Showing posts with label Verlon Thompson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Verlon Thompson. Show all posts

Friday, March 3, 2017

Guy Clark – The Best of the Dualtone Years



GUY CLARK
The Best of the Dualtone Years
Dualtone

Guy Clark (1941-2016), who died last May at age 74, had been one of my favorite singer-songwriters for more than 40 years.

As I noted four years ago in my review of My Favorite Picture of You, “I started writing about music for the Montreal Gazette back in 1975 and one of the LPs I reviewed that year was Old No. 1, the first-ever album by Guy Clark, who was already a favorite songwriter of mine thanks to having heard some of his songs sung by Jerry Jeff Walker and Bill Staines. Since then, I’ve written about almost every album Guy has done over the years. I’ve also hung out with him a few times at folk festivals and interviewed him twice – once for the Gazette and once on the Folk Roots/Folk Branches radio program when he came up to Montreal to play a concert with Jesse Winchester at the Outremont Theatre in 2001.

“One of those albums I’ve written about was called Old Friends. And, indeed, almost all of Guy’s albums and songs feel like old friends. They feel like old friends when you pull out one of those albums that you haven’t played for a while and they feel like old friends when you hear them for the first time. There’s something familiar and inviting about his songs when you hear them for the first time – maybe it’s “that old time feeling” Guy sang about on Old No. 1 – that turns his new songs into old friends.”

Beginning in 2006, Guy’s final four albums were released by Dualtone Records and the 2-CD set, The Best of the Dualtone Years, is a lovely collection of 16 songs from those albums plus three previously unreleased demos.

As well as 10 then-new Guy Clark songs and a Townes Van Zandt cover from Workbench Songs, Somedays the Song Writes You and My Favorite Picture of You, there are also four of Guy’s classics from Songs and Stories, a live album he released in 2011, and, as mentioned, demo versions of three songs we’ve not heard before.

While I’m loath to pick favorites from this collection – this is a best-of collection from a songwriting giant – I will mention just a few.

One of the most affecting songs is “My Favorite Picture of You,” co-written with Gordy Sampson, a lovely remembrance of Guy’s late wife, the songwriter and painter Susanna Clark. In the song, Guy reflects on a photo of Susanna, describing her and her mood when it was taken, and turning it into a touching but powerful declaration of love.

Another affecting piece is “El Coyote,” co-written with Noel McKay, which describes impoverished Mexicans trying to find a better life in America only to be preyed on, exploited and deserted by human smugglers – surely a topical song in the age of Trump.

“The Guitar,” co-written with Verlon Thompson, Guy’s longtime performing partner, describes a supernatural encounter with an instrument of destiny in a pawnshop and is a definite highlight in the collection.

The live classics include the always-fun “Homegrown Tomatoes; “The Randall Knife,” a poignant memory of his late father; “Dublin Blues,” a meditation on beauty, great art and great music set to the old folk melody from “Handsome Molly”; and “The Cape,” co-written with Susanna, which he introduces as a song “about jumping off a garage,” but is really an affirmative piece about having confidence in one’s self.

The Best of the Dualtone Years is a fine introduction to Guy Clark’s later recordings but I would recommend all of his albums to anyone interested in great songwriting.

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--Mike Regenstreif

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Guy Clark – My Favorite Picture of You



GUY CLARK
My Favorite Picture of You
Dualtone 
guyclark.com

I started writing about music for the Montreal Gazette back in 1975 and one of the LPs I reviewed that year was Old No. 1, the first-ever album by Guy Clark, who was already a favorite songwriter of mine thanks to having heard some of his songs sung by Jerry Jeff Walker and Bill Staines. Since then, I’ve written about almost every album Guy has done over the years. I’ve also hung out with him a few times at folk festivals and interviewed him twice – once for the Gazette and once on the Folk Roots/Folk Branches radio program when he came up to Montreal to play a concert with Jesse Winchester at the Outremont Theatre in 2001.

One of those albums I’ve written about was called Old Friends. And, indeed, almost all of Guy’s albums and songs feel like old friends. They feel like old friends when you pull out one of those albums that you haven’t played for a while and they feel like old friends when you hear them for the first time. There’s something familiar and inviting about his songs when you hear them for the first time – maybe it’s “that old time feeling” Guy sang about on Old No. 1 – that turns his new songs into old friends.

And so it is on Guy’s new album, My Favorite Picture of You: 10 new Guy Clark songs (and a version of Lyle Lovett’s “Waltzing Fool” that he makes his own) that fast turn into old friends.

The title track is among the most affecting of these new songs. You can see Guy holding the particular snapshot of his wife, the songwriter and painter Susanna Clark, who passed away last year, taken maybe 40 or so years ago. In the lyrics, Guy reflects on the photo, describing her and her mood when it was taken, and turning it into a touching but powerful declaration of love.

I remember Guy telling me in one of the interviews we did that Mexican folk songs were among the first things he learned to play as kid growing up in Texas. I was reminded of that listening to “El Coyote,” another of this album’s most affecting songs – this one about impoverished Mexicans trying to find a better life only to be preyed on, exploited and deserted by human smugglers.

Guy also writes compassionately about American soldiers who came back damaged from the war in Iraq in the poignant “Heroes.”

Another highlight is “Death of Sis Draper,” co-written by Guy and Shawn Camp, a sequel to their earlier song (“Sis Draper”) about a traveling woman fiddler from Arkansas. This time, in a song that borrows the traditional fiddle tune melody to “Shady Grove,” Sis meets her maker when she’s poisoned by a jealous waitress and is buried as her guitar playing partner, Kentucky Sue, plays “Shady Grove” one last time.

