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CD - Digi-Pak
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On her scintillating second album, roots-oriented singer-songwriter/activist Adrienne Young takes inspiration from Ben Franklin's call to a higher moral standard in his guide to Thirteen Virtues (which is included here as a separate booklet). Aiding and abetting her on this old-timey journey are formidable acoustic musicians -- Will Kimbrough, Tim O'Brien, Rob McCoury, and Mike Bub from the Del McCoury Band, among many estimable others -- and suffice it to say they seem right in sync with Young's worldview. The songs range from forthright personal mission statements -- message songs don't get any more jubilant than the album-opening title track, a driving, hoedown-style workout right out of Appalachia -- to stirring, instructive folktales from Young's youth, such as the sumptuous country ballad "Pretty Ella Arkansas" and a dry, dusty, twisted tale of a homicidal maniac, "Rastus Russell." Young also includes inspired cover songs that span a time frame connecting the pioneer fiddler/entertainer Uncle Dave Macon (a bustling, banjo-fired "Don't Get Weary") to the Grateful Dead (via the solemn "Brokedown Palace," a poignant Garcia-Hunter meditation on reconciliation and enduring love). The gospel song "Farther Along" is given a jubilant, celebratory bluegrass treatment with plenty of room for individual soloists to shine (kudos to fiery fiddler Jeremy Garrett); it seems to sum up the larger point Young is trying to make in the lyrics "farther along / we'll know all about it." Until that time arrives, look to The Art of Virtue as a light unto the path. David McGee, Barnes & Noble