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Old West troubadour
and new age balladeer wrapped in the spiritual embers of memory's
burning campfires, Mark Gorman is an artist exactly like and
completely different from any others you've heard. If the test
was to describe his music in a word, the word would undoubtedly
be "smooth." The test, however, would be unequivocally
flawed because, as with the real live cowboy, one word cannot
equate the sum.
Gorman is a high school teacher, spending days molding the
future and nights lovingly recreating the past in song. His
musical influences and experiences are widely varied, from Christian
contemporary to opera to acoustic guitar and a country song.
Similarities abound in his music, from comparisons to John Denver
and Chuck Pyle to local and lesser-known talents like Bodie Powell
and Brett Watts. But to saddle Gorman with those similarities
would be akin to calling Kinky Friedman the next Lenny Bruce.
Similarities, yes, but a style all his own is the hallmark of
Gorman's Wind and Ages.
As befits a simple record with a simple cowboy style, this
disc kicks off with the upbeat and lighthearted "I Wish
That I Could Be A Real Life Cowboy" and shuffles its way
through an easy-listening mix of tunes that cover the well-traveled
trail of western sunsets. The first cut is surely what Toby
Keith had in mind with his like-titled "Shoulda Been A Cowboy"
but misses the high cheese factor the Keith tune played for the
charts. This is a song every man who's ever left his 9 to 5
for a walk down Exchange Avenue on a summer afternoon has hummed
in his head countless times.
From this starting point, Wind and Ages makes its way
through stories familiar and new. There's the title cut's tale
of a long-forgotten cowboy, once full of himself, who gambled
it all and answered the bell in the depths of a dusky saloon
brawl, and there are other characters familiar though new and
with equally stirring and reverent tales to tell. There's Charlotte,
the spinster in Santa Fe well past her hundredth birthday, noting
that she never had made it on to Frisco. There's the aforementioned
John Denver, alive again in memory and song, reincarnated in
a voice almost as smooth as his own. In this cut, "Song
for J.D.," there's also Gorman himself, an awkward kid looking
for an identity and a comfort and finding in the Rockies his
own coat from the cold. This particular song probably is the
most telling and introspective of Gorman's tunes on display here,
showcasing simultaneously the influence Denver still has on folk
and western music and the personal life of the man behind the
mic just trying to get the music out of his soul and onto the
racks somewhere.
Those listeners looking for the hard-hitting edge of Texas
music may not find this CD to be to their taste initially. However,
those in that group who complain of the pervasive frat boys and
"beer, beer, Luckenbach" mindset that accompanies some
artists may need to rethink their position on this count. Gorman
and his band, Chris Parker (bass), Mickey Hartzog (drums) and
Steve Blevins (rhythm guitar), carve out a collection of music
on Wind and Ages that drifts between the Marty Robbins gunfighter
ballads and the smoother folk stylings of Denver and James Taylor.
The disc does not lend itself to a particular feel in either
genre, but the careful ear will hear all three of these alongside
the early Eagles and the birth of the Bakersfield sound. And
in the heart of the Bible belt metroplex, where Baptists grow
like fire ants and churches dot the corners like locusts in the
spring, well, plenty of people will also recognize the touches
of the time Gorman spent on his mid-80's Christian project called
Trust In the Lord, produced with Randy Adams (Dallas Holm
& Praise, among others).
In short, Wind and Ages is a songwriter's storytelling
disc, a place to go when the listener needs some comfort, when
a quiet place with memories and lessons is the only thing that
counts. It also works in a beatup truck on the way to another
Monday staff meeting, and on a Friday drive to Glen Rose for
the purest prairie sunsets.
Mark Gorman, in a fashion not unlike Brian Burns, is an artist
more concerned with the story than the style, but whose experiences
and influences come pouring out in a vocal and musical format
that draws from some of the greats. Wind and Ages is
an excellent sampling of that style and a good introduction to
an artist who's worth an evening of your time. You decide from
there.
More on Mark Gorman at www.flash.net/~mcgorman/content.htm
You can contact David Pilot at:
tailgunner-at-rockzilla.net
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