Topic: Robert Plant ~ Alison Krauss
Check out the new album Raising Sand from these two, I've just ordered it off Amazon. They have a sampler video there. Great harmonics!
Geoff
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Joe Bonamassa Forum → Other Artists → Robert Plant ~ Alison Krauss
Check out the new album Raising Sand from these two, I've just ordered it off Amazon. They have a sampler video there. Great harmonics!
Geoff
WOW, I was waiting for someone here to 'brag' about Robert and Alison's new project together!! Thanx. As a Led Zep fanatic myself, but NOT a Plant solo lover at all (Robert did some very wimpy stuff esp recently...sadly!:(), I welcomed the arrival of a lady like Alison Krauss who gave Robert that nudge to come outta his 'bad trip'.....listen to this album folks and you won't regret it. Thanx Robert and Alison....YOU ROCK!!!
Rob
Right, listened to the album three times now. Yes, it's different! It's not what I expected, but jeez there are tracks on there to make you well up, they are so well done. Brilliant production and harmonics. Not too much of the "old" Plant but a sensitive and intuitive blending of first rate talent from he and Alison. It comes as no surprise to see it No 1 in all categories on Amazon then! Boy does this album grow on you!!!!!
Geoff
Raising Sand review
What seems to be an unlikely pairing in the duo of former -- and future apparently -- Led Zeppelin vocalist Robert Plant and bluegrass superstar Alison Krauss is actually one of the most effortless-sounding pairings in modern popular music. The bridge seems to be producer T-Bone Burnett and the band assembled for this outing: drummer Jay Bellerose (who seems to be the session drummer in demand these days), upright bassist Dennis Crouch, guitarists Marc Ribot and Burnett, with Greg Leisz playing steel here and there, and a number of other guest appearances. Krauss, a monster fiddle player, only does so on two songs here. The proceedings are, predictably, very laid-back. Burnett has only known one speed these last ten years, and so the material chosen by the three is mostly very subdued. This doesn't make it boring, despite Burnett's production, which has become utterly predictable since he started working with Gillian Welch. He has a "sound" in the same way Daniel Lanois does: it's edges are all rounded, everything is very warm, and it all sounds artificially dated. (Anyone looking for the adventurous bravery he put into Sam Phillips' Martinis & Bikinis will be disappointed.) Speaking of Phillips, her "Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us" is a centerpiece on this set. It has Phillips' fingerprints all over it; she recorded it herself already and has her own version on her website. This tune, with its forlorn, percussion-heavy tarantella backdrop, might have come from a Tom Waits record were it not so intricately melodic -- and Krauss' gypsy swing fiddle is a gorgeous touch. There is an emptiness at the heart of longing particularly suited to Krauss' woodsy voice, and Plant's harmony vocal is perfect, understated yet ever-present. It's the most organically atmospheric tune on the set -- not in terms of production, but for lyric and compositional content. Stellar.
Plant's own obsession with old rockabilly and blues tunes is satisfied on the set's opener, "Rich Woman," by Dorothy LaBostrie and McKinley Miller. It's all swamp, all past midnight, all gigolo boasting. Krauss' harmony vocal underscores Plant's low-key crooned boast as a mirror, as the person being used and who can't help it. Rollie Salley's "Killing the Blues" sounds like it was recorded by Lanois, with its cough syrup guitars, muffled tom toms, and played-in-bedroom atmospherics. Nonetheless, the two vocalists make a brilliant song come to life with their shared sorrow, and it's as if the meaning in the tune actually happens between its bitter irony in the space between the two vocalists as the whine of Leisz's steel roots this country song in the earth, not in the white clouds reflected in its refrain. There is a pair of Gene Clark tunes here as well. Plant is a Clark fan, and so it's not a surprise, but the choices are: "Polly Come Home" and "Through the Morning, Through the Night" come from the second Dillard & Clark album from 1969 with the same title as the latter track. The first is a haunting ballad done in an old-world folk style that Clark would have been proud of. It reflects the same spirit and character as his own White Light album, but with Plant and Krauss, the spirit of Celtic-cum-Appalachian style that influenced bluegrass, and the Delta blues that influenced rock, are breached. "Through the Morning, Through the Night" is a wasted country love song told from the point of view of an outlaw. Plant gets his chance to rock -- a bit -- in the Everly Brothers' "Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On)." While it sounds nothing like the original, Plant's pipes get to croon and drift over the distorted guitars and a clipped snare; he gets to do his trademark blues improv bit between verses. To be honest, it feels like it was tossed off and, therefore, less studied than anything else here: it's a refreshing change of pace near the middle of the disc. It "rocks" in a roots way.
"Please Read the Letter" is written by Plant, Page Charlie Jones, and Michael Lee. Slow, plodding, almost crawling, Krauss' harmony vocal takes it to the next step, adds the kind of lonesome depth that makes this a song whispered under a starless sky rather than just another lost love song. Waits and Kathleen Brennan's "Trampled Rose," done shotgun ballad style, is, with the Phillips tune, the most beautiful thing here. Krauss near the top of her range sighs into the rhythm. Patrick Warren's toy piano sounds more like a marimba, and his pump organ adds to the percussive nature of this wary hymn from the depths. When she sings "You never pay just once/To get the job done," this skeletal band swells. Ribot's dobro sounds like a rickety banjo, and it stutters just ahead of the bass drum and tom toms in Bellerose's kit. Naomi Neville's "Fortune Teller" shows Burnett at his best as a producer. He lets Plant's voice come falling out of his mouth, staggering and stuttering the rhythms so they feel like a combination of Delta blues, second-line New Orleans, and Congo Square drum walk. The guitar is nasty and distorted, and the brush touches with their metallic sheen are a nice complement to the bass drums. It doesn't rock; it struts and staggers on its way. Krauss' wordless vocal in the background creates a nice space for that incessant series of rhythms to play to.
