Together at the Bluebird Café
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Together at the Bluebird Café | ||
Live album by Steve Earle, Townes Van Zandt & Guy Clark | ||
Released | Oct 9, 2001 | |
Recorded | Sept 13, 1995 Bluebird Café, Nashville, Tennessee | |
Genre | country, folk, singer-songwriter | |
Length | 1:09:01 | |
Label | American Originals | |
Producer(s) | Vinny Adinolfi | |
Professional reviews | ||
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Together at the Bluebird Café is a live recording of an "in-the-round" concert by three critically acclaimed Texas-born singer-songwriters, Steve Earle, Townes Van Zandt, and Guy Clark. Each of the three songwriters alternate between solo performaces of some of their best material. The album is unique for the camradarie between the three artists whose personnal lives and musical careers are very much intertwined.
Contents |
[edit] History
The event was organized by Susanna Clark (Guy's wife) as a benefit for the Interfaith Dental Clinic, an orgainziation that works to "restore, protect, and improve the oral health of uninsured, low-income, working people and their children in the greater Nashville area."[11] In the Liner notes Clark indicates, "When I asked Guy, Townes, and Steve to help me raise money for the Interfaith Dental Clinic, I had no idea what a stir it would cause."[12] The clinic is mentioned the the program by Townes Van Zandt who apparently had been a recipient of their services. Van Zandt tells a story of an incident in which he lost a gold tooth while shooting dice.
The recording took place on September 3, 1995 at Nashville's nationally renown venue for songwriters, The Bluebird Café. Owner and manager, Amy Kurland, described the show as "one of the best" in 19 years.[12][13]
The concert took place just 15 months before Townes Van Zandt's death. As was true 22 years earlier in his Live at the Old Quarter, Van Zandt's humor, wedged between some very sad songs is a prominent feature. The stripped down versions of Earle's songs are also unique. Earle's own live performances and albums rarely offer the listener so many chances to hear his music without the backing of a full band. Guy Clark spends the least time talking between songs, allowing his songs to tell their own stories. Occasionally the artists interact, like when Clark joins Earle on the "Mercenary Song".
A female vocalist not credited in the liner notes, but apparently Emmylou Harris adds a harmony vocal to Guy Clark's "Immigrant Eyes" and on Steve Earle's "Cooperhead Road". Earle names Mark Stuart as the additional guitarist on "Copperhead Road".
[edit] Track listing
- "Baby Took a Limo to Memphis" (Clark) – 3:31
- "My Old Friend the Blues" (Earle) – 3:03
- Townes: Introduction to "Katie Belle" – 1:44
- "Katie Belle" (Van Zandt) – 3:13
- "The Cape" (G. Clark,S. Clark, J. Jonosky) – 3:29
- Steve: Introduction to "Valentine's Day" – 1:03
- "Valentine's Day" (Earle) – 3:10
- "Ain't Leavin' Your Love" (Van Zandt) – 2:55
- "Randall Knife" (Clark) – 4:46
- "Tom Ames' Prayer" (Earle) – 3:22
- Townes: The Interfaith Dental Clinic – 4:29
- "A Song For" (Van Zandt) – 3:29
- "Dublin Blues" (Clark) – 4:29
- "I Ain't Ever Satisfied" (Earle) – 4:00
- "Pancho and Lefty" (Van Zandt) – 5:22
- "Immigrant Eyes" (Clark, Murrah) – 4:08
- Steve: Sirocco's Pizza – 1:42
- "Mercenary Song" (Earle) – 3:02
- "Tecumseh Valley" (Van Zandt) – 4:36
- "Copperhead Road" (Earle) – 3:20
[edit] Charts
year | chart | peak |
---|---|---|
2001 | Billboard Top Internet Albums | 21 |
[edit] Credits
- Executive Producers: Amy Kurland, Len Handler, Phil Kurnit
- Compilation produced by: Vinny Adinolfi
- Edited by: Elliott Federman & Vinny Adinolfi
- Mastered by: Elliott Federman at Saje Sound, New York, New York
- Recorded at the Bluebird Café, Nashville, Tennessee by: Neil Fagan & Phil Smith
- Production coordinator for The Bluebird Café: Fran Overall
- Art Direction & Design: Amy Bennick, Anything You See, Inc.
- Photography: Señor McGuire, Al Clayton, Steve Luvkin, Michael Wilson, and Anthony Lathrop
[edit] Releases
year | format | label | catalog # |
---|---|---|---|
2001 | CD | American Originals | 4006 |
2001 | CD | Catfish | 214 |
2004 | CD | Snapper | 161 |
[edit] External links
[edit] Notes and sources
- ^ Matt Bjork, "CD Review: Together at the Bluebird Cafe", About:Country Music (link)
- ^ William Ruhlmann, "Review: Together at the Bluebird Café", All Music Guide (link)
- ^ Jim Caligiuri, "Phases and Stages: Texas Platters", Austin Chronicle, January 25, 2002 (link)
- ^ Robert Wooldridge, "Country Music CD Review: Steve Earle, Townes Van Zandt, Guy Clark, Together at the Bluebird Cafe", Country Standard Time (link)
- ^ Kyf Brewer, "Review: Together at the Bluebird Cafe", Figgle (link)
- ^ Aaron Barker, "Together recorded live just two years before Townes died", FolkWax, December 12, 2001 (link - requires free subsciption)
- ^ Marc Greilsamer, "Review: steve Earle, Townes Van Zandt, Guy Clark- Together at the Bluebird Cafe", Fretplay (link)
- ^ Bruce Sylvester, (Reviews of The Best of Townes Van Zandt; Live at the Old Quarter, Houston, Texas; Texas Rain: The Texas Hill Country Recordings; Together at the Bluebird Cafe), Goldmine, 28:14:573, July 12, 2002, p. 65-66
- ^ "CD Reviews", Milwaukee Journal Sentinel December 28, 2001
- ^ , "Off the Beaten Track: Together at the Bluebird Cafe", Sing Out! Winter 2002
- ^ Interfaith Dental Clinic web site
- ^ a b liner notes, Together at the Bluebird Cafe, American Originals (AMO-4006-2), 2001
- ^ Although Kurland names it as one of the best in the album liner notes, the show does not appear on the list of Amy Kurland's Dozen Memorable Events at the Bluebird Cafe (which are all earlier events)