Published on Dec 5, 1997
Just about anyone can make a case against the 30th anniversary
issue of
Rolling Stone, “The Women in Rock.” The editors stated that
some key figures in rock were not featured because of past reviews
that the magazine gave the artists. Patti Smith had a more
political reason: making a big deal out of women genderizes the
genre instead of focusing on the work of the artist.
I’ll forgo bitching about the writers not including Tori Amos’s
masterpiece
Little Earthquakes among the most important albums by these
women artists and focus on a glaring omission for this review:the
Cowboy Junkies. True, three-fourths of the band are males, but the
staple of the band is Margo Timmins’ delicate, often haunted
voice.
After making a huge breakthrough with
The Trinity Sessions, the Cowboy Junkies released two other
albums.
The Caution Horses and
Black Eyed Man further showcased the Cowboy Junkies way
mellow style. Often acoustic and a tempo best suited for shaking a
hangover on a Sunday morning, those two albums were strictly “fans
only” type of albums. Sadly, those albums were more mood music than
works that could stand on their own.
A change in formula was needed for the band. And that’s what
came out of the 1993 release,
Pale Sun, Crecent Moon. Starting off on a dissonant note,
“Crecent Moon” gave a slight agitation to their previous efforts.
The Junkies had some guest musicians play harmonica, mandolin and
piano in a couple of the songs, giving them more texture than most
of the songs on
Black Eyed Man. That’s not to say they didn’t use these
instruments before, they just utilized them more on
Pale Sun, Crecent Moon.
The chemistry between sister Margo and brothers Michael and
Peter Timmins sounds as fluid as it did on
The Trinity Sessions, their realized masterpiece. The poppy,
chipper “Anniversary Song” actually sounds like the band members
had a couple of cappaccinos while they were recording.
For sheer storytelling, the Cowboy Junkies are one of the most
visually lyrical bands going. The visuals go from picturesque
calmness, “Have you ever seen a sight as beautiful / as that of the
rain-soaked purple / of the white birch in spring?” in “Anniversary
Song” to the untsettled imagery of “Floorboard Blues.” In that
song, Margo warns, “Check under his floorboards, Mama / I don’t
like his suggestive tone / The way his words drip from his mouth /
as he asks ‘can I take you home?'” Ouch.
The Cowboy Junkies released their double live album,
200 More Miles two years after
Pale Sun, Crecent Moon. And, after my column on double
albums, I have to admit…that one is a definitive keeper with
maybe one filler song. While new fans may want to get a good sample
from that album,
Pale Sun, Crecent Moon stands as a great album on its own
standards. It’s a cohesive recording that gave the Cowboy Junkies a
lot more room to operate, music wise.
Margo Timmins may never have the mass audience that Fiona Apple
and Jewel possess, but with ten years of recorded material under
their belts, the Cowboy Junkies show no sign of slowing down. And
while their fastest songs may put them up at the same tempo as
say…Portishead and Mazzy Star, quickness is a style that just
doesn’t fit the Cowboy Junkies. A pot of coffee, a Sunday paper and
a couple of hours with the Cowboy Junkies still is a surefire
hangover cure.