home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT1797>
- <title>
- Aug. 12, 1991: The New Troubadours
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 12, 1991 Busybodies & Crybabies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 66
- The New Troubadours
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Fresh sound abounds in the reflective music of a new generation
- of singer-songwriters
- </p>
- <p>By Jay Cocks--Reported by Elizabeth L. Bland/New York
- </p>
- <p> The music everywhere, on the air and on MTV, seems noisier
- than ever. Every time you change a channel it seems like some
- rapper is sticking his finger in your face: Yo! Listen up!
- </p>
- <p> Well, not right now. I've got other things to listen to.
- O.K.--you can hear the rejoinder immediately--like what...Zamfir? Bart Simpson? The Brandenburg Concertos
- reinterpreted with singing crystals by Linda Evans' boyfriend?
- </p>
- <p> Well, no. Just look around a little. There is some
- rock-solid music in our midst, but its coming has been so quiet
- that it seems to have arrived almost by stealth. Certainly it
- is not overwhelming the charts, and it is probably not to be
- heard on the radio anywhere short of the far ends of the FM
- dial. But it's worth searching out. If there's a college station
- in your area, they'll play it; any record store that doesn't
- feature a life-size color cutout of the Nelson twins will
- probably stock it. A couple of the musicians' names will be
- familiar to connoisseurs: Richard Thompson, Paul Brady. More--and this is the beauty part--will be new: Chris Whitley, Will
- T. Massey, Peter Himmelman, James McMurtry.
- </p>
- <p> They are working, each on his own, the same territory. The
- music will sound familiar to anyone who has a long memory and
- an affection for tradition. It has shades of folk, honky-tonk,
- urban blues and revisionist country, but all of it can be called
- highly personal rock 'n' roll. These tunes have passion,
- intimacy and a shared but singular voice: the voice of the new
- troubadours.
- </p>
- <p> It is hard to remember any time since the mid-'70s when
- there has been such a sudden flowering of reflective
- songwriting. Back then, the smash success of the Eagles, with
- their ingratiating harmonies and their canny outlaw lyrics,
- kicked open the doors for a whole generation of songwriters,
- from Jackson Browne to Warren Zevon and Karla Bonoff. Whether
- any 1990s group will crash the charts in such big-time fashion
- is not yet known. But they are already making a joyful noise,
- a reworking and reinvention of what the Irish songwriter Paul
- Brady, 44, calls "blue-eyed American rock 'n' roll."
- </p>
- <p> And clear-eyed too. Whether they are veterans like Brady
- or Thompson, who at 42 is in the bright midst of a career that
- started in the mid-'60s; or upstarts like Whitley, 30; or
- standard bearers like Himmelman, 31, who is Bob Dylan's
- son-in-law and has already released his fourth album, From
- Strength to Strength (Epic): all of them write songs with the
- same emphatic edge and aesthetic urgency that impelled the Lost
- Generation to write novels. Their songs carry similar thematic
- weight and have that same kind of conviction.
- </p>
- <p> "I think of records as different chapters in an incredibly
- long and disjointed novel," says Thompson, whose superb new
- Rumor and Sigh (Capitol) displays both his carbolic lyricism and
- his stunning guitar virtuosity. Whitley's peak-heat debut
- album, Living with the Law (Columbia), comes out of a period of
- personal turmoil and heartbreak, including the dissolution of
- his marriage, about which he says, "It was a difficult time.
- Sort of impossible. I've always needed to write. [But] there
- is a price you pay for whatever goes on. I feel that I've paid
- something. You get scars from whatever you do."
