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Bear Creek [2LP/1CD]
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Bear Creek [2LP/1CD] in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $6.99
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Size: CD
Named in honor of the converted turn-of-the-century Washington barn where it was recorded,
Brandi Carlile
's fourth studio outing, the rough and tumble, sweet and soulful
Bear Creek
, is as fiery as it is bucolic.
Carlile
's wonderfully expressive voice is as tailor-made for country as it is for roots rock, and the 13 cuts on
lean heavily on the former, striking a nice balance between the nuanced twang of
Alison Krauss
and the bluesy cockiness of
Bonnie Raitt
, especially on the spirited, boot-stomping opener "Hard Way Home," the sweet and steady "Keep Your Heart Young," and the gospel-kissed howler "Raise Hell." The notion of diminishing youth (
turned 30 during the making of the album) plays a pivotal role on
, and contributes to some of its finest moments. Both "A Promise to Keep," with its soft cadence, deft fingerpicking, and stoic refrain of "The hill I'm walking up is getting good and steep," and the lush and languid closer "Just Kids" manage to bask in the sepia glow of nostalgia without disappearing into the past, which is an attribute that
, with her old-school melodic sense and genuine flair for
Roy Orbison
/
Patsy Cline
melodrama, displayed with 2007's blistering future American Idol standard "The Story." Four albums in,
has honed her distinctly retro brand of Northwest Americana down to science, and
feels both easy and immediate, which is usually what happens when talented artists finally figure out who they are, and that heartache, failure, defiance, and confidence can all go to the dance together. ~ James Christopher Monger
Brandi Carlile
's fourth studio outing, the rough and tumble, sweet and soulful
Bear Creek
, is as fiery as it is bucolic.
Carlile
's wonderfully expressive voice is as tailor-made for country as it is for roots rock, and the 13 cuts on
lean heavily on the former, striking a nice balance between the nuanced twang of
Alison Krauss
and the bluesy cockiness of
Bonnie Raitt
, especially on the spirited, boot-stomping opener "Hard Way Home," the sweet and steady "Keep Your Heart Young," and the gospel-kissed howler "Raise Hell." The notion of diminishing youth (
turned 30 during the making of the album) plays a pivotal role on
, and contributes to some of its finest moments. Both "A Promise to Keep," with its soft cadence, deft fingerpicking, and stoic refrain of "The hill I'm walking up is getting good and steep," and the lush and languid closer "Just Kids" manage to bask in the sepia glow of nostalgia without disappearing into the past, which is an attribute that
, with her old-school melodic sense and genuine flair for
Roy Orbison
/
Patsy Cline
melodrama, displayed with 2007's blistering future American Idol standard "The Story." Four albums in,
has honed her distinctly retro brand of Northwest Americana down to science, and
feels both easy and immediate, which is usually what happens when talented artists finally figure out who they are, and that heartache, failure, defiance, and confidence can all go to the dance together. ~ James Christopher Monger