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a Boot and Shoe
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a Boot and Shoe
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
a Boot and Shoe
Current price: $17.99
Size: CD
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Sam Phillips
took a deliberate detour from the sparkly
neo-psychedelic
pop
of her best-known work on her 2001 album,
Fan Dance
, which stripped her songs and their accompaniment to their bare framework and reveled in the beauty that lay within.
Phillips
and her producer and collaborator,
T-Bone Burnett
, have followed much the same course with 2004's
A Boot and a Shoe
, which in many ways sounds like
, Pt. 2; featuring a number of the same musicians (including guitarist
Marc Ribot
and percussionists
Carla Azar
and
Jim Keltner
)
was recorded and mixed in the same spare, open manner, reveling in the acoustics of the rooms and the subtle creaks of aging instruments. However, while there was something deep and meditative in the quiet spaces of
, the 2004 release tends to put a somewhat lighter and more playful spin on the same themes. While the gravity of
' take on matters both spiritual (
"Hole in My Pocket"
) and personal (
"If I Could Write"
) hasn't changed,
has a bit more of a spring in its step, especially in the subtle sensuality of
"Red Silk 5,"
the easygoing sway of
"Drawman,"
and the torchy undercurrents of
"How to Quit."
What sounded austere on
sounds simple on
, and it's the differing inferences of those two adjectives that makes all the difference. It goes without saying that
' vocals are both unaffected and lovely, and that the subtle, literate confessionalism of her songs is a thinking person's delight, as always. What made
different is how
proved her songs could work just as well without the sonic gingerbread of
Martinis & Bikinis
Omnipop
, and
shows that she can achieve a broad and lively palette in the most modest of musical circumstances. ~ Mark Deming
took a deliberate detour from the sparkly
neo-psychedelic
pop
of her best-known work on her 2001 album,
Fan Dance
, which stripped her songs and their accompaniment to their bare framework and reveled in the beauty that lay within.
Phillips
and her producer and collaborator,
T-Bone Burnett
, have followed much the same course with 2004's
A Boot and a Shoe
, which in many ways sounds like
, Pt. 2; featuring a number of the same musicians (including guitarist
Marc Ribot
and percussionists
Carla Azar
and
Jim Keltner
)
was recorded and mixed in the same spare, open manner, reveling in the acoustics of the rooms and the subtle creaks of aging instruments. However, while there was something deep and meditative in the quiet spaces of
, the 2004 release tends to put a somewhat lighter and more playful spin on the same themes. While the gravity of
' take on matters both spiritual (
"Hole in My Pocket"
) and personal (
"If I Could Write"
) hasn't changed,
has a bit more of a spring in its step, especially in the subtle sensuality of
"Red Silk 5,"
the easygoing sway of
"Drawman,"
and the torchy undercurrents of
"How to Quit."
What sounded austere on
sounds simple on
, and it's the differing inferences of those two adjectives that makes all the difference. It goes without saying that
' vocals are both unaffected and lovely, and that the subtle, literate confessionalism of her songs is a thinking person's delight, as always. What made
different is how
proved her songs could work just as well without the sonic gingerbread of
Martinis & Bikinis
Omnipop
, and
shows that she can achieve a broad and lively palette in the most modest of musical circumstances. ~ Mark Deming