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Put your hands on the remote! browse music »No Frills Friend by Amy Allison
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fave it Folky Pop | Country Pop
13 tracks | 38 minutes
Released May 2007
on diesel only
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- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:40 What's the Deal? lyrics BUY MP3 03:40 What's the Deal? lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:40 What's the Deal?
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:25 No Frills Friend lyrics FREE 03:25 No Frills Friend lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:25 No Frills Friend
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:37 Baby, You're the One lyrics BUY MP3 02:37 Baby, You're the One lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:37 Baby, You're the One
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:29 Hell to Pay lyrics BUY MP3 02:29 Hell to Pay lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:29 Hell to Pay
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:08 Pretty Things to Buy lyrics BUY MP3 02:08 Pretty Things to Buy lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:08 Pretty Things to Buy
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:32 Don't String Me Along lyrics BUY MP3 03:32 Don't String Me Along lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:32 Don't String Me Along
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:51 Say It Isn't So lyrics BUY MP3 03:51 Say It Isn't So lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:51 Say It Isn't So
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:11 Dreaming's Killing Me lyrics BUY MP3 03:11 Dreaming's Killing Me lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:11 Dreaming's Killing Me
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:53 Thank God for the Wine lyrics BUY MP3 02:53 Thank God for the Wine lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:53 Thank God for the Wine
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 01:53 Beautiful Night lyrics BUY MP3 01:53 Beautiful Night lyrics "GIFT MP3" 01:53 Beautiful Night
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:24 Completely Yours lyrics BUY MP3 03:24 Completely Yours lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:24 Completely Yours
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:38 Hanging on a Moment lyrics BUY MP3 02:38 Hanging on a Moment lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:38 Hanging on a Moment
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:10 Moonlight on the Mountains lyrics BUY MP3 03:10 Moonlight on the Mountains lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:10 Moonlight on the Mountains
"With No Frills Friend, the daughter of jazz-blues great Mose Allison, continues to make thoroughly captivating music.” Philadelphia Inquirer
Editorial review
Amy Allison's odd, nasal vocal tone may be a stumbling block for a lot of listeners -- and that's a shame, for far from any kind of spotlight she has continued to carve out a career as an extraordinary songwriter, and singular performer. Just as her father, the legendary Mose Allison, used his chosen idioms (in his case, jazz and blues) merely as a jumping-off point for his own unique explorations and development, so too has Amy adopted the role of classic country tragedian, channeling it through her own unmistakable sensibilities. And the pop sensibilities that had always lurked around the edges on previous ventures fully rear their heads here. "Baby You're the One" doesn't simply echo the Brill Building mastery of folks like Carole King and Neil Sedaka -- it's just as good as most of those artists' legendary, hook-ridden output from that era. In fact, most of Allison's urban country chanteuse tendencies fall away on this album, surrendering to bittersweet pop intentions. On "Hell to Pay," she opts for drop-dead-pretty wistfulness in a jangly Byrds vein (while "What's the Deal" echoes the expansive, contemplative tones of that bands' latter, Ballad of Easy Rider period). In theme and feel, Amy will always be (as the title of her previous album intimated) a "sad girl," but it's the listener's gain that she is able to sublimate such bruised themes into such wistful and beautiful pop melodies. This album, her most gentle and fully realized yet, was produced in Scotland by Glaswegian David Scott (of the Pearlfishers). ~ Erik Hage, All Music Guide
Bio / Background
From Maudlin to No Frills By Kurt Wildermuth
New York City's Amy Allison (www.amyallisonmusic.com) is the daughter of jazz and blues pianist and singer-songwriter Mose Allison, and she grew up on Long Island, but you'd never guess her bio from the country-folk-pop-rock she makes. She makes it seem so natural that to know her--to appreciate what she does--is to love her, and to love her is to feel as though you know her. In other words, she earns the title of her latest CD, No Frills Friend (2003; www.dieselonly.com). For the past decade, fronting her band the Maudlins, in the duo Parlor James, and as a solo artist, Allison has established herself as that rarity in what pop-rock-schlock impresario Malcolm McLaren has called our karaoke world: a unique voice.
