Scott Kelly, Steve Von Till, Wino - Songs of Townes Van Zandt (2012)

Artist: Scott Kelly, Steve Von Till, Wino
Title: Songs of Townes Van Zandt
Year Of Release: 2012
Label: My Proud Mountain
Genre: Folk, Americana, Psychedelia
Quality: mp3 320 kbps / flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:37:08
Total Size: 93 / 187
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Songs of Townes Van Zandt
Year Of Release: 2012
Label: My Proud Mountain
Genre: Folk, Americana, Psychedelia
Quality: mp3 320 kbps / flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:37:08
Total Size: 93 / 187
WebSite: Album Preview
01. If I Needed You
02. St. John, the Gambler
03. Black Crow Blues
04. Lungs
05. Rake
06. Snake Song
07. Nothin
08. Tecumseh Valley
09. A Song For
You have to wonder how the immortal spirit of legendary troubled troubadour Townes Van Zandt feels about his oeuvre's increasing popularity among metalheads, as exemplified by 2012's Songs of Townes Van Zandt, featuring a three-headed monster of underground metal heavies in Scott Kelly (of Neurosis), Steve Von Till (ditto), and Scott Wino Weinrich (of Saint Vitus, Spirit Caravan, etc.). Chances are Townes, wherever he is, feels merely bemused, having bigger discorporal fish to fry right about now. But there's no doubt it's always taken a special kind of manic depressive to appreciate the darker nuances of Van Zandt's country-folk masterpieces, so perhaps the connection isn't as tenuous as one might initially think. In any case, with three separate interpreters on hand here covering three songs each, perhaps its better to analyze them individually as people, beginning with Von Till, who tackles his subjects with a deeply morose almost somnambulant solemnity. His resounding baritone lends some life to the spare acoustic guitars used on If I Needed You and Black Crow Blues, but it takes some clever electronics to elevate The Snake Song to a truly interesting new place. Von Till's Neurosis bandmate, Scott Kelly, takes a little more creative liberty with his choices, freeing St. John the Gambler of its accompanying orchestrations and its titular chorus (!) and infecting Lungs with muscular electric guitar drones, before intriguingly channeling Roger Waters for his brute acoustic run through Tecumseh Valley. But perhaps the biggest surprise is reserved for Wino -- not because he veers from the predominant folk guitar approach on display, but because his rugged contralto sounds so naked and pure (though as assertive as ever, unlike his more timid colleagues) as he embodies the bright-eyed, impetuous subject of Rake, accepts the inconclusive resignation of A Song For, and then scrapes his way through the incomparably bleak Nothin' -- a song that could teach the most misanthropic black metal terrorist something about abject nihilism. In sum: all three of these artists struggle with the pressure of doing Townes' imposing canon justice (and who wouldn't?), but while they may come across a tad too cautiously to impress experienced Van Zandt scholars, they are bound to lure even more hard rock and metal fans to discover the great man's singularly beautiful and haunting body of work - mission accomplished.