Lucinda Williams
has earned a reputation for her meticulous approach to making albums,
but a careful listen to her work suggests that she isn't trying to make
her music sound perfect, she just wants it to sound right, and
she isn't afraid to spend the extra time waiting for the charmed moment
to get caught on tape. This attitude seems to be borne out in her
first-ever concert album, Live @ The Fillmore,
which manages to sound carefully considered, and a model of "warts and
all" authenticity at the same time. Recorded during a three-night stand
in San Francisco, the album captures Williams' band in superb form -- Doug Pettibone's guitars, Taras Prodaniuk's bass, and Jim Christie's drums merge into a tight and emphatic groove machine that can match Williams's
many moods, whether she's quietly contemplative on "Blue," rocking out
hard on "Changed the Locks," or howling the blues on "Essence," while
the deeply resonant recording and mix gives them the royal treatment. Williams
herself is a slightly more complicated matter here -- her performance
is deeply into the spirit, so much so that sometimes her melismatic
wanderings and broad phrasing sound like they're verging on caricature.
But this is clearly a recording of a performance, and by the time we get to the end of disc two, the broad strokes have coalesced into something quite remarkable; as Williams
searches through the nooks and crannies of her songs, you sense she's
discovering things that she didn't expect to find, and it's a tremendous
thing to hear. Lucinda Williams
is an artist who writes from her soul, and she's thoroughly unafraid of
letting her passion show when she sings. If that makes for strained
technique, it also results in very real art, and this album offers a
privileged glimpse of a singular songwriter in full flight.
aCá
Sunday, January 12, 2014
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