No matter which musical setting you start with, at first Allison's singing voice might strike you as a high whine.
↓ more ↓Imagine a blend of Victoria Williams, Lucinda Williams (no relation to Victoria), and Doug Martsch (of Built to Spill). Her voice isn't really high and whiny, though, as much as extremely nasal. It won't storm the barricades of Top 40 radio or iTunes, provide the soundtrack for a car commercial, or enter heavy rotation at the coffee chains. It's an acquired taste, but a taste well worth acquiring if you value personality, expressiveness, soul--let me venture out on a limb here and call it humanity. I could try to downplay Allison's tendency to overemploy the nose, I could portray her as the next Norah Jones or some other smooth operator, but what's the point. If you're looking to be soothed by background sounds, you might as well stop reading. Or if you want to hear an Amy Allison song delivered differently, you might try country-music connoisseur and singer-songwriter Laura Cantrell's cover of "The Whiskey Makes You Sweeter," on her first CD, Not the Tremblin' Kind (2000; Diesel Only).
Allison's original appears on her own debut, The Maudlin Years (1996, Koch), which collects the songs she honed with her Brooklyn-based band, the Maudlins: Rob Meador and Simon Heathcote on guitars, mandolin, melodica; Charlie Shaw on percussion; either Mark Amft or Arturo Baguer on bass; either Steve Lewis on lap steel or Bob Hoffner on pedal steel. In the November 2000 Vanity Fair, pop-rock-and-sometimes-schlock impresario Elvis Costello listed this as one of the five hundred "Albums You Need--The Best of the Best." In a just universe, it would qualify as a minor classic. In reality, it's out of print, so you'll have to buy it straight from Allison, if she has any left, or find it secondhand.
The first track, "Cheater's World" (or "Cheaters World," depending on which list you check on the CD), distills Allison's utterly heartfelt yet subtly satiric take on both romance and country music. Producer/engineer Brian Dewan, like the several other guys behind the dials at these sessions, preserves the band's live sound, filling it in while spreading it out with roomy echo, letting the guitars gently weep and hum, making the rhythm section snap. A good, clean sound, it represents the lighter side of so-called alternative country, but from the first twang it announces an attention to classic country, an allegiance to the genre's seemingly timeless treatments of infidelity, loneliness, and the occasional desire for revenge. Think Hank Williams, Willie Nelson, Patsy Cline, George Jones. "I've been drinking vodka and thinking 'bout ya," Allison begins sweetly, "and I just can't believe that we're through." Each line etches another detail in the portrait:
For I know that you loved me and once thought much of me
Till I hurt you by being untrue
In the fifth line, the chorus widens the perspective:
It's a cheater's world and I want no part
But how can I tell that to my cheating heart?
When the moon comes up and the sun goes down
I'm always the first one downtown
Lovers and losers, boozers and dreamers make up the small town that, couple by couple, Allison turns into a microcosm. Things change, passion cools, relationships sour, people follow their natures by betraying each other. In the penultimate track, "Walking to the End of the World," before a majestic cover of Dickey Betts's "Shady Streets," one of Allison's characters vows to lose it all, lose herself, by moving on:
When the beating of my heart becomes the only sound
I take a walk down every street in this old town
I know I will never be your girl So I'm walking to the end of the world
It might just be the saddest song ever written, but Allison doesn't wallow. She's melancholy, not morose.
Trading in the high lonesome Maudlins for a more pastoral landscape of piano, guitar, bass, and no drums, Allison rerecorded "Cheater's World" (with apostrophe) on Parlor James's six-song EP, Dreadful Sorry (1996, Discovery; out of print). The short-lived Parlor James consisted of Allison and singer-songwriter Ryan Hedgecock--formerly of the "roots-rock" pioneers Lone Justice--recording with a handful of musicians in shifting combinations and making no attempt to shake hands with the marketplace. (Well, OK, a small attempt--they covered Tom Petty's "Turning Point.") As Allison and Hedgecock alternate verses and harmonize on the chorus of "Cheater's World," their partnership makes perfect sense, her idiosyncratic style intertwining beautifully with his more conventional crooning. The rest of Dreadful Sorry is murky, distorted, often chilling American gothic, ending with "Down on Dreaming," perhaps the second-saddest song ever written:
I became a dreamer when real life proved too hard,
Now that I'm a cynic I'm putting up my guard
I'm down on dreaming . . .
