Lucinda Williams – Radio City Music Hall (3/23)

Yeah I know. It’s starting to sound like all Lucinda, all the time here at planet Twang. So what? Who am I to deny the power of Lu? (or her publicity machine at Lost Highway – how about some backstage passes for all this, huh?) Ms. Williams will be coming to the Big Apple on March 23 at Radio City Music Hall. Oh how I wish for a Rockettes choreographed rendition of “Car Wheels on a Gravel Road.”

Tickets go on sale this Saturday 1/13. See you there.

Lucinda Williams – “West” Cover / Samples

Here is a glimpse of the cover of the forthcoming release from Goddess Lucinda Williams “West” (2/13). You can also hear samples from the CD at AllMusic.com. Keep checking in to Twang Nation for any more Lucinda news on the CD and tour info. I said it before and I’ll sy it again, Faith Hill and Sheryl Crow should be lick-shining the Luccheses of this lady.

Legend Porter Wagoner Signs to Anti-

Fifty years into his legendary music career, Grammy winner and Country Music Hall of Famer Porter Wagoner has been signed to LA-based Anti- records, and is soon to release a Marty Stuart-helmed project celebrating his five decades as one of Nashville’s Grand Ole Opry’s best-loved performers.

Wagonmaster, as the project is now titled, will mostly feature songs written by Wagoner himself– the same tunes that have earned him a place in Americana music history, as well as numerous industry awards and accolades. But one song in particular, while not penned by Wagoner himself, holds a special place on the album’s roster.

Twenty-five years ago, after Johnny Cash took an interest in some of Wagoner’s early recordings, he wrote “Committed to Parkview,” about a stay in a mental asylum not far from Nashville, where Cash and Wagoner both spent time. Cash gave a cassette recording of the song to bandmate Marty Stuart, who was instructed to pass it along to Wagoner, which he did– two and a half decades later.

“I never got around to it until we started collecting songs for this project,” Stuart explained in a statement. “I searched mywarehouse and found the envelope with ‘Committed to Parkview’ on it, with a note from John to Porter. Twenty-five years after I was supposed to and three years after his death, I did what I told John I would do. I delivered the song and Porter loved it.”

Wagonmaster is slated for release in May 2007. For more on Porter Wagoner, check out his official website, PorterWagoner.net.

Anti- is home to such artists as Tom Waits, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, and Neko Case.

“Everything But Country” at Pitchfork

Over at Pitchforkmedia.com Stephen M. Deusner has written an article titled “Everything But Country” which is overtly a review of Shout! Factory’s box set “Legends of Country Music: Classic Hits  from the 50s, 60s, and 70s” and is more subtly is past and present country music’s place in the American cultural landscape and Nashville’s role in inadvertently cultivating great alt.country acts. The title of the piece is taken from the typical response to “What kind of music do you like?” which is “Everything but rap and country.” Nice, thoughtful stuff.

An excerpt: Mainstream hip-hop has been filtering into indie culture for a few years, but contemporary country music has been slow to take root beyond safe alt- holdovers. Perhaps it’s because the music as played by corporate radio stations is perceived to be simplistic, jingoistic, and sentimental– which is true to an extent– or simply because Arcade Fire fans don’t want to be associated with NASCAR fans and Wal-Mart shoppers. As a result, indie faves Neko Case and Jenny Lewis are considered to be merely dabbling in country, and Tim McGraw covering “Stars Go Blue” doesn’t mean Ryan Adams is the new Kris Kristofferson. Instead, older country music gets a pass, and artists like the Carter Family, Dock Boggs, and Bob Wills are perfectly acceptable to indie ears, perhaps because there was no rock’n’roll to compete with at that time or because they’re so far removed from our current music climate that they don’t register as country anymore. Even the next few generations of country artists have found an audience among younger listeners: Willie Nelson is a favorite due to his ceaseless experimenting, Loretta Lynn found a new audience working with Jack White, and Johnny Cash is more popular with the indie (and every other) crowd dead than he was alive.

Adam Klein – Mo’ Pickens House of Satisfaction (1/8)

Hey, all the New York City hillbillys. Do yourself a favor and head down to Mo’ Pickens House Of Satisfaction tomorrow night (1/8) and check out the Athens, GA based troubaudor and friend of Twang Nation, Adam Klein performing for your entertianment pleasure. Yeah I know it’s Monday night , get off your whiney ass and catch this great show. You can thank me later.

Hellwood

Hellwood is a gothic roots-rock group featuring Jim White, Johnny Dowd and drummer Willie B.(Neko Case, Sally Timms). Recorded in a cabin in central New York, in a room with walls covered in newspaper clippings of musician obituaries, Hellwood’s “Chainsaw of Life” beings the minimalist approach of Johhny Dowd, the honky-tonk trip-hop of Jim White and the intricate percussion of Willie B. Hellwood wrapped up a Europeon tour late last year and the band is planning a tour of America this year.

2006 Best One More Useless Time

I want to take a moment on this first day of 2007 to add some other great releases that slipped my 2006 list:

Kris Kristofferson, – This Old Road
Tom Russell – Love & Fear
Dale Watson – Whiskey or God
James McMurtry – Childish Things
Loomer – Wild West Island
Elvis Costello & Allen Toussaint – The River In Reverse
James Hunter – People Gonna Talk
Hem – Funnel Cloud
Bruce Springsteen – We Shall Overcome: Seeger Sessions
Guy Clark – Workbench Songs

Useless List of Top 10 – 2006

List of “bests ofs” are bullshit. They’re either obvious, random or self-serving (I’m looking at you Letterman), but people like ’em and I like people. Especially the people that are good enough to show up at this site and spend a little time here. I’ve put together what I think is the cream of the crop and with some to spare.

