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coldteablues
I don't know how many of you have heard of this:



or gotten a copy yet, but if you haven't THEN DO!

Originally posted: October 25, 2007

Odd couple Robert Plant and Alison Krauss find mystical bond

Ever since 'Led Zeppelin III' in 1970, Robert Plant has demonstrated an affinity for the mystical side of folk and country music to complement his well-documented love of hard rock and the blues.

That love affair flourishes on 'Raising Sand' (Rounder), the British singer's new collaboration with Alison Krauss, the sweet-voiced fiddle player in the Nashville bluegrass band Union Station. Their cross-generational, bicontinental bond is cemented by producer T Bone Burnett, who picked the songs for this project, assembled the band, and played a major role in creating the eerily intimate mood.

The musicians --- included trusted Burnett accomplices Marc Ribot (guitar), Dennis Crouch (bass), Jay Bellarose (drums) and Norman Blake (acoustic guitar) --- conjure spooky chamber-folk atmosphere, with equal respect for noise and silence. This is Burnett’s specialty: roots music from the first-half of the 20th Century soaked in 21st Century dread, resulting in a blend that defies genre boundaries.

His treatment of Allen Toussant's 'Fortune Teller' is typical. Plant is at his sly best, slurring the blues while upright bass dances over reverberating guitars. This is a wobbly brand of trance music, with a party underneath just itching to break free: rapid-fire handclaps, Krauss' siren wails and finally a dirty, damaged guitar solo that wrecks the room.

Plant and Krauss split the lead vocals on a pair of haunted love songs from Byrds founder Gene Clark, bookends to a broken heart: Plant turns 'Polly Come Home' into a desperate 11th-hour hymn, persevering in spite of the odds being so obviously against his beloved Polly's return. And Krauss turns the final twist of the knife into a devastating cry on 'Through the Morning, Through the Night.'

Plant's versatility as a vocalist is the album's biggest revelation. Not just for the weathered, conversational grace that he brings to the proceedings, but in his ability to complement Krauss' yearning soprano. He never really had to share the microphone with anyone in his past projects, and now he proves himself to be not just a master lead singer, but an attentive and empathetic listener. His wordless harmonies on 'Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us' give Krauss and the song exactly what they need.

greg@gregkot.com

Source
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I picked up a copy last Friday and can't seem to get it out of rotation yet. I love, love, LOVE the mood this CD sets: melancholy, mystery, romance. At times, I hear Marc Antony in Plant. The cover of TVZ's "Nothin'" is nothing but astounding. I love popping this one in the Blazer's player and then getting 'lost' on the backroads.

I'm telling you MAKE SURE to add this one to your collection you'll thank me for it!

Cher
WalrusOct9
Burnett should get his name on the front cover along with Robert and Alison, since it really feels like his project more than either vocalist's, but that's a minor quibble...it's an amazing album. People seem surprised that it works, but having heard Plant's recent solo work, it doesn't really surprise me at all.
morninguy
We began talking about this last month 9/22. Plant-Krauss

There was a nice segment on them a couple days ago on Weekened Edition Sunday. Listen
stivmc
I love what I have heard of this so far...only 1 listen so far
bornagain
Each time I listen to it, I'm stunned again.
jame$
Can we just go ahead and save everyone some time by giving Alison another Grammy? Seriousy. At this point there's just no suspense left. If this album gets nominated, she'll win.

