|
Jimmie Dale Gilmore
Something to say
There are singers, and there are people with beautiful voices.
The two are by no means mutually exclusive, but neither do they
always coexist. Of course, there are also plenty of successful
so-called singers who aren't and who don't
have golden throats to boot, but don't get me started on that.
Jimmie Dale Gilmore is a singer which is not to say that
he has an unpleasant voice. (You can hear more than a little echo
of Roy Orbison in his singing; and there was a singer with some
pipes!) It is the voice of a man who has something to say and a
convincing, authentic way of saying it.
Gilmore's sound hearkens back to early country to his
namesake, Jimmie Rodgers, and to the Carter Family, Ernest Tubb,
and Hank Williams. You can hear that in his music plus
honky-tonk, white gospel, Texas swing, the south-of-the-border
influence, Cajun, even Chicago blues. Gilmore grew up in that
generations-old melded tradition. His father the one who
named him after Jimmie Rodgers was a fine amateur guitar
player who loved country music but whose radio played all those
related channels. Gilmore has for nearly four decades continued
to polish and burnish that musical heritage. As he sings, "I
don't know where I'm going, but I know where I've
been," and "When a treasure's yours, no need to steal
one."
Which may be why, the first time you hear a Jimmie Dale Gilmore
song, you feel as if you've heard it before even as
you're surprised by a turn of phrase or a melody that you know
you haven't. He can wring more out of a three-chord, three-minute
song than you thought was still possible. No formulaic, mini-soap
operas here, though Gilmore writes adult love songs:
"Whatever I give up, love, it won't be you";
"You've forgotten that life's a treasure, not a
trial." He also sings of, and from, a deep love of life and
humanity: "Love, I am alone and I am not afraid to walk this
world with anyone, and never walk it crying, to live my life with
all the world and never live it lying." As Debbie Elliott said
about him on NPR's All Things Considered, "This is country
when it was less glitz and more guts."
Gilmore was a founding member of the Flatlanders, one of the
great country cult bands of all time, but for the last couple of
decades he's had a solo career. His recordings always feature
great musicians and just-right arrangements and production. When
he comes to the Ark on Monday, October 13 (see Nightspots), though,
Gilmore will be accompanied by only one sideman. It will be a
chance to hear mostly his compelling voice, singing his songs just
the way he first wrote them.
Sandor Slomovits
[Review published October 2008]
|