The next three tunes are cagey, even for this eclectic set: Mel Tillis' awesome ballad "Stick with Me Baby" sounds more like Dion & the Belmonts on the street corner on cough syrup and meaning every word. There is no doo wop, just the sweet melody falling from the singers' mouths like an incantation with an understated but pronounced rhythm section painting them singing together in front of a burning ash can. This little gem is followed by a reading of Townes Van Zandt's "Nothin'" done in twilight Led Zeppelin style. It doesn't rock either. It plods and drifts, and crawls. Krauss' fiddle moans above the tambourine, indistinct and distorted; low-tuned electric guitars and the haunted, echoing banjo are a compelling move and rescue the melody from the sonic clutter -- no, sonic clutter is not a bad thing. The weirdest thing is that while it's the loudest tune on the set, it features Norman Blake on acoustic guitar with Burnett. This is what singer/songwriter heavy metal must sound like. And it is oh-so-slow. The final part of the trilogy of the weird takes place on Little Milton Campbell's "Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson," a jangly country rocker in the vein of Neil Young without the weight and creak of age hindering it. Krauss is such a fine singer, and she does her own Plant imitation here. She has his phrasing down, his slippery way of enunciating, and you can hear why this was such a great match-up. The band can play backbone slip rockabilly shuffle with their eyes closed and their hands tied behind their backs, and they do it here. It's a great moment before the close. The haunting, old-timey "Your Long Journey by A.D. and Rosa Lee Watson," with its autoharp (played by Mike Seeger no less), Riley Baugus' banjo, Crouch's big wooden bass, and Blake's acoustic guitar, is a whispering way to send this set of broken love songs off into the night. These two voices meld together seamlessly; they will not be swallowed even when the production is bigger than the song. They don't soar, they don't roar, they simply sing songs that offer different shades of meaning as a result of this welcome collaboration.
Rating: 4 stars (Album Pick)
source: allmusic.com
Robert Plant's fender baritone has symbolized rock excess for almost four decades; Alison Krauss' virtuoso fiddle and mountain soprano have symbolized country purity for two. Post-Zep, however, the leonine Plant has put his star power behind roots music from the Delta to the Sahara, while the demure Krauss has proven a fearsome workaholic, her vaunted modesty vying with her professional drive. So although Krauss brings folk cred to these new weird duets, ascribe considerable smarts and soul to Plant --and to producer T Bone Burnett, who assembled the atmospheric band and plucked most of the half-remembered material from the ether. Lend your ears to Li'l Millet's "Rich Woman," to Roly Salley's "Killing the Blues," and to the two Everly Brothers obscurities that cancel out the two Gene Clark obscurities. Skilled and inspired though it is, Raising Sand's relaxed, smoky harmonies and reverbed midtempo rockabilly don't always achieve the back-porch revelation they're going for. But they do both icons a world of good.
Robert Christgau
Rating: 3 1/2 stars
source: rollingstone.com
Artist: Robert Plant/Alison Krauss
Album: Raising Sand
Date Of Release: October 23, 2007
Genre: Folk-Rok, Americana, Acoustic Blues
Bitrate: VBR --alt-preset standard
I don't read reviews that much unless the artists at stake are BIG FISH like Plant and yes why not....in her own little way...Alison Krauss because as Jimi used to say "I've got my own life to live thru" and I don't wanna be brainwashed by ANY reviewer or critic out there! . Having stated this, I read the review above with great interest and what comes out of 90% of reviews is all about the REVIEWER himself/herself more than the artist he/she is reviewing....I've read far TOO many reviews to be able to safely say that!
Anyway, back to the review contents. RC is right when he says that the good tunes on that album are "Rich Woman" and a few others. Regarding the distorted guitars, he should have enhanced the beauty of distorted electric guits more! I have the album and I've listened to it twice now, but to be more "critique" of the critic (PUN INTENDED ), I'll have to listen to it at least 7 or 8 times thoroughly! . As for the source, Rolling Stone has sometimes been too harsh with the BEST out there.....an example? The lady of rock herself who goes by the name of Janis Joplin.....RS never treated her as she should have been treated in life and after her tragic departure from this earth!
Robert
Not really my cup of tea, but if so inclined, one can check out the whole album here, with track selection:
http://www.robertplantalisonkrauss.com/ … ukebox.php
I just got this cd too and was pleasantly surprised. It's definitely different but very pleaseing to my senses. I do like the songs that Plant is predominant on. What can I say, a Zep freak from back in the day.
~maria~
This best describes how I feel about it too...really unique and exotic in some ways!! Being a Zep freak made me buy it and listen to it. I bought Alison's CD after seeing her with Bonnie Raitt and didn't care for the strong bluegrass with her Union Station band. I remember reading somewhere, Alison may hold some record for females with grammys, especially in different categories. Won't be surprised if this CD gets a nod.
I just got this cd too and was pleasantly surprised. It's definitely different but very pleaseing to my senses. I do like the songs that Plant is predominant on. What can I say, a Zep freak from back in the day.
~maria~
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