First off the thread that runs through this list is the same as runs through everything else on this site. Call it Alt.Country, roots, freak folk, ya’llternative, twang-core…whatever. It’s great music from people that care enough to do for people that know the difference. You know, stuff that would give Carrie Underwood a the night sweats and Keith Urban a nice case of substance abuse (doh!). So let’s get to it:

10. Ray Wylie Hubbard: Snake Farm – This is a gritty, nasty, boozy release in the same vein as the Rolling Stone’s “Sticky Fingers” and early ZZ Top. Hubbard and his great band – Gurf Morlix on guitar, Rick Richards on drums and George Reiff on bass comes off as laid-back and dangerous simultaneously. The songs are rich in narrative with spare but choice lyrics sung with Hubbard’s wry, weary growl.

9. Solomon Burke: Nashville – When I was in Nashville in October listening to a compilation and “Does My Ring Burn Your Finger” came up and sent chills across my skin. Here was the voice of pain and accusation. The voice of bomming, baritone judgement. Like Ray Charles before him, Salomna Burke takes the skills he’s broight to R&B all those years and makes these songs his own and this follow up to the 2002’s Grammy winning “Don’t Give Up On Me” is a slow burning slice of country.

8. The Bottle Rockets: Zoysia – Deep-fried rock with hooks and passion galore makes this one of the best releases ever from the greatest bar band in America.

7. Scott H. Biram: Graveyard Shift – The one guy that can make Ray Wylie Hubbard seem safe would be another Texan, Scott H. Biram. No frills, just Rio Grande muddy guitar and hell raising vocals and metal attitude. Biram’s songs can also showcase the occasional straight ahead country weeper fit for the like of Hag.

6. Drive By Truckers: A Blessing and a Curse – Truth be told it took a while for this to grow on me. I loved the moonshine and blood drenched mythos of Decoration Day and Dirty South so the more grand stories unifying the release. The Skynyrd triple-threat guitars are there in force but the songs seem more tighter and the stories are more contained within each of the excellent songs.

5. Willie Nelson: You Don’t Know Me – Songs Of Cindy Walker Willie Nelson: You Don’t Know Me – Songs Of Cindy Walker – The Texas Yoda sings a Texas legendary songwriter (“Bubbles in My Beer,” “Take Me in Your Arms,” “You Don’t Know Me,” “Sugar Moon,” “Cherokee Maiden,” “Miss Molly,” and “It’s All Your Fault.”) Willie could cover this classic material in his sleep but he plays it with passion and respect each of the songs deserves.

4. Gob Iron: Death Songs for the Living – Tweedy who? Jay Farrar was the soul and heart of Uncle Tupelo and this passionate and soulful collaboration with Varnaline’s Anders Parker brings new life to these somewhat remodeled traditional folk songs glued together my spacey, spare instrumentals.

3. Hank III: Straight to Hell – Not many people are doing the what Hank III is doing by fusing traditional framework of honky-tonk with punk, metal and large doses of controlled substances and making something old sound new and , well, dangerous. Name dropping legends (George Jones and David Allen Coe) and talking trash (Kid Rock) he sounds more like a hip-hop performer than a hillbilly. By breathing new life into the outlaw spirit that has always existed outside of the Nashville factory Hank III is doing his namesake proud.

2. Bob Dylan: Modern Times – Dylan has always been a conduit for American music and on “Modern Times” he does a great job of reflecting the spirit of Willie Dixon and Hank Williams through his singular prism of storytelling and takes what’s old and familiar and applies current events of war, mortality, devotion, the profound and the profane and all things human.

1. Johnny Cash – American V: A Hundred Highways – By the 90s Nashville, in their infinite wisdom, had turned their back on Cash. But producer Rick Rubin had the vision and intelligence to allow master and simply do what had come naturally for him for over five decades. His delivery weak and rasped gives truth to the traditional “God’s Gonna Cut You Down” and the song Cash last wrote “Like the 309,” about a train taking his casket away.

Fittingly released on the fourth of July and recorded in 2002-2003, with overdubs added by Rubin after his death on September 12, 2003, at age 71, American V: A Hundred Highways is the last musical document of a dying man and is an honorable finale to a great career.

Honorable mention:
Alejandro EscovedoThe Boxing Mirror
Ray LaMontagne – Till the Sun Turns Black
Willie Nelson – Songbird
Neko Case – Fox Confessor Brings The Flood
Vince Gill – These Days
Lonesome Spurs – Lonesome Spurs
Jenny Lewis With The Watson Twins – Rabbit Fur Coat
Joey Alcorn – 50 Years Too Late
Chatham County Line – Speed Of The Whippoorwill
Old Crow Medicine Show – Big Iron World
Lucero – Rebels, Rouges, and Sworn Brothers
Scott Miller – Citation
Chris Knight – Enough Rope
Rosanne Cash – Black Cadillac
Juilie Roberts – Men and Mascara
Todd Snider – The Devil You Know
Shooter Jennings – Electric Rodeo