Someone wake me up and make me face reality Dreaming's killing me
Seven years later, on No Frills Friend, Allison rerecorded this one, changing the title to "Dreaming's Killing Me," speeding up the tempo, turning it into neo-new wave with what sounds like a vintage late-'70s synthesizer. The remake is more fun, deliberately less devastating, than Parlor James's long, slow, dreamy, druggy version.
Also worth comparing are Allison's version of "This Misery" on The Maudlin Years and the faster, chirpier, drum-machine-powered one on Parlor James's Old Dreams (1997, Sire; also out of print). Here, on the band's only full-length recording, producer/engineer/musician Malcolm Burn, best known for his work with Daniel Lanois and Lisa Germano, helps turn Parlor James's Americana into the kind of trip-hop pioneered by, among many others, Portishead, Massive Attack, and Tricky. The mix of repetitive dance grooves, atmospheric textures, and traditional songwriting can be jarring, but it also produces combinations both beautiful, as on Allison's ballads, and powerful, as on Hedgecock's rockers. The CD is worth finding if only for their version of the traditional folk song "Clementine," which sets mournful harmonies against a spare backing that sounds like and might even be an electronic hybrid of hi-hat, lute, and mandolin.
On Allison's next solo CD, Sad Girl (2001, www.glitterhouse.com in Europe; Diesel Only in the U.S.), members of the Maudlins reappear, and semilegendary country-pop-rock musicians Neal Casal, Greg Leisz, Will Rigby, and Mark Spencer make special guest appearances. It's Allison's show, though. If her songs on The Maudlin Years and the Parlor James CD's work like short stories, the songs on Sad Girl feel more like monologues: she's "listless and lonesome and how," "it's New Year's Eve" and her "glass is half-empty," her "life is a sad state of affairs' (another cheater's confession). By fusing and confusing the singer with the song, some of these first-person narratives raise Allison's art and artifice to a whole new level. "So, pardon my whining," she sings on the title song,
…but there's no silver lining
I've tried and I've tried, I can't see the bright side
Since the day I was born, I've been oh so forlorn
And it's not just an act, it's a matter of fact
Allison delivers these lines without self-pity or kitsch. She's both full of feeling and ironically putting on a persona.
Where could she go from there but further down that patented trail of tears, into weaker versions of the same thing or even into self-parody? Two years later, she did an unexpected but characteristically smart thing and changed direction, moving--if not relocating--to a different place with some familiar landmarks. Recorded in Scotland, produced by David Scott (of a Scottish pop band called the Pearlfishers), and played by Scott and Allison with three percussionists, No Frills Friend does away with lap steel, pedal steel, and much of the woe-is-me approach. Oh, Allison hasn't transformed herself into Ethel Merman. She hasn't written a bunch of anthems or covered Katrina and the Waves' "Walking on Sunshine" (though she could work wonders with it). No, but she has put some distance between herself and alt-country--just in time, since it seems to be running out of gas on its little lost highway--and she has begun singing about more than pain and sadness.
The difference leaps out at the start of the first track, "What's the Deal?," where a burst of synthesized strings leads to full-fledged pop-rock, all strumming acoustic and ringing electric guitars, organ, bass, drums, and Allison, sounding delighted: "I'm in suspense, I can't quit hoping / I've no defense, my heart is open." On "Baby, You're the One," a giddy love song, she channels Phil Spector's girl groups, Buddy Holly, the Beatles, the Beach Boys. On "Don't String Me Along," a down-on-love song and a distant cousin to Ray Charles's "Lonely Avenue," she goes slow, slinky, bluesy. On "Say It Isn't So," which wants to be positive but is really down, she draws on the Righteous Bros. and late-period Bob Dylan. Influences aside, though, Allison crafts her most subtle, elegant, and unclassifiable arrangements, all perfectly suited to her voice. If you want to hear her sing, after all, you want her voice unencumbered, as nature intended, a "no frills kind of friend" and unafraid to admit it.
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