UPC: 015891404929
Format: CD
Release Date: Jul 27, 2009
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Personnel: Sarah Jarosz (vocals, guitar, claw hammer banjo, mandolin, piano, toy piano); Jerry Douglas (slide guitar, dobro); Darrell Scott (National guitar); Stuart Duncan (fretless banjo, zither, fiddle); Mike Marshall (mandocello, mandolin); Chris Thile (mandolin); Ben Sollee (cello); Tim Lauer (piano, synthesizer).
Audio Mixer: Gary Paczosa.
Recording information: Minutia Studios, Nashville, TN.
Illustrator: Wayne Brezinka.
Seventeen years old and already turning the heads of critics, producers, and session musicians alike, Sarah Jarosz is not only a jaw-dropping talent but a multidimensional one as well. Her voice is clear and sweet, her mandolin playing has been good enough for long enough that she has memories of jamming on-stage with David Grisman and Ricky Skaggs at age twelve, and she plays guitar and clawhammer banjo. Her debut is not a bluegrass album, though it seems likely that it will end up in that section of the CD store. The songs are all originals, except for covers of the Decemberists' "Shankill Butchers" and Tom Waits' "Come on Up to the House." Some of her original compositions sound remarkably ancient, such as the vinegary and modal "Tell Me True"; others are bitingly topical, such as "Broussard's Lament" -- a song that, for all its indirectness, can only be intended as a sharp commentary on the government's bungling of the rescue and recovery effort following Hurricane Katrina. Her instrumental compositions are complex but sweetly lovely, and her twin-mandolin interplay with Mike Marshall on "Mansinneedof" is especially impressive in both its pleasant accessibility and its mature sophistication. Her acoustic arrangement of "Come on Up to the House" expresses all of the original's bluesy swagger but tempers it with a more refined sense of Southern hospitality.
Audio Mixer: Gary Paczosa.
Recording information: Minutia Studios, Nashville, TN.
Illustrator: Wayne Brezinka.
Seventeen years old and already turning the heads of critics, producers, and session musicians alike, Sarah Jarosz is not only a jaw-dropping talent but a multidimensional one as well. Her voice is clear and sweet, her mandolin playing has been good enough for long enough that she has memories of jamming on-stage with David Grisman and Ricky Skaggs at age twelve, and she plays guitar and clawhammer banjo. Her debut is not a bluegrass album, though it seems likely that it will end up in that section of the CD store. The songs are all originals, except for covers of the Decemberists' "Shankill Butchers" and Tom Waits' "Come on Up to the House." Some of her original compositions sound remarkably ancient, such as the vinegary and modal "Tell Me True"; others are bitingly topical, such as "Broussard's Lament" -- a song that, for all its indirectness, can only be intended as a sharp commentary on the government's bungling of the rescue and recovery effort following Hurricane Katrina. Her instrumental compositions are complex but sweetly lovely, and her twin-mandolin interplay with Mike Marshall on "Mansinneedof" is especially impressive in both its pleasant accessibility and its mature sophistication. Her acoustic arrangement of "Come on Up to the House" expresses all of the original's bluesy swagger but tempers it with a more refined sense of Southern hospitality.
Tracks:
1 - Song Up in Her Head
2 - Edge of a Dream
3 - Tell Me True
4 - Mansinneedof
5 - I Can't Love You Now
6 - Broussard's Lament
7 - Fischer Store Road
8 - Left Home
9 - Shankill Butchers
10 - Can't Hide
11 - Long Journey
12 - Come on Up to the House
13 - Little Song
2 - Edge of a Dream
3 - Tell Me True
4 - Mansinneedof
5 - I Can't Love You Now
6 - Broussard's Lament
7 - Fischer Store Road
8 - Left Home
9 - Shankill Butchers
10 - Can't Hide
11 - Long Journey
12 - Come on Up to the House
13 - Little Song