Editor's
Picks
Ralph Stanley II -
This One Is Two
Few people would have thought the best country album of the 2008 to-date
would emerge from southwest Virginia at the hands of a bluegrass legend’s
son. That, however, is exactly what Ralph Stanley II has delivered.
Album Review: Ralph Stanley II - This One Is Two
Jim Malec | September 8th, 2008
A traditional
country album laced with bluegrass sensibilities, This
One Is Two is neither glamorous nor expected—among
names like Randy Travis and Patty Loveless, both of whom released outstanding
new entries this year, I daresay few people would have thought the best
country album of the 2008 to-date would emerge from southwest Virginia
at the hands of a bluegrass legend’s son.
That, however, is exactly what Ralph Stanley II has delivered–This
One Is Two is a brilliantly written album that showcases
a series of choice covers, all of which the singer offers with a calm
confidence and a mournful drawl that underlines even the record’s
upbeat material, like the rolling Tom T. Hall track “Train Song.”
Many so-called traditional albums sound like direct rebuttals to mainstream
country, as if they exist specifically as a counterpoint to the commercialized
“pop country” that dominates the genre’s attention.
But in trying to record a “traditional” country or “real”
country album, artists often become so obsessed with style over substance–thinking
that style in itself is substance–that the music no longer feels
real or relevant. Traditional country for the sake of traditional country
entirely misses the point–it is the rawness and emotional honesty
upon which traditional country is built which makes the music engaging,
not simply the fact that it utilizes crying steel guitar as opposed
to loud-ringing electric solos.
Stanley has not missed the point here, on what can be described as an
album that aspires to be nothing other than what it is - wholeheartedly
country and bathed in a classic sound that beckons his musical heritage.
From the first twang-laden note he sings on the album’s opening
track “Cold Shoulder”–which was co-penned by Garth
Brooks and appears on his 1991 smash Ropin’ The Wind–it
is abundantly clear that there’s not a drop of pop in this singer’s
blood.
The album’s greatest strength, however, is its focus.
This One Is Two is a cohesive collection of songs that
not only speak to emotional truths, but which work together as an exercise
in juxtaposition. “L.A. County” (Lyle Lovett) and “They
Say I’ll Never Go Home”–which appear back-to-back–both
find the singer on the wrong side of the law, in one case innocent but
wrongfully sentenced and facing his death, in the other blatantly guilty
but taking his own life. Likewise, the album contrasts the unique love
of a mother in “Moms Are The Reasons Wildflowers Grow,”
with the very different kind of love offered by a barroom beauty in
“Loretta” (Townes Van Zandt).
This One Is Two is an
album filled with heaven, hell, the road, trains, honky-tonks, mama,
longing for home, a little bit of love and a whole lot of heartbreak—all
parts which make up the heart of country music. It is not an album for
the post-Idol crowd—those people who say they like country, as
long as it’s not too twangy; those people who say they like country
as long as it’s not slow and sad; those people who say they like
country, so long as it’s not too, well, country.
And I’m exceptionally thankful for that because it is, nonetheless,
a remarkable record–one made for those of us who not only appreciate
but crave all of the above.
Recommended Tracks: “L.A. County“,
“They Say I’ll Never Go Home“, “Carter“
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