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08/11/2007

Robert Plant & Alison Krauss - Raising Sand

 

Thanks to Mike Ollier:

“The question raised by Robert Plant & Alison Krauss's Raising Sand is ‘Who needs a Zeppelin reunion?’

“Not Robert Plant. For the last 30 years he has crafted a series of critically acclaimed and decent-selling albums, both solo and with Priory Of Brion and Strange Sensation and the Page/Plant album Walking Back To Clarksville (one track off that is featured here), which rehashed some LZ songs coupled with world music sounds.

“When asked recently, Plant said that the LZ show was a one-off, and one can’t deny that Ahmet Ertegun deserves a right royal send-off. But that doesn’t mean there has to be a full reunion (which Page said would happen, in a separate interview). Plant himself said on last week’s Culture Show that he and Alison Krauss would be touring this superb album, which is all together better news.

“For this album is wonderful. Plant’s testosterone-throated bawl has been softened, at places to a whisper and, shock-horror, Percy can sing! Krauss, at times with her band very cloying, has reined in the sweeter side of her oeuvre and produced one of her strongest albums for some time, too. It’s all helped along by Oh Brother Where Art Thou producer/guitarist T Bone Burnett (one of Dylan’s Rolling Thunder tour stalwarts), guitarist Marc Ribot (Tom Waits), mandolin maestro Norman Blake and Dennis Crouch on double bass.

“This isn’t the leap of faith that some critics are claiming; Plant has for years dabbled with folk (Led Zep II), world music and blues and Krauss is well known for her predilection for rock music (she interviewed Def Leppard for a magazine last year).

"And some people are calling it a duets album, but that’s not quite true either. Plant dominates the album, but there are almost solo tracks from both artists. They harmonise beautifully together and the whole album is beautifully played and is perhaps wrong to be thought of as a Plant/Krauss project, because the musicians all play their part.

"Stand-out track has to be Roly Salley’s Killing The Blues, with the two voices dovetailing perfectly with the delicate playing by the band. Gorgeous. The Everly Brothers country rocker Gone Gone Gone is an altogether tougher sounding vehicle; it sounds just like Don and Phil themselves, if one had been a bare-chested rock God. And the other a bluegrass chanteuse!

“Plant tells the tale of the Fortune Teller on a minor-key blues, which has a perfectly tortuous electric guitar solo as its coda with not a note wasted (take note, Mr Page), whilst Krauss shines on Gene Clark’s (one of two of his songs) Through The Morning, with Greg Leisz chipping in with pedal steel. Of course Krauss also plays fiddle throughout the album - pity Percy doesn’t break out the harmonica.

“When it’s finished, you just want to play it again. And again. It’s to be hoped there will be further CDs from this, on paper, unlikely pairing; it would be a shame to let something this good slide away.”


 

 

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