eMusic Review
Unlikely ingredients for a country song: trombone, tuba, clarinet and a lyric inspired by a 19th century English poet about an 18th century Venezian composer. However, the lead track of Kris Delmhorst's fourth studio album contains all of the above and more; the song, "Galuppi Baldessare," borrows from Robert Browning's "A Toccata of Galuppi's," and it's a joyous confection. Every track on Strange Conversation, by the New England-based Delmhorst, adapts the works of a poet — Byron, Whitman, Eliot and Cummings among them — and gives the words life with soaring tunes and a limpid, crystalline voice. Instead of collapsing beneath the weight of its own ambition, it rises, brilliantly. An eccentric masterpiece.