***1/2 Palace Music
LOST BLUES AND OTHER SONGS
(Drag City)
Authenticity has never been a reliable measuring stick of talent, especially in
a medium as bastardized as rock. John Fogerty wasn't really born on the bayou,
Bob Dylan's given surname was Zimmerman, and, yes, Will "Palace" Oldham was
raised in the relatively urbane Kentucky town of Louisville, not the rugged
hills of Appalachia. But over the course of four CDs, numerous name variations
(Palace Brothers, Palace Songs, Palace Music, and just plain Palace), several
EPs, and a bunch of singles, Oldham has appropriated the sound and feel of
back-porch blues and Depression-era country better than most.
Lost Blues and Other Songs offers evidence of his unique gift for
digging Americana's gnarled roots in the form of 15 Palace odds and ends
collected from singles and outtakes. He covers a lot of weathered ground, from
the Rust Never Sleeps-style Youngian psychodrama of "Riding" to the
gentlemanly country gait of "Horses" (the Mekons tune) to the lo-fi,
cracked-voice ramblings of "Stable Will." The stark, sometimes brooding
selections don't so much map out a progression as allude to a history Oldham
has created for himself. Time hasn't healed the singer's wounds, but it has
given them a very real aura of authenticity.
-- Matt Ashare
Palace Music appear this Wednesday, June 4, at the Middle East.
Call 864-EAST.
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