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Bone on Bone
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Bone on Bone
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
Bone on Bone
Current price: $15.99
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It's been six years since
Bruce Cockburn
delivered a studio offering. His daughter was born in 2012, he assembled a career-spanning box set, and wrote a candid memoir, Rumours of Glory. When he was finally free of his writing and curatorial chores, he wondered if there was anything left to say. A book of poems by Canada's greatest 20th century poet,
Al Purdy
, provided inspiration. The song "3 Al Purdys," in which
Cockburn
sings and speaks the yarn of a homeless wanderer under the spell of the poet (and weds his words to
Purdy
's) is one of the finest tracks here (and one of four to feature jazz cornetist
Ron Miles
).
's less concerned with perfection, particularly when it comes to his vocals. In his seventies, his instrument is gruffer, but via
Colin Linden
's immediate production, it proves a benefit. "States I'm In" is a searing, insightful, rearview look at what
's witnessed -- beautiful and horrible -- in his global travels as a musician and an Amnesty International observer. He transforms the song from reverie to a meditation on the present realities and in his own life and society. There's a more overt engagement with Christianity on this record, balanced by a sense of "growing tenser with the times" while living in a country led by Donald Trump. The bumping rockabilly shuffle "Stab at Mater" (a wonderful wordplay on the Latin "Stabat Mater") illustrates the experiential grind between spiritual insight and everyday life that deepens them both. Members of his local San Francisco church were recruited as a chorus here and elsewhere, including on the folk-inflected, poetic, yet urgent "Forty Years in the Wilderness." ("...getting to the know the beasts....") "Looking & Waiting" is wafting acoustic reggae. Buoyed by the chorus, it's a hymn to knowing full well that waiting is indeed the hardest part of faith. The title track is a gorgeous instrumental acoustic guitar workout, while "Mon Chemin" is a jazzy, Latinized folk song buoyed by charango and dulcimer, with
Miles
' cornet, accordionist nephew
John Aaron Cockburn
, bassist
John Dymond
, and drummer
Gary Craig
. The final two tracks also use blues as jumping-off points. On "Jesus Train,"
delivers them through fingerpopping, house-rocking 21st century gospel. It's followed by the traditional "Twelve Gates to the City" (so closely associated with the
Rev. Gary Davis
makes it his own by adding some new lyrics and a radical NOLA-styled R&B arrangement --
'
Louis Armstrong
-esque fills and the chorus add soulful weight to the proposition.
Bone on Bone
is a fine, deep return. This somewhat grimier and edgier
is clearly inspired, his lyrics are both jagged and elegant; they dovetail in songs that question and reveal the rough-hewn beauty of a life guided by spiritual principles. He continues to question these principles while affirming their primacy as a witness to the world's brutality. They also struggle with the next right thing and how to accomplish it, even when it seems pointless to try, and that kind of struggle is the kind of hope we need more of. ~ Thom Jurek
Bruce Cockburn
delivered a studio offering. His daughter was born in 2012, he assembled a career-spanning box set, and wrote a candid memoir, Rumours of Glory. When he was finally free of his writing and curatorial chores, he wondered if there was anything left to say. A book of poems by Canada's greatest 20th century poet,
Al Purdy
, provided inspiration. The song "3 Al Purdys," in which
Cockburn
sings and speaks the yarn of a homeless wanderer under the spell of the poet (and weds his words to
Purdy
's) is one of the finest tracks here (and one of four to feature jazz cornetist
Ron Miles
).
's less concerned with perfection, particularly when it comes to his vocals. In his seventies, his instrument is gruffer, but via
Colin Linden
's immediate production, it proves a benefit. "States I'm In" is a searing, insightful, rearview look at what
's witnessed -- beautiful and horrible -- in his global travels as a musician and an Amnesty International observer. He transforms the song from reverie to a meditation on the present realities and in his own life and society. There's a more overt engagement with Christianity on this record, balanced by a sense of "growing tenser with the times" while living in a country led by Donald Trump. The bumping rockabilly shuffle "Stab at Mater" (a wonderful wordplay on the Latin "Stabat Mater") illustrates the experiential grind between spiritual insight and everyday life that deepens them both. Members of his local San Francisco church were recruited as a chorus here and elsewhere, including on the folk-inflected, poetic, yet urgent "Forty Years in the Wilderness." ("...getting to the know the beasts....") "Looking & Waiting" is wafting acoustic reggae. Buoyed by the chorus, it's a hymn to knowing full well that waiting is indeed the hardest part of faith. The title track is a gorgeous instrumental acoustic guitar workout, while "Mon Chemin" is a jazzy, Latinized folk song buoyed by charango and dulcimer, with
Miles
' cornet, accordionist nephew
John Aaron Cockburn
, bassist
John Dymond
, and drummer
Gary Craig
. The final two tracks also use blues as jumping-off points. On "Jesus Train,"
delivers them through fingerpopping, house-rocking 21st century gospel. It's followed by the traditional "Twelve Gates to the City" (so closely associated with the
Rev. Gary Davis
makes it his own by adding some new lyrics and a radical NOLA-styled R&B arrangement --
'
Louis Armstrong
-esque fills and the chorus add soulful weight to the proposition.
Bone on Bone
is a fine, deep return. This somewhat grimier and edgier
is clearly inspired, his lyrics are both jagged and elegant; they dovetail in songs that question and reveal the rough-hewn beauty of a life guided by spiritual principles. He continues to question these principles while affirming their primacy as a witness to the world's brutality. They also struggle with the next right thing and how to accomplish it, even when it seems pointless to try, and that kind of struggle is the kind of hope we need more of. ~ Thom Jurek