Where do you find space for 21 Grammys?
morninguy
When It Takes Three People to Make a Duet
By JON PARELES
LONDON
PERHAPS it was a coincidence that Robert Plant chose a Russian tearoom called Trojka, which means a threesome or triumvirate, to talk about his new duet album with Alison Krauss, “Raising Sand.” Or maybe
it was a subliminal reminder that the album is really a three-way collaboration by an improbable alliance:
Mr. Plant, who will be forever known as the lead singer of Led Zeppelin; Ms. Krauss, whose clear voice
and deft fiddle style hail from Appalachia; and the producer and guitarist T Bone Burnett, the Texan who
is best known for concocting haunted, pensively anachronistic Americana.
They represent three different musical spheres: Mr. Plant’s worldly hard rock, Ms. Krauss’s limpid update
of rural traditions and Mr. Burnett’s rangy Texas twang. “Raising Sand” (Rounder), all three say, is like
nothing any of them could have made on their own. But Mr. Burnett saw a link between the singers:
“They’re two very mystical voices, and the blend of them is mystical,” he said in a telephone interview
from his home and studio in Los Angeles. “They both sound like they’re singing from some other time.
Alison sounds like she just stepped out of the Black Forest, and Robert sounds like Ozymandias,” the
Egyptian pharaoh.
With Mr. Burnett leading a malleable studio band, Mr. Plant and Ms. Krauss share old and recent songs,
drawing on Gene Clark, the Everly Brothers, Townes Van Zandt, Allen Toussaint, Mel Tillis and Tom
Waits. It’s a collection of, mostly, sad songs — tales of love betrayed — floating in their own limbo.
Together the collaborators triangulate a terra incognita somewhere between swamp and mountain,
memories and eternity. Mr. Plant happily called it “the most amazing collision of styles.”
Sipping a latte and wearing a washed-out brown T-shirt that revealed robust biceps, Mr. Plant was far
more eager to talk about “Raising Sand” than about the impending Led Zeppelin reunion. That concert is
scheduled for Nov. 26 at the O2 arena in London as a benefit for a educational charity supported by
Ahmet Ertegun, the chairman of Atlantic Records until his death last year. “It’s a one-night stand,” Mr.
Plant said. “I’m taking emotional condoms.” Then he changed the subject.
“Raising Sand” started as Mr. Plant’s project, the latest swerve in a long post-Zeppelin career that has
delved into the wide-open-spaces rock of Mr. Plant’s 1983 hits “Big Log” and “In the Mood”; the
reimagined vintage R&B of the Honeydrippers; and the rhythms and modalities of Mali and echoes of
psychedelia in his current band, Strange Sensation.
“I think that Robert has always done exactly what he wants, and I mean that in a beautiful way,” Ms.
Krauss said by telephone from her home in Nashville.
Mr. Plant has been a longtime fan of Ms. Krauss and her string band Union Station, which uses traditional
instruments for music that’s steeped in old-timey and bluegrass styles but not bound by them. When the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland asked Mr. Plant to perform at a 2004 tribute to the
bluesman Lead Belly, he invited Ms. Krauss to sing with him. The collaboration went so well that they
began to consider recording together.
“Alison and I started talking about material,” Mr. Plant said. “We come from such different worlds that we
only knew the top of each other’s world, the cream, the stuff that comes to the surface. We didn’t really
know too much about the infinite myriad of influences underneath. And so it was an absolute coup that T
Bone came on the scene.”
Ms. Krauss, 36, had already worked with Mr. Burnett on albums including the multimillion-selling, neo-
Appalachian soundtrack album for “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” Mr. Plant and Mr. Burnett, who were
both born in 1948, are connoisseurs of older American music who share a taste for the deepest blues.
Mr. Plant came to realize, however, that he had long focused on African-American music, while he had
virtually ignored the other side of the racial divide, Ms. Krauss’s stomping ground and part of Mr.
Burnett’s down-home foundations.
“I thought I was pretty knowledgeable about American music, but I’d missed out on an entire area,” Mr.
Plant said. “I now know that American music is a total panorama. I was cutting it off and thinking it was
redneck hell down there. But it’s not.”
Mr. Plant has spent decades as a lead singer, wailing across arenas as Led Zeppelin’s golden-haired belter
and, since then, improvising at whim as the front man for his own bands. For “Raising Sand” he would
have to harmonize as well.
“I was quite nervous about the idea of finding out just how much of a one-trick pony I am,” he said. “I’ve
