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Artist: RALPH STANLEY II
Title: THIS ONE IS TWO
Label: LONESOME DAY RECORDS LDR013
Release Date: SEPTEMBER 2008
By Dennis Roger Reed
To the dilettante, bluegrass is just one flavor of country.
The truth is far more intertwined, though in today's radio market bluegrass is
considered too country for country. Apparently no one told Ralph Stanley II about this, so he's just released a great
country/bluegrass recording.
Ralph Stanley II is
the son of Ralph Stanley, the
reigning patriarch of bluegrass. He's travelled and performed with his father
and his father's band The Clinch
Mountain Boys since he was old enough to stand, and has served as the lead
singer of the group since the age of 16, filling the shoes of former leads Ricky Skaggs, Keith Whitley, Larry Sparks
and of course Carter Stanley.
But with maturity, Ralph Stanley III's voice has deepened
and is a resonant instrument more reminiscent of George Jones or Randy Travis
than Bill Monroe or his father.
Ralph II has always had a love of country music, especially the stuff that is
more honky-tonk than bluegrass. "People get all caught up in labels," says Stanley, "what's country
and what's bluegrass. I guess there's a place for that. But all I look for are
songs that ring true to me." Stanley
has recorded two solo records that were Grammy nominated.
The instrumentation is bluegrass, rather than honky tonk
country. No drums, no pedal steel guitars. Mandolins and banjos are used
instead. Players include Tim Crouch on
fiddle and guitar; Randy Kohrs on
resophonic guitar; Cody Kilby on
guitar; Harold Nixon on bass; Adam Steffey on mandolin and Ron Stewart on banjo. Harmonies come
from Dale Ann Bradley, Steve Gully, Jim Lauderdale, Marty Raybon,
and Darrin Vincent. Production
values are sparkling, and the performances uniformly appealing.
It's all about the songs, and Stanley chooses well. On this project, Stanley only carries two co-writes, but has found some
great new tunes, and also covers well known songwriters Garth Brooks,
Elton John, Lyle Lovett, Tom T. Hall
and Townes Van Zandt.
Lyle Lovett's L.A. County is a tough cover, but Stanley sings with Jim Lauderdale on what is
the closest to bluegrass this project treads, and manages to still evoke the
creepiness of the original while imparting his own spin. Hall's Train Songs tells a funny story of a
musician that attempts to please an old patron by playing every train song he
knows. Stanley co-wrote Honky Tonk Way with Jake
Jenkins, and the tune captures Stanley's
"road focus."
By far the most striking song on the project is Fred Eaglesmith's Carter. Carter Stanley
was Ralph Stanley's brother and duet partner. He passed away in 1966, well
before Ralph II was born. Carter and Ralph created an otherworldly bluegrass
harmony duet, and Ralph struggled for some time before dedicating himself to
continuing the legacy he had begun with Carter. Eaglesmith is a stellar
craftsman, and this is an incredibly strong, emotion tugging song in any arena.
When performed by Ralph II, it creates an impact not found often in recorded music.
It's that good.
This is a fine project that straddles two genres very
comfortably. Stanley
is a great talent still developing.
Dennis Roger Reed is a singer-songwriter, musician and
writer based in San Clemente,
CA. He's released two solo CDs,
and appeared on two CDs with the newgrassy Andy Rau Band and two CDs with the
roots rockers Blue Mama. His prose has appeared in a variety of publications
such as the OC Weekly and MOJO magazine. Writing about his music has
appeared in an eclectic group of publications such as Bass Player,
Acoustic Musician, Dirty Linen, Blue Suede News and Sing Out! His
oddest folk resume entry would be the period of several months in 2002 when he
danced onstage as part of both Little Richard's and Paul Simon's revues. He was
actually asked to do the former and condoned by the latter. He apparently knows
no shame.
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