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Here's
what the critics are saying about Souls' Chapel ..............
"…the bluesiest gospel album you may
ever hear, a righteous collection of testifying six-string twang and quartet
vocals that fir together like pieces of a tailored suit." (Brian
Mansfield USA Today ****)
"To tout Souls' Chapel as the best gospel record this year gives
it short shrift, because Marty Stuart's latest work ranks with the best
2005 albums in any genre." (Steven White, Associated Press)
"This is one of , if not the, strongest outing
of Stuart's career, and it not only pays homage to gospel music's rich
and varied tradition, but adds to it." (Thom Jurek, All Music Guide)
"With feet on the ground and heads in the
sky, Stuart & crew will rock your souls." (Jim Musser)
"Souls' Chapel puts a fresh face on some best-loved
favorites and also sheds light on several new gospel songs. The project
is very impressive and I highly recommend it." (Ginny McCabe)
'Souls' Chapel', Marty Stuart’s first gospel
album, is also the first of a trilogy of diverse collections based in
the richness of Southern culture that Stuart will release on his new Superlatone
Records imprint with Universal South.
The music on 'Souls' Chapel' –
in stores August 30th - hews purely, passionately, and closely to what
Stuart terms Delta Gospel. "You know what this record sounds like
to me?" he asks. "It sounds like everything I heard on the radio
as a kid growing up in Mississippi.”
A string-player prodigy, the Philadelphia, Mississippi native's first
job found him on the road, playing mandolin with the Sullivan Family Singers,
who sang bluegrass gospel music. “I began appearing with them when
I was 12 years old,” Stuart says. ”We played Pentecostal churches,
camp meetings, bluegrass festivals and George Wallace campaign rallies
all throughout the South that summer. It was baptism by fire into a wonderfully
archaic brand of church-house rock and roll. I always felt the presence
of the truth inside that music.”
“Gospel music should represent the truth,” Stuart says. “The
truth is, the creative process of this record was stalled when I got arrested
and sent to jail for DUI, and it wasn’t the first time it had ever
happened to me. The press was all over it. I was so humiliated. I also
felt powerless not being able to live out the message of what I was singing
about here. In the midst of my personal failure, I lost sight of any faith
or hope.”
But then something awesome happened to Marty Stuart. "We were playing
a show in Chicago the day after I got out of jail. Mavis and Yvonne Staples
came to the concert that night. Without them knowing what had happened
at all, they brought and gave me Pops Staples' guitar. It was the greatest
confirmation I'd ever had to fight on. It was like being handed the Excalibur
sword. It was like being knighted with an instrument of light.”
"And," says Marty Stuart, "it gave me the inspiration
to go on, get my life back on track, and make this record."
'Souls' Chapel' was recorded outside Nashville, in Hendersonville, Tennessee,
at Stuart’s home. The sessions employ his band the Fabulous Superlatives
-- drummer Harry Stinson, bassist Brian Glenn, and guitarist Kenny Vaughan
-- augmented by a handful of other musicians, such as the drummer Chad
Cromwell and the great Muscle Shoals-sired keyboardist-producer Barry
Beckett. Stinson, Glenn and Vaughan also contribute background and lead
vocals instead of their usual instrumental work. And on the climactic
song "Move Along Train," Mavis Staples of the legendary Staples
Singers shows up and sings with Stuart. "I called Mavis," Stuart
says, "and I said, 'Mavis, gotta have you on this one.'"
It was not just any call. As they played their customary live dates across
the country, Stuart and his band had taken to singing gospel songs on
their bus. Inescapably this meant, for Stuart, the brilliantly conceived
and executed work of the Staple Singers, with whom Stuart had recorded
a searing version of The Band's "The Weight" for the 1994 collection
'Rhythm, Country & Blues.'
"Pops Staples was always one of my closest friends," Stuart
says. "To me, he was as much a force of light as Robert Johnson was
a force of darkness. So Pops and I were real close; the Staples are like
my family."
The eleven songs that comprise 'Souls' Chapel' are both old and new.
The collection opens with "Somebody Saved Me," a Pops Staples
composition that indicates at once how Stuart -- singing in a naturally
strong voice that conveys both authority and intimacy -- and the harmonizing
of his band will approach this material. And that involves, basically,
the Staples' masterful idea of bringing off the most emotionally expansive
music not with swelling choirs or organs, but the frequently funky allure
of minimal front-porch instrumentation.
Going onward, on songs such as the more quickly-gaited obscure, Albert
E. Brumley gem "Lord, Give Me Just a Little More Time" and the
bluesy "Way Down," a Stuart-Stinson original, one hears the
sort of music where, as in classic Jamaican reggae, every drum shuffle,
every snaking guitar line, every empty space communicates deep universes
of feeling, all which amplify the effect of the singing.
"To me, the Staples Singers, what they sounded like, from the first
time I heard the way they sang 'Will the Circle Be Unbroken'," Stuart
says, "was that they were like ghosts standing in a cotton field,
quietly proclaiming, not shouting and screaming, without any kind of guilt
thing. To me, the word that sums up gospel music above all is 'inspirational'.
It should be inspirational music; it shouldn't condemn or threaten. It
should inspire and inform."
This is exactly what the music on 'Souls' Chapel' does, from the easeful
narrative flows of Stuart's "The Gospel Story of Noah's Ark"
to the intense soulful loveliness of 1975's "I Can't Even Walk (Without
You Holding my Hand)," and the double finale of Steve Cropper and
William Bell's "Slow Train" preceding "Move Along Train,"
the deliberate, fiery Stuart -- Mavis Staples duet written by her father.
"It's hard to beat standing in the middle of the Mississippi Delta,
singing out," Stuart says.
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