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Live Recording
Personnel: Robin Williams (vocals, guitar); Linda (guitar, banjo, background vocals); Schuyler Fisk (vocals); John Jennings (guitar); Mike Auldridge (dobro); Jimmy Gaudrea (mandolin, mandola); Iris Dement (background vocals). Over the past 30 years, singers and songwriters Robin and Linda Williams have assembled one of the most daunting, emotionally honest, and brilliantly crafted catalogs in American music. Their now trademark tapestry of bluegrass, traditional mountain folk ballads, Southern gospel, country, and hillbilly blues is singular. With Deeper Waters, the album that marks their debut on the Minnesota-based Red House label, and their 30th anniversary as a recording and touring unit, the Williams have issued what amounts to nothing short of a masterpiece and perhaps their most inspired recorded moment. Once in a while, it is possible to glance at a cover to know that what is contained within its folds is special, something so completely out of the ordinary, it seems to speak before it is placed in the box and played. Deeper Waters is just such an item, from the sleeve with photography by Michael Wilson and a gorgeous design by Carla Leighton to its phenomenal players, who include Mike Auldridge, Jimmy Gaudreau, Mark Schatz, and Rickie Simpkins, to its guest vocalists: Iris DeMent, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Schuyler Fisk, and actress Sissy Spacek. The true wealth of any recording by the Williams is in the songs, of course, and this batch is glorious. The pair wrote or co-wrote all but one track here. The pair co-wrote with Dave Hull, Jerome Clark, Tim O'Brien, Jimmy Fortune, and Jim Watson. There's the pastoral melancholy of "October Light," the shimmering dobro and mandolin that entwine with Robin's guitar and vocal of haunted bygone love in "Whippoorwill," and the hunted, devastating dislocation of "Leaving This Land," where the grain of Linda's voice carries within it the weight of every dispossessed, locked-out refugee from across the history of the American landscape. Interestingly enough, it is followed by "Home #235," a banjo-driven song that looks across a life spent traveling and wrapped in the anchor of love for a wandering soul, holding a few possessions as the evidence of personal history. On "Annie," there is more drift and dislocation, where once more, love proves to be the demarcation of home in both the spiritual and physical senses of the word. It is in love that the heart finds its home is what many of these songs seem to say. In the mirage of terrain and landmarks, there is always the presence of the beloved Other to measure the years and distance by. In this manner, Deeper Waters is nearly a timeless collection of Americana; it could have been recorded 100 years ago (as the traditional songs such as "I'll Remember You Love in My Prayers," with its spooky banjo and mandolin lines, slinking through the foreground of the mix suggest), or last week (as evidenced by "I'm Just Glad You're Gone.") The album closes full circle with "Lost Children," a ballad of familial separation, migration, and the kind of truth that can only be borne out in the hope of reunion. Deeper Waters is a testament to the stories that are seldom told yet lived in every community, era, and household. This is the place where love, grief, loss, endings, and beginnings are given utterance: to whisper, weep, laugh, and reflect as they move through lives both ghostly and grand. ~ Thom Jurek
Deeper Waters Music | List Price | $17.97 (You save $3.52) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Folk CDs, Country, Folk Music, Bluegrass | | Label | Red House | | Orig Year | 2004 | | All Time Sales Rank | 116959  | | CD Universe Part number | 6654183 | | Catalog number | 173 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Feb 24, 2004 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Kevin McNoldy | | Personnel | Mike Auldridge - dobro Iris Dement - background vocals John Jennings - guitar Linda Williams - guitar, banjo, background vocals Jimmy Gaudreau - mandolin, mandola Robin Williams - vocals, guitar Schuyler Fisk - vocals Robin Williams - vocals, guitar
Also: Mary-Chapin Carpenter |
Robin Williams Deeper Waters Songs | 1. | Whippoorwill |
| 2. | October Light |
| 3. | Clarkfield |
| 4. | Leaving This Land |
| 5. | Home #235 |
| 6. | Old Plank Road |
| 7. | Used to Be |
| 8. | I'm Just Glad You're Gone |
| 9. | Annie |
| 10. | I'll Remember You Love In My Prayers / Lisa Jane / The Old Stillhouse |
| 11. | Saving Me a Place |
| 12. | Lost Little Children |
| Deeper Waters Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)   Good, close, personal, and accessible songs I interviewed Robin and Linda Williams in 1999 for a Bluegrass Unlimited article entitled “Bluegrass Pushes Tradition.” At the time, they defined their audience as “a little bit of everything, just acoustic music lovers…broad based…folkies who like the old-time ballads, bluegrassers that like the instruments and harmonies…roots country people who like the original material…and others who come just to be entertained.” Since the Williams first received national attention in 1975 on “A Prairie Home Companion” radio show, their eclectic group of fans has continued to grow. From the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, the duo once toured with Mary Chapin Carpenter who appears as a harmony vocalist on “Home #235” and “Old Plank Road.” Sissy Spacey (and her daughter, Schuyler Fisk) also sing harmony on the latter, while Iris Dement joins in on “Leaving this Land.” Another special guest on this album is dobroist Mike Auldridge.
