Shovels and Rope: A striking “Swimmin’ Time”
By Ken Paulson
We loved the Shovels and Rope album O’ Be Joyful and have looked forward to the follow-up. The wait is over.
Last week, Cary Ann Hearst and Michael Trent released Swimmin’ Time, a comparably striking album that melds folk, country, blues, and rock in a truly compelling style. The album marries often rudimentary rhythms to fascinating narratives and compelling lyrics.
There’s a lot of water imagery here, including “Fish Assassin,” possibly the most unsettling fishing song of all time.
“Mary Ann and One Eyed Dan” tells the saga of a waitress and a man who lost part of his eyelid in combat: “She said “Do you like the menu or do you need me to read it to you?’ Her question leaves him ” half way angry, half turned on and half confused.” It’s lousy math, but good songwriting.
Those kinds of lines jump out at you throughout the album. “I got wasted and sat around the fire all day, see if I could find someone to make love to,” Hearst sings on the plaintive album opener “The Devil is All Around.”
The music is still direct and basic, and often ominous, no surprise with song titles like “Evil” and “Bridge of Fire.” It’s a worthy follow-up to their highly successful debut.
This article first appeared on Sun209.