Raising Sand Robert Plant, Alison Krauss

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CD

  • Release Date: 10/23/2007
  • Sales Rank: 480
  • Label: ROUNDER / UMGD
  • UPC: 011661907522

Listener Rating: (62 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Performance" See All

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Vinyl LP$19.99

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About Robert Plant

About Alison Krauss

Editorial Reviews

There are duet albums, and there are duo albums; the shimmering Raising Sand, which unites Robert Plant with Alison Krauss, is emphatically the latter. There's no coy interplay between these two stars, no he-said-she-said routines. Instead, the album presents two artists laboring creatively (and producer T Bone Burnett surely plays a big role, as well) to create a third, distinct thing. The magic of this encounter is that it draws the two out of their comfort zones: Imagine America's bluegrass sweetheart harmonizing on Benny Spellman's New Orleans R&B classic "Fortune Teller," or the Led Zep frontman wrapping his rock-god pipes around Mel Tillis's "Stick With Me, Baby." Or imagine either of them fronting an eerie, Eastern European-flavored treatment of Sam Philips's "Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us." Yes, there are plenty of surprises here. Not the least is the simpatico blend of the principals' voices. Krauss is as luminous as ever, finding new colors for her exquisitely controlled instrument, but Plant amazes with his low-key, knowing, and indeed humble performance. Acoustic settings aside, Raising Sand is not "The Battle of Evermore" stretched over 13 tracks. Keynotes come from later in Plant's career -- the haunting, Gene Clark-penned "Polly Come Home" is sonic kin to Plant's mid-'80s hit "Big Log," while the preponderance of rockabilly flavor suggests a midlife reminiscence of the Honeydrippers (see their churning version of the Everlys' "Gone Gone Gone"). The artfully off-the-cuff production by Burnett gains additional earthiness from ringers such as Marc Ribot and Mike Seeger, but it's hard to think about the instrumentation when Plant's and Krauss's voices are dancing together in close harmony. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Robert Plant and Allison Krause are a Super Duoby Anonymous

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October 17, 2009: Robert Plant inserts some Led Zeppelin influence in this album. And, now I know why Allison Krause is such a success and why Robert Plant is so impressed with creating music with her. This is an outstanding album and very enjoyable.

Raising Sandby Anonymous

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August 29, 2009: I enjoyed this CD when its in a mix of others. There are some great fun songs on it. I don't care for as much when I listen to it all the way through by its self.


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