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Gillian Welch
Soul Journey
Acony 50466 6868 2
By Marianne Ebertowski

When Gillian Welch and David Rawlings played the Ancienne Belgique Club in Brussels about four years ago, I took a friend with me who instantaneously fell in love with everything about Gillian, especially her ears. When the show was over, there was no holding him back: he just had to be in a picture with Gillian. After that had been taken care of, he tried to convince an amused David Rawlings that his partner had great ears. I guess David had already discovered that a long time ago and benevolently signed my friend's copy of Hell Among The Yearlings not only with his name, but also with "Great Ears!"

This was the first thing that came to mind when I picked up a copy of Gillian's new album Soul Journey featuring on the back her portrait with a cowboy hat riding her ... great ears. And, let's face it, what could possibly be more relevant to a singer/songwriter than great ears, apart from a great voice, I suppose, which is another thing Gillian Welch is blessed with. Her spectacularly controlled delivery seems to have been created for singing the sort of old time music, bluegrass, folk and (acoustic) country she has designated so far as her territory.

But, then again, behind every great woman there's a great man (or sometimes another great woman), and in Gillian's case the greatness of David Rawling's modest self-effacing personality has proven to be priceless: his effortless and inventive guitar playing and his smooth harmonies were very much the driving force behind this new Gillian Welch project. But a word of warning, whoever expected Gillian Welch's new effort to be another Hell or Revival or Time (The Revelator) will be disappointed or, at best, surprised. Soul Journey is more a modern folk (rock) album than another mysterious old time excursion. Also, David Rawlings' presence is less obvious than on its predecessors. Maybe the reason for all this is that Soul Journey is Ms. Welch's most personal album so far: it's her soul she's traveling with and into, after all. And it looks as if Rawlings has realized and accepted this, maybe even long before she did, and actually encouraged her to put out tracks she had previously recorded solo, among them the two traditionals "Make Me A Pallet On Your Floor" and "I Had A Real Good Mother And Father." In a way, David Rawlings is more present than ever: as a producer, a co-writer of most songs and as a multi-instrumentalist he has done the exquisite job only he could do. You can say of him what is often said about the best team players in sports: they better the performance of those around them. Rawlings clearly brings out the best in Welch and does so in a manner that perhaps undesiredly highlights his natural humility.

In truth, there was already a hint for the musical change of direction to come on Time (The Revelator), right there in the brilliant but oddly out of place sounding "I Want To Sing That Rock And Roll." That celebrant live track taken from the Down From The Mountain concert featured Rawlings playing the living daylight out of his 1935 Epiphone.

And now Gillian Welch's Soul Journey starts where "I Want To Sing That Rock And Roll" left off. "I wanna do right but not right now," the rebellious words Gillian places into the mouth of "Miss Ohio," are pushed along by the driving force of Son Volt's Jim Bocquist on electric bass and introduced by the seductive sounds of Greg Leisz's dobro. The wanna-do-right-but-not-right-now attitude delves deeper in "Make Me Down A Pallet On Your Floor," best known in the versions of Woody Guthrie or Mississippi John Hurt. Gillian's offering is a stunning solo performance featuring her trademark, the "slowest yodel in the world," and her best guitar playing to date. "Babe I'm broke and I got nowhere to go," she appends to the venerable lyric, and sounds that way as she makes the song her own.

"When I got to Nashville/It was too much soldier's joy," Welch explains in "Wayside/Back In Time," a song that - with its B-3 organ intro, drums and fiddle (Ketchum Secor) - sounds like a tape discovered somewhere in the basement of Big Pink. There's more electric and electrifying stuff like "One Monkey," a bluesy piece where Welch, initially accompanying herself only on acoustic guitar, is joined halfway through by the rest of the band.

The heart of the album consists of two songs. The one half of the heart is the twenties gospel "I Had A Real Good Mother and Father," the other "No One Knows My Name," the song in which Welch reveals her adoption story. The striking thing about this song is the fact that its melody is identical with A.P. Carter's "Motherless Children." Is this a reference made in homage, a chestnut for the faithful not mentioned in the liner notes, or is it Gillian's subconscious playing a trick on her? Welch and Rawlings are extremely knowledgeable about old time music and they are certainly no thieves. So, this is interesting. And there is more interesting food for thought here. The traditional's lyrics are:

I had a real good mother and father/ they surely stood the test....they set a good example for me/they taught me how to pray/now I am truely converted and walking on the narrow way/I know that if I cannot meet them on high/how lonely I would be /for what good is my journey/ if I miss out on eternity?

