Pop music is usually fairly predictable when it comes to lyrical content. The majority of what you're going to hear on the radio will more than likely deal with the stages of a romantic relationship, from the first blush of love to the heartbreak of it falling apart. Occasionally a writer will seek his or her inspiration in world affairs or perhaps an aspect of the human condition other than love; but even in those circumstances there is an accepted formula which most follow.
T Bone Burnett has never been one to follow the herd in anything that he has done. Whether he's producing a Robert Plant and Allison Krauss collaboration, acting as musical advisor to movies like O Brother, Where Art Thou? and Cold Mountain, or recording his own music, he's always marched to the beat of his own drum. Two years ago he released his first release in more then a decade, and The True False Identity was a collection of the exceptional lyrics and musical experimentation people had come to expect from the man who penned songs like "Hefner and Disney" back in the eighties.
Tooth Of Crime, on Nonesuch Records is not just an example of Burnett going places that other popular musicians would fear to tread, it's also an indication of just how much he invests of himself into a project. Burnett first started work on the material included in this disc back in 1996 as part of a collaboration with noted American playwright - and sometime actor - Sam Shepard.

Shepard first wrote the play Tooth Of Crime back in 1972, and in 1996 he re-staged it with material that Burnett wrote for the actors to sing as part of the performance. The CD that's scheduled for release on May 13, isn't a cast album from the play though. Instead Burnett has taken the framework that the play offered and used it as the context for the songs included on this recording. Some of the songs are from that 1996 performance, while others are ones that Burnett started work on back then, but only now has had the time to complete to his satisfaction.








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