Staff Reviews
Margo Price - Midwest Farmer's Daughter
The 33-year-old has lived and lost, and drunk and cried, but has emerged from it all as a special talent»
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First impressions matter. Especially on a debut album. Time and attention-strapped listeners size up an artist within a song or two, then move on or delve in further. Fortunately, it only takes Margo Price about twenty-eight seconds to convince you that you're hearing the arrival of a singular new talent. 'Hands of Time,' the opener on 'Midwest Farmer's Daughter', is an invitation, a mission statement and a starkly poetic summary of the 32-year old singer's life, all in one knockout, self-penned punch. Easing in over a groove of sidestick, bass and atmospheric guitar, Price sings, "When I rolled out of town on the unpaved road, I was fifty-seven dollars from bein' broke . . ." It has the feel of the first line of a great novel or opening scene in a classic film. There's an expectancy, a brewing excitement. And as the song builds, strings rising around her, Price recalls hardships and heartaches - the loss of her family's farm, the death of her child, problems with men and the bottle. There is no self-pity or over-emoting. Her voice has that alluring mix of vulnerability and resilience that was once the province of Loretta and Dolly. It is a tour-de-force performance that is vivid, deeply moving and all true. From the honky tonk comeuppance of 'About To Find Out,' to the rockabilly-charged 'This Town Gets Around' to the weekend twang of 'Hurtin' (On The Bottle)', Price adds fresh twists to classic Nashville country, with a sound that could've made hits in any decade. Meanwhile, the hard-hitting blues grooves of 'Four Years of Chances' and 'Tennessee Song' push the boundaries further west to Memphis (the album was recorded at the legendary Sun Studio).
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