Mary Gauthier
Tuesday October 25, 2005; part of: Journalism

A couple of months ago, I think, I found an extraordinary album on emusic, Dixie Kitchen by Mary Gauthier. It was twisted country music, with songs about aids, unhappy love affairs, growing up as a tomboy, unhappy love affairs, Jack Kerouac, an unhappy love affair ... you may see a pattern emerging. But they were all good, and some were quite outstanding. So was the delivery: full of emotion but without self-pity or self-dramatisation. She was 35 when she made it, after a life almost too full of incident and excitement.

I thought she was the most interesting singer I had come across since Townes van Zandt, and shelled out for her three next albums from Cdbaby. What a tremendous disappointment. There were still two or three excellent songs on each, but someone had obviously told her she could be the next Springsteen. The production was obtrusively flawless. The words, which once had the kind of directness you need to convince a small live audience, have now inflated to Significance.

She's still good, and still worth listening to. But the story shows how conventional and corrupt the aesthetic of "alternative" music is. Dixie Kitchen sounded as if she had just had the idea that anyone could make songs like this. The later ones sound as if they're made for people who have heard lots of music almost like this before.

Posted by andrewb at October 25, 2005 09:24 PM
Comments

In this context, I can't help but mention Jimmie Dale Gilmore. His latest, Come on Back, is something of a "roots music" album for him. My favorites, though, are Spinning Around the Sun, Braver Newer World, and After Awhile.

Amazing stuff. Eclectic as all hell, great production and sidemen, and he's not a bad songwriter, either.

And how many West Texas country singers quote Ezra Pound in their liner notes?

Posted by: Jonathan Lundell on October 26, 2005 01:32 AM


I'll check. I should have mentioned, too, Alejandro Escovedo, who is the only musician I know to have arranged Stooges songs for the cello.

Posted by: acb on October 26, 2005 06:07 AM


JDG was recently nearby

The Pound line: “the poem fails when it strays too far from the song, and the song fails when it strays too far from the dance.”

Posted by: Jonathan Lundell on October 26, 2005 08:51 AM


He's in London next month. I'm tempted.

Posted by: acb on October 26, 2005 09:33 AM


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