Spotlight Album Review: The Kennedys "Headwinds"

With the onset of Covid-19, Pete and Maura Kennedy found themselves stymied, while touring was precluded. Famous road warriors, The Kennedys inaugurated weekly live streams, which drew hundreds of viewers and generated a repertoire of a thousand songs. Meanwhile, the changing times inspired a wealth of original songs, which have been released on their first album of new material in five years, Headwinds, which addresses both the environment and polarization.

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Cynthia Cochrane
Spotlight Album Review: Rhiannon Giddens "You're The One"

Let’s put it right out there: Rhiannon Giddens is a goddess! Not just a Renaissance woman – a banjo player and a fiddler who’s won multiple Grammys, a MacArthur “Genius” grant, and a Pulitzer Prize for her opera Omar; co-founded Carolina Chocolate Drops and Our Native Daughters; succeeded Yo-Yo Ma as the Artistic Director of the Silk Road Ensemble; acted in the TV series Nashville; narrated podcasts; authored children’s books, and so much more – she’s somehow divinely ordained. On her new release, You’re the One, she channels her musical gifts into a sublimely eclectic album which may be the best of the year.

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Cynthia Cochrane
Spotlight Album Review: Ellis Paul "55"

For more than 30 years, ever since he moved from Maine to Boston (on the strength of a track scholarship at Boston College), Ellis Paul has epitomized literate song craftsmanship. Now ensconced in Charlottesville, VA, he’s continued to release a string of high-quality albums. His 22nd and most recent release, 55, reveals a mature artist at the height of his powers.

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Cynthia Cochrane
Spotlight Album Review: Vance Gilbert "The Mother of Trouble"

For 30 years Vance Gilbert has released albums that cover the musical landscape, with elements of folk, R&B, swing, pop standards, and Americana. On his new album, The Mother of Trouble, he seems to check off all those boxes. Add to that the lyrical content, which, per his description, includes “4 bullies, 3 deaths, 2 accidents, 2 moms, 2 Black people, 1 dog, and 1 ball,” and you’ve got a rich and deep album.

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Cynthia Cochrane
REVIEW: Fat Ham

The scene opens in the backyard of a ranch-style house in the South. A somewhat pudgy young Black man is blowing up balloons. There’s going to be a party celebrating the marriage of his mother and his father’s brother, which he feels is unseemly, considering his father’s recent death. Was his uncle responsible? If that sounds a bit like Hamlet, you get the connection with Fat Ham. But instead of being a tragedy, for the most part it’s a hilarious, albeit provocative, comedy.

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Cynthia Cochrane
INDING FOLK IN KC: FAI Recap

For the first time in three years, I attended the Folk Alliance International conference in Kansas City. Though not as busy as in some years past, it was robustly attended  by a couple thousand artists, presenters, media, and music lovers of various stripes, who were delighted to embrace the folk community again in person.

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Cynthia Cochrane
Spotlight Album Review: Roger Street Friedman "Love Hope Trust"

Roger Street Friedman took a 25-year hiatus from music to work in the family business. When he returned in 2014 with his debut album, The Waiting Sky, it was clear that he was a solid songwriter. In the time since, the Long Island resident has released three increasingly strong albums. With the latest, Love Hope Trust, he seems to have hit his stride. 

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Cynthia Cochrane