Tift Merritt.

Her first album Bramble Rose (B +, 2002) is straight heart-break country. Her vocals are sexy and breathe-y, aching with a knowing hunger and vulnerability that matches the songs. The lyrics are Hemingway plain, perfect for country, with stand-outs being Trouble Over Me, Sunday (the best track), and Are You Still in Love with Me. Woven through all the songs is a desire for love and commitment with a realization that marriage isn’t probable (if possible). http://www.rhapsody.com/tiftmerritt/bramblerose
Merritt's second album Tambourine (A-, 2004) adds a shot of rock n roll to the cocktail, most notably on lead-off Stray Paper, Shadow in the Way, Late Night Pilgrim and stand-out Tambourine, a swinging, rocking, blues piano number saturated with sex. “I am your tambourine. Shake me with your love, shake me with your love, shake me with our love tonight,” she sings to some lucky dude. Still, it’s the ache on the slow songs Plainest Thing and Still Pretending that draw me back. “Barefoot in the kitchen laughing till you leave, when I'll be crying inside the door I close behind you, wishing you would stay. But we're still pretending and we're still wrong and I still can't tell my heart why I'm still alone.” http://www.rhapsody.com/tiftmerritt/tambourine
Rilo Kiley/Jenny Lewis.

You’ll know Rilo Kiley from the Grey’s Anatomy and John Tucker Must Die (although I’m not sure that will resonate with too many of our readers…) soundtracks. More Adventurous (B+, 2004) is the sometimes folk, sometimes pop album that put them on the map, with razor-sharp lyrics, an ear for a good hook, and vocals by Jenny Lewis full of wide-eyed guilt. Although a bit uneven, at their best they sum-up the longing for love and lack of hope that permeates the post-twenty-five single life. Lewis keeps both in tension in so-good-it’s scary “Portions for Foxes” (I keep on talkin’ trash, but I never say anything, and the talkin’ leads to touchin’ and the touchin’ leads to sex and then there is not mystery left. And it’s bad news.), “I Never” (I’m only a women of flesh and bone and I weigh too much (we all do), and I thought I might die alone), and “The Absence of God (“Folk singers sing songs for the working, baby. We’re just recreation for all those doctors and lawyers” and “You’re not happy but you’re funny, and I’m tripping over my joy, but I keep getting up again”). I’d buy the whole thing, but definitely download those three. http://www.rhapsody.com/rilokiley/moreadventurous

*Rilo Kiley has a new CD just out that I’ll review shortly. You can hear a couple tracks from it on their myspace.
Patty Griffin. 1000 Kisses (A 2002). Although Griffin has a number of albums, all good, out there, this is the masterpiece. A collection of haunting songs of love in

http://www.rhapsody.com/pattygriffin/1000kisses
I am waiting for the Tift Merritt and Jenny Phillips collaboration. IJS.
ReplyDeletewho's jenny phillips?
ReplyDeletesorry, I meant Jenny Lewis.
ReplyDeleteWell I don't know who any of them are. In fact, the title of this entry made me think you were writing about dysmenorrhea, endometriosis, or dyspareunia.
ReplyDeleteI still say that Griffin's "Living with Ghosts" is Griffin at her purestand maybe most aching!
ReplyDelete