Signup for a folk alley account


Review: Pharis & Jason Romero - Long Gone Out West Blues

February 13, 2013

Thumbnail image for Pharis and jason album cover.jpgby Kim Ruehl, for FolkAlley.com

Let's just get the Gillian Welch & Dave Rawlings comparison out of the way.

Good, now we can listen more deeply. After all, Pharis & Jason Romero are artists unto themselves - instrument makers, songwriters, pickers extraordinaire. These two clearly have as much adoration and natural talent for the traditions of American folk music as they do for the intrinsic musicality of their two voices.

Fresh from a win at the Canadian Folk Music Awards (they won New/Emerging Artist of the Year), they've got a sophomore album ready (Long Gone Out West Blues), which wanders deeper into their craft. Like a path through the woods, you think you know where you're headed until you to hear the running water. Then come the lonely songs.

pharis and jason-color for web.jpgThere can be a desperation in singing lonely songs - something quiet, sad, and seething. But, when the Romeros sing, there's more of a letting go. You're not peering into the mind of a songwriter; you're witnessing the release of some long-clenched story or emotion. Though these are all beautifully composed, well-considered songs, there's a sense that the music is coming more from the spur of the moment - the newness of the emotion - than from the channeling spirit you might witness with Welch & Rawlings. For example, when Pharis comes in on "Wild Bill Jones," it's like she was listening to this confession then joined in out of urgent solidarity.

Besides, as the album progresses, the influence of Joni Mitchell surfaces on "The Little Things Are Hardest in the End" - possibly the album's hardest hitting tune - followed by hints of Dylan and Baez, and other more elusive influences. A spirit emerges, clearly plucked from deep within obscure field recordings. From Pharis' thoughtful, creative originals to classics like "Sally Goodin", you might be hard pressed to determine what's old and what's new.

This is music made on a timeless continuum, where yesterday's troubles contribute to today's lonesome songs. Listen in, and see where it takes you.

Click HERE to order the 'Long Gone Way Out West Blues.'

Posted by Linda Fahey at February 13, 2013 8:28 AM


Comments

Registered users can post comments in the blog. Please register or log in to share your views.

Support Folk Alley During Our Spring Fund Drive!
Signup for a folk alley account

 

Recent Topics

A Conversation with Joy Kills Sorrow's Matt Arcara
Folk Alley New Music Adds for April
HEAR IT FIRST at Folk Alley: David Francey - 'So Say We All'
REVIEW: Anais Mitchell & Jefferson Hamer's 'Child Ballads'
New Music for March
Thanks for your quick response
Kim Ruehl's Q&A with Amy Ray
Review: Pharis & Jason Romero - Long Gone Out West Blues
Early 2013 Adds to the Folk Alley Music Collection
Folk Alley's Best of 2012 - Linda Fahey's Top Picks of the Year
Folk Alley's Best of 2012 - Barb Heller's Top Picks of the Year
Folk Alley's Best of 2012 - Matt Watroba's Top Picks of the Year
Folk Alley's Best of 2012 - Elena See's Top Picks of the Year
Folk Alley's Best of 2012 - Jim Blum's Top Picks of the Year
Music for the Holidays - 2012 Edition
VOTE for the Best Folk Albums of 2012
The Stray Birds - Folk Alley Backstage Session at BluSeed Studios
Hear It First at Folk Alley ~ Carrie Newcomer - 'Kindred Spirits: A Collection'
40th Anniversary of "Will The Circle Be Unbroken" - Interview with John McEuen
Hear It First at Folk Alley ~ Rayna Gellert: 'Old Light: Songs from My Childhood & Other Gone Worlds
Hear It First at Folk Alley ~ Black Prairie: 'A Tear In the Eye Is A Wound In the Heart'
Hear It First at Folk Alley ~ Caroline Herring: 'Camilla'
Hear It First at Folk Alley ~ The Stray Birds
Hear It First at Folk Alley ~ The Be Good Tanyas: A Collection
Hear It First at Folk Alley ~ Mindy Smith: 'Mindy Smith'
CD Review: The Honeycutters ~ 'When Bitter Met Sweet'
Hear It First on Folk Alley ~ Chris Smither: 'Hundred Dollar Valentine'
New Music Added to Folk Alley
Review: Brown Bird @ Mechanic Street House Concerts, Cleveland, Ohio
Hear It First ~ KIN: Songs by Mary Karr & Rodney Crowell

 

 

May 2013
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
         1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31