always been a lead singer. That’s the gig, you know. Especially an English one. You translate usually black
music, American music, in a particular fashion which is very English. But melody, and the structure of
melody, I can be quite loose with.”
Harmony singing is Ms. Krauss’s element; it’s at the core of bluegrass and the vocal blend she shares in
Union Station. Her “stretch” for the album, she said, was riding the rhythm. “It was really an ear-opening
experience,” she said. “It’s just a different thing, singing with drums. You have to find a different place to
sit.”
Mr. Plant said, “I wanted her to slur more, to become more sassy. She used to say to me, ‘But, Robert, I’m
too white.’ I said: ‘No, you’re not white. You’ve only been given that shell. But inside it you’ve got
everything.’ And she certainly does.”
As they planned the album, the three principals traded lists of potential songs. “Robert called up and said
send five-six songs over, and I played him a couple,” Mr. Burnett said. “He said, ‘That’s a nice little ditty,
but Alison wants to do something dark.’ And that was the starting point.”
Although none of the material on the album is new, Mr. Burnett insists there’s no nostalgia. “I think this
album is looking into the skull of the present,” he said. “It represents all of the danger and the darkness
and the outsiderness and the bleakness that seemed appropriate to this time.”
Mr. Plant brought his own countryish goodbye song, “Please Read the Letter,” and rock-tinged oldies like
“Fortune Teller,” which was written by the New Orleans songwriter Allen Toussaint (under the
pseudonym Naomi Neville), and “Gone Gone Gone,” a threat and kiss-off by the Everly Brothers.
When she saw one group of potential songs, Mr. Krauss recalled, she said she felt “I can’t do that.” She
called Mr. Burnett, who she said told her, “You’ve called me and said you’re afraid. Robert has said sort of
the same thing. And it’s exactly what I wanted to happen.”
The core of the band consisted of Mr. Burnett’s regular studio musicians, who know their way around all
kinds of roots music. Despite Mr. Plant’s years of savoring American music “Raising Sand” is the first full
album he has made with an American band.
The arrangements use silences and echoes with strategic grace; another factor, Mr. Burnett revealed, is the
underlying rhythm. The songs often seem to hover because the beat is understated, elastic or only implied.
“We’ve been getting completely away from the notion of beats and more into the notion of rumble or
waves,” Mr. Burnett said.
Mr. Plant sings with barely a hint of arena bluster; his voice is aching and androgynous. Townes Van
Zandt’s “Nothin’,” one of the most desolate songs ever written, has distorted guitar chords and Ms.
Krauss’s biting Celtic fiddle looming up suddenly out of quiet dobro picking. In “Polly Come Home,” Gene
Clark’s testament of utter loneliness, Ms. Krauss sings disembodied layers of harmony that drift around
him like ghosts.
Ms. Krauss sings all alone on “Trampled Rose,” a parable of spurned love by Tom Waits and Kathleen
Brennan. And she sings lead in “Through the Morning, Through the Night,” a waltz about murderous
jealousy written by Clark. Hearing a woman rather than a man sing, “To know that another man’s holding
you tight/hurts me little darling” gives the song a bisexual twist, although Ms. Krauss was taken aback by
the thought.
“It’s just leaving the song as it was written,” she said. “It wasn’t about anything other than the integrity of
the song.”
Unlike Led Zeppelin, Mr. Plant, Ms. Krauss, Mr. Burnett and the band are likely to tour together. “I think
the music will change a bit,” Mr. Plant said. “There’s lots and lots and lots of opportunities to do different
things within this little format.” A mischievous grin crossed his face. “God only knows how it will affect
her audience and my audience. They’ll go, ‘Hell, what’s going on?’ ”
10/21/2007 09:06 AM When It Takes Three People to Make a Duet - New York Times
Page 4 of 4 http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/21/arts/mus...agewanted=print
her audience and my audience. They’ll go, ‘Hell, what’s going on?’ ”
Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company
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paintedturtlegirl
Nice article, Brian ~ thanks. This album really is a rarity, I think. I've listened to it maybe 4 times through now, and I still find myself sort of on the edge of my seat waiting to hear the next song. There might be some sad songs on this but the joy of them all making the record together comes through; it's just a rich recording and they know it too. Can't imagine where else they'll go creatively in future recordings and performances. It'll be worth the wait.