Accompanying Guy on the album are such fine acoustic musicians as Verlon Thompson, who has been playing with him on stage and recordings for many years, Shawn Camp, Bryn Davies and Chris Latham, and harmony singer Morgane Stapleton.

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--Mike Regenstreif

Friday, November 4, 2011

Guy Clark – Songs and Stories; Various Artists – This One’s for Him: A Tribute to Guy Clark

I can pinpoint when I became a fan of the songwriting of Guy Clark. It was in 1972 when Jerry Jeff Walker released his eponymously named LP, Jerry Jeff Walker. It was the LP that marked Jerry Jeff’s move from the Greenwich Village folk scene to the Austin folk/outlaw country scene.

Two of the best songs on Jerry Jeff Walker, “That Old Time Feeling” and “L.A. Freeway” were credited to Guy. I was starting to play a little guitar then and learned “L.A. Freeway” from that record.

Not much later, I learned a Guy Clark song called “Lone Star Hotel Café” from my friend Bill Staines.

So Guy Clark’s was a name I already knew when his own first LP, Old No. 1, was released in 1975. By then I was a Montreal Gazette music reviewer and I remember writing glowingly about that LP. I’ve been a fan ever since. I’ve listened a lot to every record he’s ever made and have had a chance to hang out with him a couple of times at folk festivals and on his one trip to Montreal for an Outremont Theatre concert in 2001 with Jesse Winchester (while in Montreal he also did an extended interview with me on the Folk Roots/Folk Branches radio show).

Guy is one of the all-time great singer-songwriters, one of the definitive songwriters of the Texas country-folk school. He turns 70 this week and the milestone is marked by a new live album, Songs and Stories, which was released in August, and This One’s for Him: A Tribute to Guy Clark, a 2-CD homage by 30 fellow artists.

GUY CLARK
Songs and Stories
Dualtone

Although they were sitting on the stage at the Belcourt Theatre in Nashville, there’s a real living room feeling to Songs and Stories, a friendly, informal, 69-minute set that has Guy Clark and friends sharing songs and stories from across his long career. Joining him on stage are Verlon Thompson, his regular guitar player and occasional songwriting collaborator; guitarist and mandolin player Shawn Camp, also an occasional songwriting collaborator; and the excellent rhythm section of bassist Bryn Davies and drummer Kenny Malone (one of those all-too-rare drummers who knows how to play with acoustic folk musicians without ever getting in the way).

 Guy is older and has had some health problems in recent years which you can hear it in a voice that isn’t as strong as it once was – though it’s still as expressive – and in somewhat diminished energy level. But that’s OK, in essence Guy is a storyteller-in-song and his ability to sing us a story, to instil memories in us that are not our own, remains undiminished.

Among my favourite of Guy’s performances in the set are “The Randall Knife,” a poignant memory of the father he lost three decades ago, “Dublin Blues,” a meditation on beauty, great art and great music set to the old folk melody from “Handsome Molly,” and “The Cape,” a song he introduces as being “about jumping off a garage,” but is really an affirmative song about having confidence in one’s self.

Guy also does a fine version of Townes Van Zandt’s “If I Needed You.” There are probably no other artists who understand Townes’ songs on a level with Guy.

Guy also turns things over to Shawn and Verlon – hot pickers both – for two songs each. Shawn does a couple of his co-writes with Guy including “Sis Draper,” the story of a great fiddler that’s one of the most infectious tunes from Guy’s catalog. Verlon does a couple of his own songs that show he’s a fine artist in his own right.

VARIOUS ARTISTS
This One’s for Him: A Tribute to Guy Clark
Icehouse Music

“Let’s give her a good go and make old Guy proud of us,” says Rodney Crowell as he kicks off “That Old Time Feeling,” a perfect gem of a song from 40 or so years ago. It’s the opening track to This One’s for Him: A Tribute to Guy Clark, a loving 2-CD, 30-song homage to one of the all-time greatest songwriters on the occasion of his 70th birthday.

This album is filled with lots of great artists singing lots of great songs. Most of the artists are the kind of Texas or Nashville folk you might expect on an album like this. But, there are a few surprises, including Canadian singer-songwriter Ron Sexsmith who does a nice version of “Broken Hearted People.”

There are few weak tracks here. A few of my favourites include Rosanne Cash’s lovely version of “Better Days,” highlighted by the superb steel guitar work of Lloyd Maines; Willie Nelson’s mature take on “Desperadoes Waiting for a Train,” a song Guy wrote as a very young man in tribute to an old man of 70 (his grandmother’s boyfriend, Guy told me when he was on Folk Roots/Folk Branches); “Let Him Roll,” a talking song ably performed by John Townes Van Zandt II, Townes’ son; Joe Ely’s version of the fore-mentioned “Dublin Blues”; Ramblin' Jack Elliott's fine version of “The Guitar,” a kind of musician's ghost story; and a sweet duet by John Prine and Emmylou Harris on “Magnolia Wind.”

The album ends by bring me full circle back to Jerry Jeff Walker, the artist who introduced me to Guy Clark songs almost 40 years ago. Jerry Jeff sings “My Favorite Picture of You,” the one song of 30 I’ve never heard before. It’s a beautiful new love song that’s as finely crafted as anything Guy’s written before.

There are few missing artists who should be here – Tom Russell, Nanci Griffith, Bill Staines and Jesse Winchester come to mind. And there are lots of other Guy Clark songs I wish there was room for. Be that as it may, This One’s for Him is a great tribute to a great artist. Kudos to co-producers Tamara Saviano and Shawn Camp; and to Guy’s long-time accompanist, Verlon Thompson, who, with Shawn, plays on most of these songs.

I'm sure, Rodney, you guys made old Guy proud with this album.

Happy Birthday, Guy!

--Mike Regenstreif