On tour, guitarist Robin and clawhammer banjo-player Linda’s “Fine Group” includes Jim Watson on electric bass and mandolin, and Jimmy Gaudreau on mandolin and mandola (a band member since 2000). Both bandmates appear in prominent roles on “Deeper Waters,” but two other bassists (Mark Schatz, Kevin McNoldy) play that instrument. Fiddler Rickie Simpkins adds some beautiful fills and breaks to the mix.
With all strong originals and one traditional medley, “Deeper Waters” showcases the fine songwriting and arranging skills of Robin and Linda, whose collaborators include Dave Hull, Jerome Clark, Jimmy Fortune, Jim Watson and Tim O’Brien. All lyrics are included for their emotional and intimate songs of love, home, remembrances and memories, happy and sad. With a goal of presenting good, close, personal, and accessible songs, they looked to both older and newer material.
A contemplative ballad, “Whippoorwill,” opens the project with a tale of a Kansas woman’s sweet refrain for a North Dakota boy. A melodic and embracing “October Light” demonstrates Robin and Linda’s tightly-blended and smooth duet singing. Turning up the tempo a notch on “Clarkfield” is a welcome treat. A sad perspective of the old prairie home and impending abandonment is portrayed in “Leaving This Land.” The mandolin, banjo, and dobro riffs dance happily throughout “Home #235,” a seemingly autobiographical song that speaks to their traveling life and love. A spirited “Old Plank Road” tells of potluck and picking down at Charlie’s store.
The 7-minute traditional medley begins with “I'll Remember You Love In My Prayers” before its genesis drives into a toe-tappin’ “Liza Jane” and “The Old Stillhouse.” The duo’s longing for deceased family and dear friends will be realized at their journey’s end as they are “Saving Me A Place.” This would’ve made a nice closer on Deeper Waters, but they instead chose “Lost Children,” a ballad written with Tim O’Brien about emigrating Irish children and the safety that the future brings after they reunite with the parents.
Clearly with a strong kinship to traditional music, the Williams continue to provide fresh explorations that preserve the sound yet also innovate. Robin once told me that he puts on Bill Monroe when he wants to hear good music and get rejuvenated. Following the same innovative muse and spirit as Monroe, Robin and Linda only get so far from traditional sensibilities while maintaining themselves in the forefront of the ever-growing Americana movement.
Although this is only their first on the Red House Records (after a successful stint with Sugar Hill), I look forward to their continued collaboration with this fine Minnesota-based label known for its folk and Americana offerings. The duo’s optimistic attitude towards change has always led them to new heights. Robin and Linda have now released seventeen albums, they’re clearly not in any musical ruts, nor are they constrained by any boundaries. They continue to grow professionally. With their brand new songs and fresh look at some older material, the waters clearly do run deep for Robin and Linda Williams. (Joe Ross, staff writer, Bluegrass Now)
Submitted by rossjoe (Roseburg, OR, US) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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