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ARTIST: ERNEST
TROOST
TITLE: RESURRECTION BLUES
LABEL: TRAVELIN' SHOES RECORDS
Release Date: October 2009
By Susie Glaze
2009 Kerrville New Folk Winner Ernest Troost's newest album,
the aptly titled Resurrection Blues
is a brilliant new piece of songwriting art. Its thirteen Piedmont-blues
influenced songs tell stories of passion, lost love and regret-filled lives at
a cross-roads, looking for a modern-day answer to "how did things ever get this
far?" and "when did the darkness fall?" Ernest Troost's existential questions
run rampant in his first three songs; and then, the stories begin.
For those of you who aren't familiar with his work, aside
from the new Kerrville win, Ernest Troost is an Emmy-winning and multiply
Emmy-nominated composer of more than one hundred scores for films and
television. His first album of songs, All
the Boats Are Gonna Rise, was a return to his musical roots, inspired by
one of those "defining moments" where an event or series of events can turn you
onto a new path you didn't see coming. He writes: "I bought a Blind Blake
instructional video and learned a bunch of his songs, which led to my writing
my own songs in the Piedmont style. I had studied jazz guitar and classical
guitar for years, but had never played guitar in the open tuning that Blake
used. The alternate tunings I learned were a revelation and I now use lots of
different tunings in my songwriting." Add this to solid composing chops and
you've got something brand new that sounds old and is just flat good.
Some background: Piedmont blues is a true melting pot of
sounds, developed along the East Coast and typically refers to a greater
geographical area than the Piedmont plateau, from about Richmond, Virginia, to
Atlanta, Georgia. Piedmont blues musicians come from this area, as well as
Maryland, Delaware, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and northern Florida, eastern
Tennessee, Kentucky, and Alabama - later the Northeastern cities like Boston,
Newark, NJ, or New York. It's noted for characteristics like alternating bass
played with the thumb (some say it's like playing piano on guitar) and, because
the black community in the Piedmont region was more integrated into the white
community than, say, the Delta region in Mississippi (producing Delta Blues
with slides and simpler melodies), it was influenced by a variety of popular
music of the day such as Ragtime, Tin-Pan Alley and other popular music forms
in its harmony and rhythm. Ernest captures the feel of the Piedmont style
engagingly and gently, with an honest poetry that is both accessible and
profound.
Ernest likes to call his new work "cinematic folk" (perfect
for keeping with his film and TV work), and that's a great description, in that
he writes such vivid character studies with fable-like, morality-tale
qualities. Indeed, his songs are like entire films in miniature, like looking
at a painting that tells a story in one image (or several) on one canvas. From
Ernest again: "Stories are what fascinate me...I sometimes think of myself more
as a filmmaker than a songwriter...I love to weave words and music together and
create cinematic images in the mind of the listener."
And images do fly: Just listen to the story of Switchblade Heart, where Frankie, a
killer who "kept his enemies close and his edges sharp" falls for "a girl from
Tennessee." Then on one fateful night she jumps in front of Frankie as the boys
come after him and there is "the cough of a pistol and her mournful cry." Or
enjoy the whimsical Big-time Blues
where criminals find their just deserts, or the tale of the man who couldn't
get over a long-ago transgression in Sad
Dog Blues. Ernest captures the grand Tin-Pan Alley influence with a new classic
My Baby Loves Me replete with clarinet
and an infectious swing:
I'm under her spell, but this ain't no voodoo
My baby loves me like no other lover do!
This is a broad and colorful canvas of Americana. But his
theme I think here is in the title cut, Resurrection
Blues where Ernest asks something we can all understand:
What happened and how did I get here?
Sittin' in the dark, watchin' for a sign
My thoughts can hardly keep up with my restless mind
I've seen my future and my world has come undone
My gears are broken and my springs have sprung...
I got criminal blood coursing through my veins
I got addictive tendencies circlin' my brain
Waitin' like a pack of wolves ‘til I let down my guard
I'm doing my best, but I'm breathin' hard...
As a writer and artist, Ernest flatly acknowledges lost
youth and asks where did it go? In Hellbound:
If love once passed this way, all the trails are cold...
All that's left is old pale traces of tears...
Or in Dark Days:
There are pieces of me in here
There are bits I left back there
There's a home I cannot embrace
From beneath this shroud....
He embraces darkness and its reflection in his own soul and
in the tragic tales of others' lives, at the same time he suspects there are
answers around the next bend. You'll find yourself chuckling at the rueful
humor while you weep for the days gone by - the endless human condition. "It's
the dark characters that interest me," he says about his songs. Indeed, Ernest
himself is the first dark character on this album, followed by the man with the
"black Armani jacket" or Frankie, or the boy who vows to leave his
town through a treacherous black water "if it's the last thing I do." The album has a narrative arc
that works as a story line to unite the whole album, like the journey that it
is.
Then, lo and behold, his questions yield a great answer, and
with the answer comes flat out redemption! One last sad story, It Don't Hurt, tells of a ruined
childhood which he flees. He "met a girl in Richmond, so tender and true," but
he tries to leave her as well. Then, she "unpacked my suitcase" and "said,
after a while, it don't hurt." That's the savior story that turns everything
around and you can just feel the sun coming up over the mountain. Love is fulfilled
in Doubtin' Blues - hey: a blues song about being happy!
When black's the only color I see/And my mind keeps playing
tricks on me
Darlin', all because of you/I can put aside these doubtin'
blues.
The final song caps the resurrection with appropriate
spiritual praise, The Lonesome Gospel
Blues. He runs down to the river, through the valley and joins the choir:
Sing out like a choir of angels
We're gonna chase these blues away.
Blues Revue Magazine wrote
correctly that "Troost's style and subject matter recall Dylan, Dave Alvin, and
(especially for his concentration on life's darker side) Richard
Thompson--enviable company indeed. Such comparisons are not lightly made: Every
song here is a keeper." I also thought of Richard Thompson as a comparison:
dark stories with a beat. Ernest's melodies can be spooky and complex, but
always beautiful and beautifully rendered here, many with great instrumental
sections separating the main melody. Ernest's high and light voice can be
tender, angry, sad, bewildered and joyful, all in keeping with the story he's
telling. His fine guitar work can be moody and mysterious, then raucous and
joyful. I read another neat description of Ernest's writing: he's been
described as what would happen if the Carter Family, Robbie Robertson, and
Alfred Hitchcock wrote songs together. Sounds like something for everyone! For
me, the melodies and harmonies linger in my head and the characters haunt my
thoughts long after the songs are over.
Ernest is very nicely accompanied by Nicole Gordon and Lisa
O'Kane on harmony vocals, and joined by Richard Greene on fiddle, Rick Smith on
harmonica, Ed Tree on resonator guitar, Scott Higgins on percussion, Don
Markese on clarinet and Shaun Cromwell on banjo. The bulk of the playing is
done by Ernest himself on lead guitar, bass, mandolin and some percussion. This
album, along with his noted awards, should take Ernest far. He deserves it -
this work is remarkable and important and you are sure to hear more of Ernest
Troost down the line.
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 Magazine's 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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