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Out of the Ashes

 
Album Review: Out of the Ashes

  • Artist: Jessi Colter
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: February 28, 2006
  • Genre: Country

Review

Out of the Ashes is Jessi Colter's first record in over 20 years. She took a few songs she had written to Don Was and asked him what he thought. His response was that he didn't know, but if she had ten of them, they'd record. Colter delivered the songs (six of which she wrote herself, four she wrote with others, and two covers), and Was delivered on his promise. He is certainly her collaborator here, crafting a band and sound that keeps close to her outlaw country roots and yet brings out her newfound independence as an artist and as a woman. Out of the Ashes is an album about grieving and loss, yet embraces a new life that honors the past but is not trapped by it. The opening cut, "His Eye Is on the Sparrow," is a moving cover of the Charlie Gabriel-Civilla Martin gospel tune that puts God at the helm of the entire proceeding, from the place of loneliness to the rediscovery of sexuality and love in the songs that follow. The centerpiece of the record is "Out of the Rain," an older song that she wrote with Tony Joe White. White sings here, as does son Shooter Jennings and her local church's gospel choir. The big surprise is an old tape with Waylon's backing vocal on it that was spliced in here. It's a majestic track that is a classic outlaw ballad turned spiritual. One can hear the gratitude that comes from suffering in the grain of Colter's voice. She sings from experience, but also from freedom. White's duet vocal stands in contrast, slow, rumbling, and low, like a backwoods preacher getting ready to cut loose. The very next cut, "Velvet and Steel," is a rocking honky tonk number about a growing relationship that's not quite love, but well on the way, and the singer exhorts her partner not to be "a slow walking daddy" and to "take it to the limit," with Ray Herndon's backing vocal keeping it slippery and greasy. Colter's reading of Bob Dylan's "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" is sloppy, but it offers a nice context for her stepping out of the shadows. It predicts what people might feel about the widow of one of country music's icons putting herself back in the game and offers an answer. The dirty blues boogie of "You Can Pick 'Em" offers Colter's bona fide outlaw background and makes no apologies for calling her late husband's weaknesses. The ballad "Starman," with Colter's beautiful Fender Rhodes line driving it, offers a determined "no" to a male suitor. The piano-driven ballad "The Phoenix Rises" (the cut before "Out of the Ashes") is gorgeous, with Jenny Lynn Young's cello accenting the refrains. It accepts the newness of life while asking hard questions. The set closes with Colter and Shooter's duet vocal on "Please Carry Me Home," which was previously released on Songs Inspired by the Passion of the Christ. With Lynn's cello and Colter's piano, the song places everything in a place of redemption and under the protection of Christ's love. Raw, immediate, and unlike anything one is likely to hear on country radio these days, Out of the Ashes is a great reflection of the music's tradition, from church pew to the barrom to the lovers' bedroom. Ray Kennedy's mix is nothing short of brilliant, and Was' production is lean and mean; there is no excess here. It is -- after all this time, and six previously celebrated offerings -- the record Colter has been waiting to make all her life and better than anyone ever had any right to expect. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
His Eye Is on the Sparrow Civilla D. Martin, Charles H. Gabriel Jessi Colter (3:58)
You Can Pick 'Em Jessi Colter, Ray Herndon Jessi Colter (4:09)
Starman Jessi Colter Jessi Colter (4:37)
The Phoenix Rises Jessi Colter Jessi Colter (4:38)
Out of the Rain Tony Joe White Waylon Jennings, Tony Joe White, Jessi Colter (4:47)
Velvet and Steel Jessi Colter Jessi Colter (4:46)
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 Bob Dylan Jessi Colter (4:27)
You Took Me by Surprise Jessi Colter Jessi Colter (4:37)
So Many Things Jessi Colter Jessi Colter (2:57)
The Canyon Jessi Colter Jessi Colter (4:20)
Never Got Over You Jessi Colter, Ray Herndon Jessi Colter (3:55)
Please Carry Me Home (Lyrics) Jessi Colter, Shooter Jennings Jessi Colter, Shooter Jennings (5:51)

