Music Review: Shovels & Rope keep folk tradition alive | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
Subscribe

Would you like to subscribe to our newsletter?

Music Review: Shovels & Rope keep folk tradition alive

This cover image released by Dualtone Music shows "By Blood," a release by Shovels & Rope. (Dualtone Music via AP)

Shovels & Rope, "By Blood" (Dualtone)

The traditions of folk and bluegrass style may seem all but dead — gone are the days of murder ballads, tunes written on horseback and songs yearning for life out west. Gone are those days, unless you are folk-rock duo Shovels & Rope.

"By Blood" is a 10-track album that stays true to the heritage of folk and bluegrass music in theme and style, while adding Shovels & Rope's own spin and a rockabilly edge.

The duo of Cary Ann Hearst and Michael Trent display a tightness on the album that transcends typical bandmate cohesion. Married for a decade, the two are perfectly in step on every track, filling the space between one another with Trent's gravelly voice and Heart's coarse, yet salient vocals.

On the bluegrass and folk songwriting side, there's "Pretty Polly," ''Hammer," ''Mississippi Nuthin'" and "C'mon Utah!" All adhere to the story-telling style of the genre.

"C'mon Utah!" is a battle cry on horseback during a journey out west. "Pretty Polly" tells the tale of a woman he couldn't let go and couldn't let stay, so he "buried pretty Polly in a poor pathetic grave."

"Mississippi Nuthin'" is a cleverly honest ballad about a narrator down on luck, reminding a friend of what they've been through together. "Maybe I'm just the blue-collar version of you," the duo sings, "but I've got a plan that's gonna turn it all around."

"Hammer" is a stomping, fiddle-infused labour song, respecting the convention of country to honour hard work and perseverance. "They shut my water off/ I've got a nasty cough/ But I'm out here every day with my hammer."

With harmonica solos, thundering drums and energetic riffs, "By Blood" is an upbeat record that still makes time for sombre moments. The songwriting on "Good Old Days" and "Carry Me Home" is honest and raw, from the former's self-loathing ("I hate myself a little more each day") to the latter's admission of desperation ("I'm no good when I'm alone/ I'm burned down to the bone").

While not everyone can relate to riding horseback to Colorado, there are themes of struggle, desperation and determination on the album that are universal. Times may be changing, but Shovels & Rope prove that folk themes still have a place.

News from © The Associated Press, 2019
The Associated Press

  • Popular vernon News
  • Why Okanagan Lake doesn't freeze anymore
    Don Knox remembers not only skating on a glassy smooth Okanagan Lake as a young child, but also on a nicely frozen Mission Creek. “When we were kids – I can’t remember the
  • Judge locks bank accounts of Okanagan business owner, suspected drug supplier
    An Okanagan man suspected of using his car dealership and mortgages to hide drug money had his bank accounts frozen by a judge. He's one of three people included in the order as the prov
  • Where to get weird and exotic snacks in Kelowna
    Arabic malt energy drinks, protein Snickers bars, an edible Barbie dream house, Snoop Dogg chips; if any of those exotic snacks pique your interest there are places to get them in Kelowna. S
  • The free life — and lives — of Dag Aabye
    This feature first ran on iNFOnews in April of 2017. VERNON - For much of the year, home for Dag Aabye is a portable garden shed that he carried, in pieces, halfway up a mountain to a remo
  • Slippery slide: The decline of the Okanagan's waterslides
    They were once a mainstay of an Okanagan summer, where kids could burn off steam running back up the hill for another adrenaline-inducing ride down their favourite waterslide, while their parents
View Site in: Desktop | Mobile