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  Reviews
CD REVIEW: Country-folk release is good-natured

Steve Morley, Apr 24, 2009


Kate Campbell: Save the Day
Label: Large River
Sound/Style: Poetic and philosophical blend of old-time country and contemporary folk

By Steve Morley
United Methodist News Service

Southern-born singer/songwriter Kate Campbell holds a degree in history, so she’s well aware that her homeland is remembered as much for racial intolerance and the rebel flag as for its deeply rooted faith and spirit of hospitality. 

But the singer has done the Southland proud with her gentle, wise and often inspirational music, which recalls the benevolent spirit of the Southern writer Eudora Welty. While Ms. Campbell’s latest album, Save the Day, isn’t as South-centric as some of her past work, it reveals Welty’s considerable influence in its plainspoken and non-judgmental observations. 

“Fordlandia,” Ms. Campbell’s duet with Nanci Griffith, deals with the little-known city and rubber plantation founded in the Brazilian wilderness by automotive industrialist Henry Ford. The fact that the enterprise was a colossal failure might warrant ridicule, though Ms. Campbell’s retelling of the story is both matter-of-fact and philosophical. The song’s gently rolling acoustic arrangement turns the tale into a folksy fable that speaks up for those who dream big and reminds us that mistakes are part of the blueprint of success. 

In a similar fashion, the banjo-driven “Welcome to Ray” quizzically ponders the extinction of a once-thriving mobile home community without attempting drama or pointing fingers at heartless real estate developers. Instead, Ms. Campbell meditates on the meaning of home and echoes the irony of the surviving welcome sign captured for posterity by documentary photographer Daryl Thetford. 

Ms. Campbell’s title track breaks fresh ground, posing a probing social question over an ambling rock shuffle decorated with bright, Beatlesque guitar. Though Ms. Campbell casts no outright aspersions on those who seek wealth and possessions, the song’s sharp distinction between luxury and survival prompts consideration about the things that truly matter. 

The track’s progressive pop-folk sound appears on two other standout tunes, adding welcome colors to Ms. Campbell’s earthy Southern soul and country-folk canvas as well as the potential for airplay on adult alternative radio. 

Ms. Campbell’s method of addressing spirituality—something she does often—can be unorthodox. “Looking for Jesus,” which perfectly casts folk legend John Prine as Ms. Campbell’s duet partner, describes a variety of Savior-seekers ranging from archeologists to the highest bidder on a bowl of cornflakes that resembles the face of Jesus. 

While Ms. Campbell declares “we all want to believe,” she leaves behind the bittersweet implication that many of us overlook the real Christ in the process of chasing tangible representations. 

Coming from a Southern Baptist upbringing, it’s interesting that Ms. Campbell addresses faith from a slant that’s more philosophical than evangelical. But her good-natured and thoughtful handling of all the subjects she covers on Save the Day comprises a potent case for the ongoing existence of old-fashioned Southern grace. 

For more UMNS stories, visit http://umns.umc.org.

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Other articles by Steve Morley:
CD REVIEW: Drennan's CD offers hope in trying times (Jul 17, 2009)
CD REVIEW: U2’s atmospheric CD confounds expectations (Jun 19, 2009)
CD REVIEW: Costner takes no-frills approach (Apr 24, 2009)
CD REVIEW: Ex-Fleetwood musician still eclectic (Apr 3, 2009)
CD REVIEW: Soul hybrid resurrects gospel sound (Apr 3, 2009)

Other articles in Reviews category:
FILM REVIEW: Sci-fi blockbuster ‘Inception’ revels in creative confusion  (Bill Fentum, Aug 3, 2010)
BOOK REVIEW: Methodism as a glorious ‘machine’  (David Mosser, Jul 16, 2010)
FILM REVIEW: Last ‘Toy Story’ adventure honors love, imagination  (Bill Fentum, Jul 13, 2010)
THEATER REVIEW:
‘Screwtape’ staged with devious skill
 (Mary Jacobs, Jul 13, 2010)
FILM REVIEW: ‘Please Give’ leaps into urban ethical dilemma for couple  (Bill Fentum, Jul 7, 2010)

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