Credits

Waylon Jennings (Guitar), Waylon Jennings (Vocals), Waylon Jennings (Guest Appearance), Ray Kennedy (Organ), Ray Kennedy (Bass), Ray Kennedy (Percussion), Ray Kennedy (Mastering), Ray Kennedy (Mixing), Ray Kennedy (Wurlitzer), Tony Joe White (Guitar), Tony Joe White (Vocals), Tony Joe White (Guest Appearance), Jessi Colter (Piano), Jessi Colter (Arranger), Jessi Colter (Wurlitzer), Ritchie Albright (Percussion), Ritchie Albright (Drums), Jerry Bridges (Bass), Sarah Brown (Management), Ray Herndon (Guitar), Ray Herndon (Vocals), Ray Herndon (Guest Appearance), Jim Horn (Saxophone), Barny Robertson (Bass), Barny Robertson (Drums), Barny Robertson (Keyboards), Barny Robertson (Engineer), Carter Robertson (Vocals (Background)), Robby Turner (Dobro), Robby Turner (Pedal Steel), Don Was (Producer), Don Was (Bass (Upright)), Reggie Young (Guitar (Electric)), Alan Cartee (Engineer), James Minchin (Photography), Julee Stover (Project Assistant), David Gorman (Package Design), Jeff Hale (Drums), Steve Crowder (Engineer), Shawn Amos (A&R), John Roberts & Tony Barrand (Artwork), John Roberts & Tony Barrand (Package Supervision), John Roberts (Artwork), John Roberts (Package Supervision), Kurt Johnson (Harmonica), Derek Dressler (Project Assistant), Jeff Palo (Producer), Shooter Jennings (Drums), Shooter Jennings (Vocals), Shooter Jennings (Producer), Shooter Jennings (Guest Appearance), Mike Breen (Engineer), Arthur Nakata (Package Design), Dan Gillis (Management), Greater Apostolic Christ Temple Choir (Choir, Chorus), Jenny Lynn Young (Cello), Joanna Robertson (Vocals (Background))
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Wikipedia: Out of the Ashes (Jessi Colter album)
Top
Out of the Ashes
Studio album by Jessi Colter
Released February 28, 2006
Genre Country
Label Shout! Factory
Producer Don Was
Professional reviews
Jessi Colter chronology
Jessi Colter Sings Just for Kids: Songs from Around the World
(1996)
Out of the Ashes
(2006)
TBD

Out of the Ashes is the twelfth studio album by American country music artist, Jessi Colter. The album was released February 28, 2006 on Shout! Factory Records. It was Colter's first album in ten years and her first country music album in twenty two years, since 1984's Rock and Roll Lullaby. It was also her first release since 1981 to chart on the Top Country Albums chart, where it reached #61. It was the first album by Colter to be released following the death of her husband and country artist, Waylon Jennings. The title of the album, Out of the Ashes, explains the message that she has remained an artist without the help of Jennings.[1]

Contents

Content

Out of the Ashes consisted of twelve tracks that mixed the genres of country, blues, gospel, and rock. The album was produced by Don Was, who had previously worked with The Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan. The release includes guest appearances from son Shooter Jennings and Tony Joe White. It also includes an unreleased song Colter collaborated on with Jennings in the late 1980s called "Out of the Rain."[2][3] Before recording the album, Colter specifically went to Don Was with a few songs she had written and asked him what he thought. After telling Colter he was unsure about the songs, she returned to Was with more songs and shortly afterwards, they recorded the album. Six of the songs were written entirely by Colter, four were co-written by her, and two were cover versions of songs: the Gospel song, "His Eye is on the Sparrow" and Bob Dylan's "Rainy Day Women No. 12 and 35."[3]

Critical reception

Allmusic critic, Thom Jurek gave Out of the Ashes a positive review, giving it four out of five stars. Jurek praised the album overall, stating, "Out of the Ashes is a great reflection of the music's tradition, from church pew to the barrom to the lovers' bedroom." Jurek also went on to say, "It is -- after all this time, and six previously celebrated offerings -- the record Colter has been waiting to make all her life and better than anyone ever had any right to expect."[3]

Kathy Coleman of about.com gave Out of the Ashes three in a half out of five stars. Even though the album was given a fairly average rating compared to allmusic's, Coleman gave the release positive feedback instead of constructive criticism. Coleman explained how the release of the album helped Colter overcome Jennings's death, emerging her "from grief into a renewed life." Coleman called the track, "The Phoenix Rises" to sound like, "Jessi does indeed rise like the Phoenix from the ashes." She later summarized the album, stating, "Out of the Ashes is a beautiful record, and a new classic by a true legend."[1]

Entertainment Weekly also reviewed the album. Unlike other websites, music reviewer, Marc Weingarten criticized Out of the Ashes, calling the album to, "sound more like something Rick Rubin might have worked on." Weingarten explained that he felt Colter's "70s sass is gone" and is instead replaced by, "a voice that sounds cured in gospel and cigarettes." Although he did criticize the release, Weingarten found her songwriting skills to be "still intact" for writing "bluesy" and "bittersweet" material.[4]

Track listing

All songs composed by Jessi Colter, except where noted.

  1. "His Eye is on the Sparrow" — 3:58 (Civilla D. Martin, Charles H. Gabriel)
  2. "You Can Pick 'Em" — 4:09 (Colter, Ray Herndon)
  3. "Starman" — 4:23
  4. "The Phoenix Rises" — 4:38
  5. "Out of the Rain" — 4:47 (Tony Joe White)
  6. "Velvet and Steel" — 4:46
  7. "Rainy Day Women No. 12 & 35" — 4:27 (Bob Dylan)
  8. "You Took Me by Surprise" — 4:37
  9. "So Many Things" — 2:57
  10. "The Canyon" — 4:20
  11. "Never Got Over You" — 3:55 (Colter, Herndon)
  12. "Please Carry Me Home" — 5:51 (Colter, Shooter Jennings)
    • with Shooter Jennings

Personnel

Chart performance

Chart (2006) Peak
position
[5]
U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums 61

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Out of the Ashes (Jessi Colter album)" Read more

 

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