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ARTIST: JEREMY GARRETT
TITLE: I AM A STRANGER
LABEL: SUGAR HILL
RELEASE DATE: March 2009
By Susie Glaze
The state of contemporary Bluegrass
is in an interesting position: the genre has become a new melting pot, an
amalgam of styles and sounds encompassing Old Time, Folk, Blues, Country, Jazz,
Pop and, of course (hopefully!) Bluegrass -
the original sounds of Bill Monroe and his Bluegrass Boys. Why this is
interesting is because Bluegrass at its creation was a monumental evolution of
gathered sounds, from Tin Pan Alley, Blues, Black Gospel, Appalachian ballads,
Irish dance music, set to a blindingly fast pace, with high lead vocals and
group harmonies tighter than a drum. So now, it's gratifying to watch it
growing again and changing with this new generation, called "a Bluegrass youth
revolution" by some, all the while reaching back to grab, with love and
reverence, the old sounds of driving Bluegrass, George Jones-type country
music, Western Swing and mountain fiddle, melding with pop-flavored
contemporary sounds.
The contemporary Nashville Bluegrass group The Infamous Stringdusters sprung on
the scene in 2007 and made a big splash. They were six young country musicians
working in Nashville who decided to form a new
bluegrass band themselves and quickly took Nashville by storm, winning awards and
touring like crazy. Among their fine players is Jeremy Garrett on fiddle and
vocals. He's produced and just released his solo album I Am A Stranger on the Stringdusters' label, Sugar Hill, the same
company that distributed for Dolly Parton's return to Bluegrass
as well as many other very fine musicians such as Tim O'Brien (who produced the
Stringdusters' second release). Indeed, clear echoes of O'Brien can be heard in
Garrett's singing - he's very similar to O'Brien in his ability to straddle the
worlds and sounds of good Bluegrass lead
singing with more of a folk-sounding warmth. It's a clean, warm Bluegrass
tenor, with added tasty decorations that distinctly recall the best male Bluegrass singer (perhaps ever), Ricky Skaggs. O'Brien's
been called a pioneer of the progressive school of roots and Bluegrass,
and I agree. So his influence is keenly felt here with Garrett, and I think it's
great. The eclectic nature of it embraces musical origins while leading you to
the new, kinder and gentler destination of its future at the same time. So
there's this great arc of time that you can see and feel and sense as you
listen.
The bridging of the vocal style is right for this mix, and
shows Garrett to be flexible enough to give out a great performance on such
diversity as Hank Thompson's Today
(with pedal steel, piano and drums, sounding just as Grand Ole Opry as you can
get, reminding me of the great Mac Weisman), and right after it a plaintive
(and fabulous) mountain fiddle/vocal duet The
Fields of My Mind (the liner notes state, "Played and sung at the same
time, not over-dubbed."). The fact that he can go from one end of the swing to
the other back-to-back is impressive and gratifying. I can just hear Lester
Flatt saying "mighty fine, mighty fine!" (Bob Wills, too!)
Garrett's written great songs on this album as well, the
title track being one of them, written with his Dad, Glen Garrett. The elder
Garrett also shows up with another great song Give it Up (written with Craig Market) which is about opening your
heart to trust, written with easy and authentic poetry. Jeremy's Echoes of Goodbye is a great new
original song worthy of standard-status in the vein of the New Grass Revival,
while his absolutely hot instrumental Y2K
achieves authentic lift-off near its exciting climax. I especially enjoyed how,
in John Pennell's and Jeff White's End Of
The Line there is a soulful fiddle/banjo duet offered as beginning and end,
giving you an old/new experience in one tune, and the lush Peace King written by Garrett with Chris Pandolfi, sounding a lot
like the smooth and lovely classical/acoustic instrumental work done by Edgar
Meyer and Mark O'Connor. There's also the great Claud Vernon and Jerry Organ
standard from Flatt & Scruggs days What's
Good For You, rendered perfectly here. I love that he finishes the album
with a cover of a U2 song he states in the notes that he always loved, and has
remade in his own style, North and South
of the River. It's the most lyric-driven song on the album, and I think a
stab at making a statement about regrets and ending old ways. That says a lot
about the culture that Bluegrass music has
historically found itself in, and I find it a welcome ray of sunshine:
There was a badness
that had its way
But love wasn't lost,
love will have its day...
'Cause there's no
feeling that's so alone
As when the one you're
hurting is your own...
Some high ground is
not worth taking
Some connections are
not worth making
This old church bell
no longer ringing
Some old songs are not
worth bringing
The majority of the players here are not surprisingly his
Stringduster band mates Andy Hall, Andy Falco, Travis Book, Chris Pandolfi and
Jesse Cobb, adding other great guests Dennis Crouch, Jamie Dailey, Abigail
Washburn, Mike Compton, Shawn Lane,
Julie Elkins, Chris Sharp, Mike Compton, Mike Bub, Paul Franklin and Jeff
Taylor. Everyone is first rate, but I must shout-out to Travis Book on bass who
makes everything really cook on Y2K.
Jeremy Garrett is a gifted young player and songwriter from
a new generation of young musicians who revere the past while embracing their
interest in more contemporary sounds and flavors. And for the fact that he's
writing new classics and really knows how to get them done, he's someone to
watch and enjoy. There's something for everybody on I Am A Stranger, a truly feel-good and beautiful album, and the
well-crafted, wide-ranging styles explore and celebrate across a broad and deep
spectrum of Americana.
When you hear it, you'll say "if that's Bluegrass, then I love Bluegrass!" and to me that's worth the price of
admission.
Award-winning recording artist and critically-acclaimed
Bluegrass powerhouse vocalist, Susie Glaze has been called by BLUEGRASS
UNLIMITED "an important voice on the California
Bluegrass scene." Her album "Blue Eyed
Darlin'" was the winner of the Just Plain Folks 2006 Music Award for Best Roots
Album and FolkWorks' Pick for Best Bluegrass Album of 2005. "One of the most
beautiful voices in bluegrass and folk music today." (Roz Larman of FolkScene).
Susie's new release Green Kentucky Blues
and additional recordings can be found at www.susieglaze.com.
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