FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 13, 2006
CHRIS SMITHER’S LEAVE THE LIGHT ON DRAWS
FROM BLUES AND FOLK, POETS AND PHILOSOPHERS
12th album due on Signature Sounds September
19
BOSTON, Mass. — Chris Smither, whose songs have been covered
by Diana Krall, Emmylou Harris and Bonnie Raitt, to name a few, is
one of a handful of musicians active today who were on the scene during
the folk/blues renaissance of the ‘60s. Born in Miami and raised
in New Orleans -- where he first heard the blues -- before heading
on to Boston at the onset of that city’s late ‘60s musical
greening, Smither has carved a reputation for transforming blues roots
into modern-day songwriting craft. His forthcoming twelfth recording,
Leave The Light On, is defined by bright, intricate guitar
work, driving foot stomps and assured interplay with a cadre of superb
musicians.
Leave The Light On marks the start of a new label relationship
for Smither. The album will be released on his own imprint, Mighty
Albert, in association with the renowned acoustic and modern folk
label Signature Sounds. For the recording, Smither reunited with producer
David Goodrich (Peter Mulvey, Jeffrey Foucault, Avalon Blues:
A Tribute to the Music of Mississippi John Hurt) and session
musicians Mike Piehl (drums), Lou Ulrich (bass) and Anita Suhanin
(vocals). They were joined by Grammy® Award-winning multi-instrumentalist
and vocalist Tim O’Brien (Hot Rize, Kathy Mattea) and rising
American roots band Ollabelle, whose own album was released last year
on Sony Music.
The title track, “Leave the Light On”, combines an up-tempo
rollick with the gravity of a hymn. In ever-building harmonies with
O’Brien, Suhanin and Sean Staples, the topic is clearly mortality
yet the tone is not somber but joyful. Contrast that with the heavy
blues of “Seems So Real” with its spooky backing vocals
from Ollabelle. For that track, producer Goodrich summoned up the
call-and-response quality of an old Mississippi Fred McDowell recording.
“Origin of the Species” is a wickedly pointed swing tune,
and probably won’t be a hit with the Kansas Board of Education.
Peter Case’s “Cold Trail Blues,” rendered here as
a duet with Anita Suhanin, espouses the penetrating ache of longing.
And “Diplomacy” is a full-tilt rocker; a big, loud shot
across the bow of a cotillion of war-driven empty suits.
The album concludes with a trio of songs that have inhabited Smither’s
world for upwards of 40 years. First there’s Bob Dylan’s
“Visions of Johanna” as a waltz. That is followed by a
bone-rattling version of Lightnin’ Hopkins’ “Blues
in The Bottle” — from the first blues album Smither ever
owned — in which he’s written new taglines to Lightnin’s
verses. The album closes with a ghostly version of the standard “John
Hardy”, with Smither’s guitar, foot taps and vocals supported
one last time by the vocal and instrumental talents of O’Brien,
Ollabelle and Staples.
Acoustic Guitar magazine, which recently featured Chris Smither on
its cover, cited his gift for addressing “the big things —
life, love, loss — in a penetrating and poetic yet unpretentious
way.”
That would just about sum up Leave The Light On.