FREE SHIPPING
Coal Kathy Mattea

Want to reserve & pick up at your local store?
- Enter your zip
CD - Digi-Pak
- Release Date: 04/01/2008
- Sales Rank: 35,473
- Label: Captain Potato
- UPC: 689076532600
Overview -
Coal
To listen to samples you'll need a Windows Media Player
Coal
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | |
| 11 | |
About this Artist
Editorial Reviews
Darkness, in and out of the mine, is ever present in the coal miner's life. Unassuming, gripping, and informed by experience, Kathy Mattea's journey back to her West Virginia roots in Coal (produced by Marty Stuart) is a tale told darkly, exploring the hardship, tenacity, and endurance that are the mining family's daily bread. Mattea, who can belt with the best of 'em, approaches these songs with controlled fury and heightened empathy for lives at risk. While the world moves on (Jean Ritchie's rumbling "The L&N Don't Stop Here Anymore" opens the album on an ominous note, lamenting the demise of a mining community and the all-consuming darkness attached to it), miners accept their dire fate (Darrel Scott's foreboding "You'll Never Leave Harlan Alive"), and the beckoning mine persists in myth and in fact as a voracious, subterranean leviathan (the chilling "Black Lung"). Stuart, who knows how to work with great singers in the studio, lets Mattea soar above a spare, haunting soundscape. Byron House's slap bass is the journey's indomitable beating heart, an aural evocation of the coal miners' persistence, and Stuart makes sure to keep its pulse right there. Other instruments -- mandolin, banjo, cello, accordion -- make what amount to cameo appearances, popping up periodically for added atmosphere as Mattea works her way through a merciless, unforgiving landscape. Patti Loveless adds keening mountain harmony to a miner's tale of physical dissolution, "Blue Diamond Mines," and Tim and Molly O'Brien join Mattea on soothing, spiritually redolent choruses of a bittersweet memory of the home state, "Green Rolling Hills." In the end, though, Mattea is utterly alone, singing a cappella, in the desolate denouement, "Black Lung/Coal," before the entire exercise fades to the deepest hue of black. No stranger to deeply personal albums, Kathy Mattea, with Coal, digs deep for something extra and finds it. David McGee, Barnes & Noble
More Reviews and Recommendations






















Loading...