Music Review: Cowboy Junkies - Long Journey Home (DVD+CD)

Author: El BichoPublished: Dec 24, 2006 at 2:21 am 1 comment

“Cowboy Junkies” is one of the best names to convey a band’s sound. The words’ connotations signal a wide musical palette for the band to draw from as they frame the torch song tales delivered by Margo Timmins who continues to make despair sound so good. This artistic expanse keeps listeners engaged, as they never know what is coming next.

This DVD+CD combo finds Cowboy Junkies at the end of their 2004 One Soul Now tour at the Liverpool Philharmonic Hall in England, three years after their last appearance in the UK. They are a sextet that have been all been working together since their major label debut, 1988’s The Trinity Session. Joining Margo are Alan Anton on bass; Jaro Czerwinec on accordion; utility player Jeff Bird, who played mandolin, harmonica, and percussion; and her brothers, Peter on drums, and Mike, lead guitarist and songwriter of the band’s original songs. Playing together for so long has obviously given them an air of confidence as they play on a bare stage; it’s just them, their music, and colored lights.

The set opens by going back to their beginnings with their cover of The Velvet Underground’s “Sweet Jane.” The song is expanded by Mike’s brilliant playing. He’s a slow, steady hand that knows exactly what he’s doing and does it like very few, reminiscent of David Gilmour in style, though not in sound. Sitting in his chair, he delivers a smoldering fury that, combined with the accordion accompaniment, could very well have transported the listener elsewhere were it not for the song’s familiar steady beat kept by the rhythm section.

The sounds and moods are constantly shifting. “Sun Comes Up It’s Tuesday Morning” is a short, easygoing country tune describing the brief moments of strength during a break-up before the remembrance of heartbreak sets back in. It is followed by Robert Johnson’s "32-20 Blues,” a grim, angry tale about dealing with lovers when they doesn't come home. Mike soars to magnificent heights once again with the aid of a metal slide on this 13-minute epic. The accordion and mandolin on “’Cause Cheap Is How I Feel” create a smooth country/folk sound. Mike drops a great fuzzed-out guitar solo in the middle of it.

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Article Author: El Bicho

El Bicho writes for a number of movie web sites, including Cinema Sentries, which he runs for the geniuses of Forwerd Media. He also occasionally cleans up around here. Follow at twitter.com/ElBicho_CS

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