There are very few bands that manage to genuinely bridge the gap between country and rock/pop music. Too many of them end up forgetting that all they have to do is remember where rock and roll came from in the first place and they'll be able to get the right feel and sound. Instead what you get is bands playing rock music but throwing a pedal steel guitar in for effect, or country bands throwing in an occasional burning guitar solo.
In each case the effect is more jarring than pleasing to the ear. Of the bands and individual artists that have attempted to mix the two genres the only three that I know of from the past thirty to forty years (that doesn't mean there aren't others) with any degree of success were "The Byrds", "The Grateful Dead", and "Graham Parsons and the Grievous Angels". Since then while bands like the "Flying Burrito Brothers" may have attempted such experiments its been left to a bunch of city boys from Toronto Ontario to pick up that torch.
"Blue Rodeo", unlike a number of their contemporaries, seems to have found the perfect balance of sensibilities to create a fusion of the two genres. Their songs have a timeless feel that doesn't tie them to one era, allowing one to believe they could have been recorded anywhere from the fifties in the Sun Record studios with Elvis just down the hall, or in a more contemporary setting with any number of current rock bands.
Their current album, Are You Ready is a perfect example of what I'm talking about. No matter what the tempo or topic the songs, with one note worthy exception, bring the best of both worlds together. Country's heart felt emotions are rid of cheap sentimentality by a world-weary rock attitude.
Where most bands stumble when attempting this merger, "Blue Rodeo" excels: the actual crafting of the songs. On Are You Ready the predominant theme is of love lost and relationships ending. Pretty standard heartbreak country stuff you might think, that doesn’t have a hope in hell of sounding palatable. But in the hands of the song writing team of Greg Keelor and Jim Cuddy the material transcends cliché and becomes something real.
"Thank you December for your cold grey air/lakes are frozen, trees are bare./I once loved her of that I am proud/just no room for me up on that cloud" Blue Rodeo "Up On That Cloud", Are You Ready 2005
Lines like that used to describe the vulnerability of an unrequited love, when you know you have no hope in hell of ever having it reciprocated, are the perfect antidote to the usual she don't know I exist moaning that passes for emotion. I don't normally associate song lyrics with poetry; most lyricists are too intent on reproducing a formula, but the imagery utilized by Keelor and Cuddy is equal to that of any poets.







Article comments
1 - Temple A. Stark
This post was chosen by the section editor as a BC pick of the week. Go HERE (link) to find out why.
And thank you
- Temple
2 - jayson
Richard,
I really like Blue Rodeo (have for sometime now), but I would quibble with the idea that too many bands don't attain a country sound because they simply add a pedal steel. A lot of great bands/artists out there are simply experimenting with pedal steel and twang, and there's no one "authentic" country sound anyway (never has been). Why shouldn't they be able to do that. I think they produce some new and sometimes quite beautiful sounds that way. And what's the matter with songs about pickup trucks. The country out of which rocknroll grew did not have a lot of lyrics like Blue Rodeo's (that you cite here). But these are minor points. I am glad that you're publicizing a group that certainly deserves it.