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(Rounder
Records - 2006)
Irma
Thomas - vocal
FEATURING:
Dirk Powell -
electric guitar (1,7,8) fiddle (2,10), fretless banjo (4,11), acoustic
guitar (4,10)
Sonny Landreth - slide guitar (1,2,7,12)
David Torkanowsky - electric piano (1,4,8,10), Hammond
B3 organ (2,5,6,8,12), piano (5,6,9,13)
James Singleton - acoustic bass (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,12),
arco and pizzicato acoustic bass (7)
Stanton Moore - drums (1,2,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12),
percussion (5,8,9,10,11)
Juanita Brooks, Marc Broussard and Charles
"Chucky C" Elam, III - backing
vocals (2,3,6,8)
David Egan - piano (6,12)
Corey Harris - electric guitar (10), acoustic guitar (11)
Scott
Billingtone - tambourine (3)
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| 1. |
IN
THE MIDDLE OF IT ALL |
|
4:46 |
| 2. |
FLOWERS |
|
4:22 |
| 3. |
I
COUNT THE TEARS |
 |
3:02 |
| 4. |
MAKE
ME A PALLET ON YOUR FLOOR |
 |
4:28 |
| 5. |
I
WISH I KNEW HOW IT WOULD FEEL TO BE FREE |
 |
3:02 |
| 6. |
IF
YOU KNEW HOW MUCH |
 |
2:27 |
| 7. |
ANOTHER
MAN DONE GONE |
 |
3:49 |
| 8. |
TILL
I CAN'T TAKE IT ANYMORE |
 |
3:28 |
| 9. |
THESE
HONEY DOS |
|
4:27 |
| 10. |
ANOTHER
LONELY HEART |
 |
4:21 |
| 11. |
SOUL
OF A MAN |
 |
3:01 |
| 12. |
STONE
SURVIVOR |
 |
3:47 |
| 12. |
SHELTER
IN THE RAIN |
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4:14 |
Recorded
by David Farrell and Steve Reynolds at Dockside Studio, Maurice,
Louisiana, December 2005-February 2006.
Edited by Steve Reynolds at Dockside.
"Shelter in the Rain" recorded by Steve Reynolds at Storyville
Studio, New Orleans.
Mixed by Paul Q. Kolderie and Adam Taylor at Camp Street Studio,
Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Mastered by Adam Ayan at Gateway Mastering, Portland, Maine.
Photography by Rick Olivier.
Design by Sarah Lainie Smith
Produced by Scott Billington |
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Following Hurricane Katrina, Fox News
began circulating the story that Irma Thomas, along with other New
Orleans music notables such as Fats Domino, had gone missing in the
ensuing flood. The story spread through the media, and the phones
at Rounder Records began to ring as concerned fans, friends and musical
associates called to ask about her safety. As it turned out, the
news report was false. She'd been gigging in Austin, Texas, and hadn't
even been in New Orleans when the storm hit. What was clear was that
the press was acknowledging Thomas as a treasured cultural icon who
embodies the very soul of New Orleans.
Thomas told the Boston Herald, "Well, I guess people thought I was
dead. When I became somebody who was no longer around, I became somebody
worth looking at." With her home, her nightclub and her other properties
flooded and the mementos, photos and awards from her 40-year career
lost, Irma still managed to find more than a few bright spots in
her post-Katrina life. She and her husband, Emile Jackson, found
a temporary home in Gonzales, Louisiana, near Baton Rouge. Since
Katrina, she's appeared at September's Big Easy Benefit Concert at
Madison Square Garden, on Jools Holland's BBC New Year's Eve telecast,
at Switzerland's prestigious Davos Festival, on the Today show and
on the recent Grammy awards.
Now, Thomas has returned to the studio for her first new album in
six years, completed just a few days before her 65th birthday. With
After the Rain, Thomas and producer Scott Billington celebrate
their 20th anniversary of collaboration with an adventurous project
that will both surprise and delight Thomas' fans. Said Billington, "Irma
has one of the richest and most beautiful voices in contemporary
music. It seemed confining at this stage of her career to make a
straight R&B record, so we broke the mold." The result is a recording
that frames Thomas' vocals with spare arrangements and many acoustic
instruments, and with a repertoire that spans 75 years of great American
songwriting.
Logistics for making the album were complicated by Katrina, which
destroyed Ultrasonic Studio in New Orleans. The sessions finally
came together at Dockside Studio in rural Maurice, Louisiana, with
Ultrasonic engineers David Farrell and Steve Reynolds at the recording
console. Billington assembled a dream team of Louisiana musicians,
including keyboardists David Torkanowsky and David Egan; guitarists
Corey Harris and Sonny Landreth; fiddler/fretless banjo player/guitarist
Dirk Powell; acoustic bassist James Singleton; drummer Stanton Moore;
and vocalists Juanita Brooks, Marc Broussard and Charles "Chucky
C" Elam.
The album opens with a deeply soulful version of Arthur Alexander's "In
the Middle of It All," before breaking into the fiddle-driven funk
of the minor key "Flowers," from Nashville writers Kevin Gordon and
Gwil Owen. The David Egan-penned ballad, "If You Know How Much," may
have inspired Thomas' most powerful and emotional vocal performance
on record in many years. Other highlights are a version of the traditional "Another
Man Done Gone," with new lyrics from Thomas and Billington that explore
the plight of those not able to return home, and the country song "Another
Lonely Heart," by Los Angeles songwriter Eleni Mandell.
Perhaps what is most impressive about this recording is that Irma
Thomas is now at the very peak of her powers, delivering every song
with resonating feeling, honesty and that amazing voice, 46 years
after her first recording. We don't need a hurricane, thank you,
to remind us that this is one cultural icon who is sounding better
than ever. |
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