- </p>
- <p> If the new troubadours talk about their music with a high
- but easy seriousness, the tunes themselves have a driving
- dynamic that needs only a chorus to shake off any lingering
- academic taint. Massey, 22, has himself a real
- sit-up-and-take-notice debut, Will T. Massey (MCA), in which the
- restless soul of Hank Williams matches up effortlessly with a
- rock-'n'-roll heart. Co-produced by Roy Bittan, the piano wizard
- from Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band, the record thumb-trips
- across a desert of burned-out hopes. "There's a coffin curse
- assailing me/ There's a highway hearse tailing me," Massey sings
- in one of the album's standout cuts, nailing in two fleet lines
- a spooky vision that owes a little to the Boss and a lot to the
- likes of Woody Guthrie and Sherwood Anderson.
- </p>
- <p> The lyrics are the showpieces for the new troubadours.
- Thompson has heavy chops as an instrumentalist; the others, in
- varying degrees, just use their guitars as a way to put the song
- across. McMurtry, 29, even has a little trouble keeping his
- voice in gear, but it does not greatly matter. His acerbic yet
- compassionate chronicles of life on the thin edge, where country
- folk move to the fringes of the big city and start to fall apart
- like so many patches in a crazy quilt, owe a spiritual debt to
- the work of his novelist father Larry. James, who is based in
- Austin, has a terrific second album, Candyland (Columbia),
- likely to be released by the end of the year, but he warns that
- he has "about used up all my old scrap pile. You get tired of
- writing about the same place and you have to move on." After
- deciding to get serious about songwriting, he almost pulled up
- stakes and moved on to Nashville a few years back. But his
- father, working on a screenplay with John Cougar Mellencamp, got
- his collaborator to play James' demo tape. Mellencamp offered
- to produce his debut album, and McMurtry, and his roots, stayed
- put, where they could be nurtured.
- </p>
- <p> There is a certain kind of open emotion required for all
- music of this kind, which can clash with the macho posturings
- required of most male pop stars. That could be why the
- singer-songwriter torch has been borne lately most noticeably
- by women--Rickie Lee Jones, Bonnie Raitt, Toni Childs, Tracy
- Chapman--who according to show-biz cliche are usually expected
- to wear their hearts on their guitars.
- </p>
- <p> If this group of troubadours is confounding such
- stereotypes, it is also playing into some expectations. Whitley
- has a photogenic scruffiness and a life story that makes him
- sound the prototypical ramblin' man, '90s style. "My parents
- were kind of...bohemian isn't the right word," he says. "But
- it was the '60s, they were into acid and getting stoned." His
- father was a mechanic who became a Madison Avenue art director;
- his mother was a sculptor who took the kids to Mexico, then
- finally roosted in a Vermont hunting cabin "with wood heat, no
- hot water and an outhouse." Whitley himself spent much of the
- '80s in Belgium. Sounds like material enough for half a dozen
- records right there.
- </p>
- <p> Brady is looking at his breakthrough year. He wrote two
- songs on Raitt's brand new Luck of the Draw, including the title
- track; and she returns the favor by singing lead and background
- on the title track from Brady's own Trick or Treat
- (Fontana/Mercury), which may well be the prize work in this very
- fine bunch. Brady's solo career as a songwriter began more than
- a decade ago; before that he had been known as a reinterpreter
- of traditional Irish music. After his fourth solo record, in
- 1988, followed the usual pattern--critical accolades, cult
- status, stubbornly low profile--"I decided to take a year off"
- to work out the key question: "whether I actually wanted to go
- on making records and trying to have major success in the
- mainstream. A lot of the songs on Trick or Treat reflect what
- I was going through. They're songs about looking for something,
- looking for a sense of what you should be doing, about facing
- up to the fact that you may never find out."
- </p>
- <p> More than the music itself, which ranges from Himmelman's
- slightly mystical lyricism to Brady's graceful rock to the
- saw-toothed blues riffs that Whitley lays down, this may be what
- unites the work of this burgeoning group, even as the mainstream
- comes within hailing distance. There is nothing refined or
- settled in any of this music. Look elsewhere for something that
- placates. Every one of these songs is a wound that goes
- unhealed, a question that stays open.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-