JOAN SHELLEY : THE SPUR

  1. Forever Blues
  2. The Spur
  3. Home
  4. Amberlit Morning
  5. Like The Thunder
  6. When The Light Is Dying
  7. Breath For The Boy
  8. Fawn
  9. Why Not Live Here
  10. Bolt
  11. Between Rock And Sky
  12. Completely

Label : No Quarter

Release Date : June 24, 2022

Length : 41:10

Review (AllMusic) : In 2020, Joan Shelley was wrestling with disillusionment and a sense of loss in the wake of a nonstop barrage of troubling news when the COVID-19 pandemic took her off the road and sent her home to her farm in Kentucky. At home, she tended to her chickens, communicated with other songwriters via Zoom, and wrote songs that mirrored her feelings. Those emotions got all the more complicated when Shelley discovered she and her partner and musical collaborator Nathan Salsburg were going to become parents. She was seven months pregnant when they went into the studio with producer James Elkington to record 2022's The Spur, and the complicated emotions are audible in the finished recordings. The lyrics to The Spur's 12 songs echo with vague fears and unanswered questions, imagining the world her child will inherit, wondering how to move forward in spite of her misgivings, and mourning the loss of voices that influenced her. The music is something very different. There is a calm and a sense of beauty in The Spur that's not a denial of the literal messages of the songs, but the sound of a musician finding strength in the simple, enduring pleasure of her melodies. Shelley's musings gain depth in her vocals, never ostentatious but making the most of the eloquent clarity of her instrument and communicating with the listener in an honest, unguarded manner. Her voice and Salsburg's guitar are the foundation of The Spur, with producer Elkington layering subtle accompaniment over their performances that adds color, depth, and shadow to the songs, building on their mood and meaning. The Spur isn't happy music, and it's not sad, either -- it's an honest assessment of a time of personal and cultural change that confronts fear and responds with courage and resilience, even as it betrays the author's understandable anxiety. It documents a gifted artist in full command of her gifts, and it's more than worthy of your time and attention.

Review (Pitchfork) : Joan Shelley takes modernity in microdoses. Her lean songs, which share genetics with Kentucky mountain music and its Irish-Scottish-English tributaries, have blossomed over the past decade in impressionist increments, all firmly rooted in her voice—a dazzlingly bright, peaty contralto—and her similarly earthy poetics. Even her visuals admit newness sparingly: The charming video for “Amberlit Morning,” a highlight of her latest album, The Spur, is set in present-day Brooklyn but counterweighted with references to Georges Méliès 1902 silent film A Trip to the Moon, complete with black-and-white intertitles and a planetary satellite that’s clearly as handmade as the music. In Shelley’s world, old magic is often the best magic. On The Spur, the singer-songwriter uses an uncharacteristically wide range of textures, each careful brushstroke of strings, horns, and vocal harmony deepening the emotional landscapes of songs that quietly savor their own instability, weighing change as a route to renewal, and shifting concepts of home. These ideas coincided with the birth of a child, Shelley’s first, with partner Nathan Salsburg—a fingerstyle guitarist-archivist who shares with her a similarly rangy attitude towards folk tradition (a recent solo LP, Psalms, was an exploration of ancient Jewish texts). Their uncanny melodic connection can seem the product of a single mind, recalling the voice-and-guitar telepathy between Gillian Welch and David Rawlings. Like co-parenting itself, The Spur is grounded in the partnership while expanding it. Some of this new breadth is in the vocal arrangements. “Completely,” a skeletal conjuring of mid-century R&B that Otis Redding might’ve done wonders with, employs Shelley’s multi-tracked voice, adding ghostly backup vocals as she offers wise comfort. On “Home,” Shelley works a word that’s done yeoman’s duty in American music, from “Home on the Range” to “This Must Be the Place,” echoing the Sanskrit mantra it phonetically resembles, leaning into its rhyme with the word “overgrown,” considering the place that formed her, the people who “sweetened and flawed” her, and harmonizing with herself in an aural hall of mirrors. A reliable highlight of Shelley’s LPs has always been hearing how her vocals play with others. On “Amberlit Morning,” her voice is a glowing ember alongside the crackling log of Bill Callahan’s, in beguilingly imperfect harmonies that recall her exchanges with her Louisville-area neighbor Will Oldham—whose voice is nearer her range—yet manifest even further out of sync, with elusive and hard-won flickers of connection. The string and bass arrangements, by producer James Elkington, are equally striking, sympathetic, and illuminating. On the opening track, “Forever Blues,” Shelley frets over notions of loss as layers of violin and viola roll in like storm clouds, a backdrop recalling the lush string arrangements the late Robert Kirby provided for Nick Drake—an artist Shelley has covered—on Five Leaves Left. “When the Light Is Dying,” a slow processional with brass swells and swooping string stabs, conjures another of Shelley’s forebears, Leonard Cohen, channeling his gallows humor, clear-eyed acceptance, and eternal flirtiness: “I traced the black outline of every stubborn human thing/Alone on the horizon; ‘You want it darker?’ Leonard sang/Well, the light is dying/Darling, come inside.” “Bolt,” loamy with brass and strings that swell magnificently near the end, considers death’s flipside in an uneasy meditation on fertility, its title referencing plants gone too soon to seed and also, faintly but unavoidably, the urge to flee. It’s satisfying to hear Shelley’s sound growing more verdant, the way carefully tended topiary fills out in spring. But the words and her phrasing remain the heart of what she does, and the judicious spaciousness of these settings feels both admirable and essential, crafting austerity that’s as much bounty as balm, and as celebratory as it is reflective. On “Between Rock and Sky,” the album’s penultimate song, we hear nothing but a handful of piano chords and her voice, pondering the phenomena of birth, the brevity of life, and above all, the importance of celebrating it in song, with glasses raised high.