"Electric Dirt" Grammy Award winner for
Best Americana Album OF 2009!!
THIS
NEW CD IS A FOLLOW UP TO THE GRAMMY-WINNING
RELEASE DIRT FARMER
CD Cover Concept by:
Levon Helm
Graphics and Art by: Mike DuBois
***Grammy Award
Winner
for Best Americana Album of 2009***
Rolling Stone gives
Electric
Dirt
Four Stars * * * * "The Band's indomitable drummer rocks on Electric
Dirt wants to party." - Rolling Stone
"He
sounds like an oracle" -
New Yorker "Powerful." - LA Times "Helm brings swagger and verve" - NPR.org
"Song of the Day" "Levon Helm paints another masterpiece with
'Electric Dirt."- Elmore "Helm is still rock's most authentic man."
- Washington City Paper "His voice is
vigorous and unbridled...
the music struts and cackles through every earthly
travail"-
New York Times "Electric Dirt jumps, shouts and laughs in the
face of hard times,
and occasionally sheds a quiet tear."- Chicago
Tribune
Electric Dirt (Dirt Farmer
Music/Vanguard Records) is the second album in the last two years
from American musical treasure Levon Helm. Its predecessor, Dirt
Farmer, his first solo LP in a quarter century, followed Levon’s
near-miraculous recovery from throat cancer, and as such represented
a new lease on life for the legendary artist, who rose to prominence
as the drummer and vocalist for Levon and the Hawks, which later
became The Band.
The accolades poured in after Dirt Farmer’s release in the fall of
2007. “This album is nothing less than a return to form by one of
the most soulful vocalists in rock history,” raved the San Francisco
Chronicle, reflecting the universal sentiment. Levon was named
Artist of the Year by the Americana Music Association, and the album
was awarded the 2008 Grammy for Best Traditional Folk Recording.
Meanwhile, Rolling Stone hailed Helm’s Midnight Ramble, which takes
place monthly at Levon Helm Studios—a.k.a. The Barn—in his longtime
home of Woodstock, N.Y., as 2008’s Best Jam Session.
“I’m not surprised that Levon wanted to do another record so
quickly,” says multi-instrumentalist Larry Campbell, who, along with
Amy Helm, produced Dirt Farmer and who, due to Ms. Helm’s
obligations as a new mother, was the sole producer of this project.
“It turned out to be a promising relationship as far as he and I
were concerned, and a promising situation overall. We all had the
sense that Levon’s reemergence was long overdue, and it was
downright thrilling to hear him singing again at the Midnight
Rambles and during the sessions for the last record, after the
possibility of losing that voice forever. For people my age and a
little bit older, it was as if the Beatles had gotten back together.
That would have been a very important voice to have lost, and to get
it back again was monumental.”
The 11 tracks feature the same core crew of Midnight Ramble regulars
that played on Dirt Farmer and subsequently hit the road: Helm
behind the drum kit, Ollabelle’s Byron Isaacs on bass, Brian
Mitchell on keyboards, Campbell on various guitars, fiddle,
mandolin, dulcimer and harmony vocals. Backing vocalists Amy Helm of
Ollabelle, Levon’s daughter, and Teresa Williams, Campbell’s wife,
deepen the album’s “next of kin” vibe. The horn section of the Levon
Helm Band appears on four tracks. Two of the tracks were arranged by
the legendary Allen Toussaint with the LHB horns and the other two
tracks by trumpet-playing band member Steven Bernstein. Best known
for his work with Marianne Faithfull, Lou Reed and Rufus Wainwright,
Bernstein is also leader of New York avant-jazz band Sex Mob. So
this is a diverse group of skilled musicians united by their feel
for and devotion to Helm’s singular vision.
Electric Dirt again finds Levon steeped in tradition in his
connection to the land and those who live by it, but this record
goes deeper and wider, incorporating gospel, blues and soul elements
in a bracing collection of originals and carefully chosen outside
songs.
“We knew we couldn’t just remake Dirt Farmer; it had to be something
different,” Campbell explains. “Because as great as that record was,
as convincing as Levon was and as pure as his impulse was to make
it, that’s just one aspect of what he’s about. I knew that we had to
keep that vibe but build on it—get more expansive. We wanted to get
closer to what we do in the live shows, but not depart too far from
that organic thing. Given all that, it was difficult coming up with
an actual concept, but as the tunes were collected, it started to
present itself. We wanted to get a few tracks with the horns on
them, but we didn’t want to hit everybody over the head with that
aspect, so it took a lot of thought to come up with tunes and
arrangements that wouldn’t alienate the audience that embraced Dirt
Farmer. Which meant keeping away from overproduced, slick sounds—not
that Levon could ever get close to that—but the idea was to keep it
honest.”
A pair of Muddy Waters tunes, “Stuff You Gotta Watch” and “You Can’t
Lose What You Ain’t Never Had,” was actually cut during the Dirt
Farmer sessions, although they perfectly fit the vibe of Electric
Dirt. “Initially, there was some discussion about doing a
straight-ahead blues record, but that ain’t right because that’s
changing what the last record was, not expanding on it. There is a
blues feel to some of the performances, and the blues is a part of
what Levon is as well. But the objective was to just present more of
his depth as an artist.”
Electric Dirt’s numerous high points start right at the top, with a
rousing rendition of the Grateful Dead’s “Tennessee Jed.” Campbell
and Williams spent a good part of 2008 on the road with Dead bassist
Phil Lesh, including some shows on which Helm and Lesh appeared
together. “There was some real comradeship going on,” Campbell
points out, “so we thought, wouldn’t it be great if we could find a
Grateful Dead tune that Levon could do? ‘Tennessee Jed’ was always
one of my favorite Dead songs, and I thought Levon could actually be
Tennessee Jed. And it fit like a glove.”
Following a fervent take on the Staples Singers’ “Move Along Train,”
which finds Levon breaking out his gospel roots, comes Helm and
Campbell’s “Growing Trade,” which takes an empathetic look at the
plight of a Southern small-farm owner. “My wife is from west
Tennessee,” says Campbell, “and there are cotton farmers down there
about to lose their places. Most of them are just church-going
farmers with deep, moral convictions, but they’ve realized that the
most important thing for them is to save the land which has been in
their families for generations. And Levon has a deep understanding
of what all that means, so he brought a wonderful perspective to the
song and performance.”
The ancient-sounding mountain ballad “Golden Bird,” on which
Campbell’s mournful fiddling
deepens the melancholy of Helm’s vocal,
was actually written by seminal Woodstock folk artist Happy Traum.
Along with Carter Stanley’s “White Dove,” the song forms a bridge
between the rustic intimacy of Dirt Farmer and the amped-up urgency
of Electric Dirt. “Heaven’s Pearls,” penned by Byron Isaacs for
Ollabelle, originally appeared on the group’s Campbell-produced 2006
album Riverside Battle Songs. “Amy had the idea that it would be a
really good duet with Levon,” says Campbell. “So we started messin’
with that, and sure enough, it worked great.”
“I Wish I Knew How It Feels to Be Free,” whom Helm had been itching
to tackle since hearing Nina Simone’s 1967 version, is at once
rousing and deeply poignant in his horn-fueled interpretation. It
ends the album on a fittingly life-embracing note.
Levon, says Campbell, “is in great spirits as he gets more and more
comfortable with his resurgence. And the next one will be even
bigger.” He’s laughing, but that doesn’t mean he or his legendary
collaborator would settle for anything less. Campbell is speaking
for himself and everyone involved when he adds, “This is very much a
labor of love.”