GhostWriter
Ok......

1. How did I MISS THIS???

2. I've gone and purchased this against all my rules of purchasing music, namely and most importantly, without hearing a single note from the CD. This thread and the comments therein were enough......

Be back in about an hour.
John

EDIT: Only up to "Please Read the Letter" at the moment, but felt compelled to say...... Good grief, This is amazing. Wow....

EDIT: Just finished my first listening. Have you ever listened to an album and thought "this is exactly what I needed to hear right now"? Well, "this is exactly what I needed to hear right now". This music and I met at exactly the right time, methinks. Wonderful. Thanks for the thread and comments all.
J
paintedturtlegirl
QUOTE(GhostWriter @ Nov 2 2007, 08:04 PM) *
Have you ever listened to an album and thought "this is exactly what I needed to hear right now"? Well, "this is exactly what I needed to hear right now". This music and I met at exactly the right time, methinks.



Yes. Listened to the album twice tonight; once on my way driving north to meet with a friend for coffee and once on the way back. Came back and clicked on the NPR link a few postings up; that was a fun piece to catch too. They've said that they want to tour. I wonder who they might find to open for them, some band who has an interest in Americana music, a variety of stuff, a band who also likes to push themselves creatively. Hey...I've got an idea...but I think I'd need to take a year off from work to see every show.

*it's fun to dream, esp. with good music playing*
coldteablues
"Mr. Plant said, “I wanted her to slur more, to become more sassy. She used to say to me, ‘But, Robert, I’m
too white.’ I said: ‘No, you’re not white. You’ve only been given that shell. But inside it you’ve got
everything.’ And she certainly does.”"


What more to say? I've been out sick for the past couple of days and this CD has been stuck in my work PC's player. I'm listening to it now. Can I explain just how much I've missed hearing it? It's awesome to take along in the car when I go out photo hunting. I often find myself misplaced on country roads, and this CD is the perfect one to have along for company.

Cher
Trudes
I just got my copy in the mail.
Whoa...I'm lovin' it.
pico de gallo
I have to say this recording surprised me. Plant's voice doesn't have the usual obnoxious tone to it. I chalk it up to T-Bone; this album has his name all over it.

The only song that isn't grabbing me yet is the Tom Waits cover. Just too used to the Real Gone version.
GhostWriter
QUOTE(pico de gallo @ Nov 7 2007, 07:55 PM) *
I have to say this recording surprised me. Plant's voice doesn't have the usual obnoxious tone to it. I chalk it up to T-Bone; this album has his name all over it.

The only song that isn't grabbing me yet is the Tom Waits cover. Just too used to the Real Gone version.

Yeah, I noticed this too John. But it gets close to that in a couple of the songs. But it works. As a matter of fact, I really love Plant's vocals on this CD. I also agree that T-Bone has his fingerprints all over this CD. Not often that I really embrace a CD full of covers, but this is a sure thing.

Third or fourth listen through and I really love this CD. About the only song that leaves me a little less excited than the rest is Stick With Me Baby. But I don't skip it, so that counts for something.

Random observation: How the three songs Polly Come Home, Rich Woman and Please Read the Letter can be back to back to back on the same CD and have it work is beyond my ability to comprehend. I freaking love this work. I have a thing about three great songs in a row on any CD and this is three of the best, imo (along with Empty, Barfly and Three More Days on Ray Lamontagne's Till the Sun Turns Black).
J
bivester
last night, i was flipping thru the channels and stumbled across alison krauss, robert plant & t-bone burnett doing an interview w/charlie rose.

a great, fun conversation about them working together on "raising sand."

very insightful stuff...watch it! i was kind of amazed by plant's deep knowledge, love and almost reverential respect for american roots music.

Charlie Rose - Alison, Robert & T-Bone (you don't have to buy it, just click on the image and it will start to play)
bivester
"music is the way we're wired, i think" ~t-bone burnett (to charlie rose 11.14.07) smile.gif
BlondeDynamite
I picked this up a day or two ago, as I could no longer control the urge to listen to the entire thing online. I love it! Beautiful and addicting.
bornagain
Does anybody know where the title of this came from?

I'm just wondering because, a while ago, I was listening to this old Staples Singers album called Be What You Are and there is a song on it titled I Ain't Raisin' No Sand. Anybody know if there's a connection, there?
ChuckS
QUOTE (bornagain @ Apr 30 2008, 09:24 PM) *
Does anybody know where the title of this came from?


Here's a distinct possibility:

T-Bone sang Bon Temps Rouler at the Plant/Krauss concert in Louisvile. It includes these lyrics:

I've got a Creole girl well she's one fine dish
But she's got ways like a mean crawfish
She don't do nothing but raise sand all night
But when it comes to loving she's a much all right.
WalrusOct9
Raising Sand on vinyl = Epic want.

The record store guy said I had a better chance of running into Robert and Alison in his store than of actually finding a copy. Oh well.
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