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The Trinity Session

The Trinity Session in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $9.99
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Size: CD
Who says you can't make a great record in one day -- or night, as the case may be?
The Trinity Session
was recorded in one night using one microphone, a DAT recorder, and the wonderful acoustics of
the Holy Trinity
in Toronto. Interestingly, it's the album that broke
the Cowboy Junkies
in the United States for their version of
"Sweet Jane,"
which included the lost verse. It's far from the best cut here, though. There are other covers, such as
Margo Timmins
'
a cappella
read of the
traditional
"Mining for Gold,"
a heroin-slow version of
Hank Williams
' classic
"I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry,"
"Dreaming My Dreams With You"
(canonized by
Waylon Jennings
), and a radical take of the
Patsy Cline
classic
"Walkin' After Midnight"
that closes the disc. Those few who had heard the band's previous album,
Whites Off Earth Now!!
, were aware that, along with
Low
,
were the only band at the time capable of playing slower than
Neil Young
and
Crazy Horse
-- and without the ear-threatening volume. The
Timmins
family --
Margo
, guitarist and songwriter
Michael
, drummer
Peter
, and backing vocalist and guitarist
John
-- along with bassist
Alan Anton
and a few pals playing pedal steel, accordion, and harmonica, paced everything to crawl.
That said, it works in that every song has its own texture, slowly and deliberately unfolding from
blues
country
and drones. An example is the
song
"I Don't Get It,"
ushered in with a few drawling guitar lines, a spooky harmonica, and brushed drums.
doesn't have a large range and doesn't need it as she scratches each song's surface like an itch until it bleeds its truth. This is also true on
"Misguided Angel,"
another original where the verses become nearly a round alternating between her voice and
's snaky spare guitar lines to fill an almost unimaginable space. The
Williams
tune becomes a dirge in
the Cowboys
' hands. It's a funeral song, or an elegy for one who has dragged herself so far into the oblivion of isolation that there is no place left to go but home.
's guitar moves around the changes as bassist
Anton
plays them; he colors the space allowing for
to fill the melodic space spot-on, yet stretching each syllable out to the breaking point. For most, this was
' debut --
was re-released in the States a few years later -- and it established them firmly in the forefront of the "
alternative
" scene with radio and
MTV
. As an album, it's still remarkable at how timeless it sounds, and its beauty is -- in stark contrast to its presentation -- voluminous and rich, perhaps even eternal. ~ Thom Jurek
The Trinity Session
was recorded in one night using one microphone, a DAT recorder, and the wonderful acoustics of
the Holy Trinity
in Toronto. Interestingly, it's the album that broke
the Cowboy Junkies
in the United States for their version of
"Sweet Jane,"
which included the lost verse. It's far from the best cut here, though. There are other covers, such as
Margo Timmins
'
a cappella
read of the
traditional
"Mining for Gold,"
a heroin-slow version of
Hank Williams
' classic
"I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry,"
"Dreaming My Dreams With You"
(canonized by
Waylon Jennings
), and a radical take of the
Patsy Cline
classic
"Walkin' After Midnight"
that closes the disc. Those few who had heard the band's previous album,
Whites Off Earth Now!!
, were aware that, along with
Low
,
were the only band at the time capable of playing slower than
Neil Young
and
Crazy Horse
-- and without the ear-threatening volume. The
Timmins
family --
Margo
, guitarist and songwriter
Michael
, drummer
Peter
, and backing vocalist and guitarist
John
-- along with bassist
Alan Anton
and a few pals playing pedal steel, accordion, and harmonica, paced everything to crawl.
That said, it works in that every song has its own texture, slowly and deliberately unfolding from
blues
country
and drones. An example is the
song
"I Don't Get It,"
ushered in with a few drawling guitar lines, a spooky harmonica, and brushed drums.
doesn't have a large range and doesn't need it as she scratches each song's surface like an itch until it bleeds its truth. This is also true on
"Misguided Angel,"
another original where the verses become nearly a round alternating between her voice and
's snaky spare guitar lines to fill an almost unimaginable space. The
Williams
tune becomes a dirge in
the Cowboys
' hands. It's a funeral song, or an elegy for one who has dragged herself so far into the oblivion of isolation that there is no place left to go but home.
's guitar moves around the changes as bassist
Anton
plays them; he colors the space allowing for
to fill the melodic space spot-on, yet stretching each syllable out to the breaking point. For most, this was
' debut --
was re-released in the States a few years later -- and it established them firmly in the forefront of the "
alternative
" scene with radio and
MTV
. As an album, it's still remarkable at how timeless it sounds, and its beauty is -- in stark contrast to its presentation -- voluminous and rich, perhaps even eternal. ~ Thom Jurek