The last two lines are added by Welch. Do they add doubt as far as the journey on the narrow way is concerned? Maybe the answer is found in the traditional's personal counterpiece " No One Knows My Name:"

O my mother was just a girl of seventeen/and my dad was passing through/doing things a man will do./ when my mother was just a girl of seventeen /It's a wonder that I'm in this world at all/...and I have a life to claim/ no, I really don't know my name / it's a wonder I'm on this world at all/Ain't one soul in the whole world knows my name ...

Here David Rawlings' soothing voice comes in and together they continue:

but it's written up in the sky and I see it by and by. Ain't one soul knows my name .

Then the lyrics cleverly link up with the traditional's:

well I had a good mother and dad just the same /and they took me to their breast and they surely stood the test ...ain't one soul. in the whole wide world knows my name/ just another baby born to a girl lost and lorn/ain't one soul in the whole wide world knows my name/ now and then there's a lonesone thought in my mind/ and on the crowd in the street /I see a strange face that looks like me .

This is so incredibly well-crafted without losing its emotional intensity, it makes a grown (wo)man weep.

The traditional's (added) puzzle:

I know that if I cannot meet them on high/how lonely I would be /for what good is my journey/ if I miss out on eternity

finds its solution in a slow process of understanding and forgiving:

Ain't one soul in the whole world knows my name ..but it's written up in the sky and I'll see it by and by.

Brilliant, and it's getting better. If these two songs are the beating heart of Soul Journey, "Lowlands" makes it a triumphant trilogy. Melodically it builds further on "No One Knows My Name" (or should I say "Motherless Children") and lyrically it does as well.

O I've been in the lowlands too long/ I know that I should go/ .../this is not how it works at the start/ there's a doubt and a blame in my heart/ and it's no one else/ no fault but my own/ that I've been in the lowlands too long /.../ what is this weight on my mind /what is this new sense of time /it's the open fields and the friends that are gone.but I can''t do right and I know that I'm wrong/but I know I've been in the lowlands too long

It sounds almost as if Welch by going back to her origin has liberated herself from the gloom and doom of the "Lowlands" and can now pass on to happier things, even if doing right might not yet be for right now.

The perspective of "doing right" is further illuminated in "One Little Song," written by Gillian alone without her partner Dave. It's a beautiful little song about songwriting which breathes the graceful and optimistic innocence of Tom Paxton's best work:

There's gotta be a song left to sing/ cause everybody can't have thought of everything/One little song that ain't been sung/ one little rag that ain't been wrung out completely yet./till's nothing left/.one little note that ain't been used/ one little word that ain't abused a thousand times in a thousand rhymes /one little drop of falling rain/one little chance to try again...

After this little jewel Welch continues in a folky mood with the beautiful and mournful "Made A Lover's Prayer," the only real duet song on the album, a sweet and soulful piece with blasting harmonica play.

Then it's time for the grand finale: "Wrecking Ball" (a Welch/Rawlings composition, not the Neil Young song made famous by Emmylou Harris). For this occasion, all the musicians involved in the album turn up to play on Gillian's (I was just a little Deadhead with too much trouble for me to share) party. And they're having a real blast: drums, fiddle, guitars and a scorching B-3 deliver a gripping soundtrack while the whole journey passes once more in front of Gillian's eyes.

Soul Journey is an album of self-liberation and celebration. Welch travelled deep into her soul, confronted herself with her past and came out realizing that she'd been "in the lowlands too long." Whether that is really "no fault but her own" is another story. Life's a bitch, after all. Spending life in the "lowlands" is not a waste of time. Often it is inevitable and, sometimes, even necessary. In Welch's case it has given us three incredible albums. Soul Journey is a new start. I don't expect Gillian to deliver happy albums from now on. Personal lowlands tend to never quite disappear and of course there are always other people's lowlands to write and sing about. Gillian Welch's talent and crafts(wo)manship that allow her as a songwriter to tackle pain and sorrow in whatever historical or sociological context she chooses are almost beyond comparison. Wherever her next soul journey will take her, on this one she has done "right right now."

(with apologies to Gillian and David for maybe not always having quoted the lyrics accurately - a lyric sheet would have helped)

www.gillianwelch.com

Contact Marianne Ebertowski at ebertowski-at-rockzilla.net

 

  
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