For Immediate Release:
26 January 2005
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Holly Gleason for Joe's Garage
John Prine's Fair & Square --
First New Original Music In 9 Years Hits Streets April 26
Nashville: John Prine takes his own sweet time dancing with his muse --
and truly writes what's in his soul. So if it takes him a little longer to
write the songs that capture moments and reveal the gently folded human
truths that bind us all together, it's always worth the wait. Now, nearly
nine years since the release of his Grammy-nominated Lost Dogs & Mixed
Blessings, the iconic American writer is putting the finishing touches
on Fair & Square, which will be released on Prine's Oh Boy label
April 26th.
"It was just time," says Prine in his always understated way. "I had a
bunch of songs. I'd started recording em, and it turns out, I liked 'em
pretty well. So, now, I get to get 'em all just the way I like 'em - and
then I get to let 'em go out to meet the world."
Drawing on Prine's incomparable sweetness, his wicked wit and social
commentary and his split rail simplicity, Fair & Square turns on the
phases of the human heart -- and the way the people getting by live, dream,
love and survive their lives. With the occasional wheezing accordion,
curlicue electric guitar parts, quick-wristed mandolins, billowing B-3 pads
and puddles of pedal steel guitar, the rough-voiced singer/songwriter's
first self-produced record is a homey affair that draws generously from the
palette of traditional American music -- be it folk, bluegrass, shuffles,
almost vintage rock & roll, torch, country -- for an amalgamation that would
be at home on any Wurlitzer in a whiskey-soaked tavern with beer signs
flickering from age and the walls stained deeper than sepia from the years
of constant smoke.
Whether it's the sultry celebration of post-encounter rapture "Morning
Train," the afterglow burning until the next moment can happen "Long Monday"
or the down-stroke electric guitar charged "She Is My Everything," Fair &
Square captures Prine's candy heart. But there's also the Joshua Tree
dry wit of our culture's tabloid obsessive culture "I Hate It When That
Happens To Me" and the fame-chasing self-mockery of "Crazy As A
Loon", not
to mention the gentle political nudge "Some Humans Ain't Human" that's
soft-spoken indictment at its most aw-shucks.
With bluegrass queen Allison Krauss on the ode to his Irish refuge "My
Darlin' Hometown" and the street corner desolation of "The Moon Is Down" and
alt.country princess Mindy Smith bringing allure and tartness to "Morning
Train, "Long Monday" and the melted neon ponder of "Taking A Walk," Fair
& Square is the work of a man at ease with his life, secure with his
place in the world and willing to share the things that he sees.
"It's been a while, so I'm pretty excited,"
Prine admits with
that Oh! Boy! grin. "And that's a really good place to be."
Tour dates will follow shortly. Advance music is being pulled together.
But given the working class Midwestern origin of the Grammy-winning
songwriter, you can bet the songs will be served -- and the fans who want to
see and hear them will have their chance.
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