Dave Alvin and The Guilty Women

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (122 ratings)
Dave Alvin and The Guilty Women album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 52:06

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2009 Top of the Line

BLUESRx

This album grabbed me on the first listen. The Guilty Women, an excellent addition to Dave's great voice. Hopefully there will be other recordings from this combination of musicians. Fantastic!

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Guilty as charged

Average-Nights-Jack

Yup, guilty of making a damn fine record. This is an excellent album from a long time Californian legend who moves between genres like any genuine music lover should. Not a bad track on the album with the girls all contributing muscially and vocally to add tone & deapth to some excellent songs. One of my favourite releases of 2009. Thanks eMusic.

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Definitely a Keeper

Bungelow_Ed

If you like Dave Alvin this album will not disappoint. While not in the league of Out of California, Blackjack Dave or Public Domain the songs are well composed and executed. I expect Dave and the Guilty Women to grow on me with every playing.

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Best since King of California

JDEW

This is his best work since King of Calfornia and Blackjack Dave

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They Say All Music Guide

Life put Dave Alvin though some pretty serious changes in 2008 when his close friend, bandmate, and frequent collaborator Chris Gaffney succumbed to liver cancer in the spring. Alvin responded by making a change of his own — for a show at San Francisco’s Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in the fall of 2008, Alvin wanted to try something new and asked Cindy Cashdollar, a gifted slide guitarist and good friend, to put together an acoustic band to back him for the show. Cashdollar assembled a killer all-female quintet, and Alvin was jazzed enough with the results to promptly take the band into the studio. A big part of the energy of Dave Alvin and the Guilty Women comes from the musicians, and while some might think Alvin might be aiming for novelty factor by recording with five women, one listen will wipe those thoughts from your mind. Cashdollar and guitarist Nina Gerber are superb pickers who lead this band with style and a tight focus, Laurie Lewis brings a lovely high lonesome feel and honky tonk bounce to these tunes with her fiddle and mandolin, and bassist Sarah Brown and percussionist Lisa Pankratz are a great, firmly supportive rhythm section. As for Alvin, this album finds him in a contemplative mood; many of the songs clearly hearken back to his past, such as “Boss of the Blues” (which recounts some of his adventures with Big Joe Turner), “Nana and Jimi” (in which Dave’s mom drops her 12-year-old son off at a Jimi Hendrix concert) and “Downey Girl” (a meditation on fellow hometown girl Karen Carpenter). Alvin’s voice is a surprisingly soft, measured croon compared to much of his earlier work, but there’s a passion and emotional force in his performance that brings a world of experience and sorrow to these songs. Alvin is also generous enough to share lead vocals with Amy Farris and Christy McWilson on several tunes, and they bring their own distinct gifts to the album without disturbing its mood. And while the closing cover of “Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)” may seem like some sort of joke, the boogie-woogie rhythm the band lays in behind the song gives it a welcome jolt and Alvin, Farris, and McWilson find something almost Zen like in the song’s contemplation of the cycle of life. Dave Alvin and the Guilty Women is an album that often comes out of pain, but it also speaks of joy, perseverance, and the acceptance of the mysteries of life, and Dave’s collaborators make this little miracle come to life as much as he does. It’s something they can all point to with pride. – Mark Deming

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