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Heart of Stone

by

Chris Knight

 
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Chris Knight flexes his '80s Mellencamp muscle

  • We Say...

    Kentucky songster Chris Knight's fifth album takes a few listens to get into — song tempos almost invariably feel sluggish, and the singing congested, like he's got sinus troubles. But the initial frustration is worth it. What first connects is the mid '80s Mellencamp muscle of tracks like "Hell Ain't Half Full" and "Another Dollar" and the overcast Link Wray guitar twang running through "Almost There." Then melodies start ringing a bell: remnants of Don Henley's "The End of the Innocence," Jim Croce's "One Less Set of Footsteps," Gordon Lightfoot's "Sundown," Johnny Cash's "Wanted Man." Eventually, finally, the writing starts kicking in. And it's both funny and poignant.

    In two songs Knight worries about becoming his dad; in two more, he worries about money. Opener "Home Sick Gipsy" turns out to be a tough Southern-rock road boogie (production from old Georgia Satellite Dan Baird can be a good thing); the waltz-unto-reel "Danville," which at first seems a sub-par rewrite of R.E.M.'s "Don't Go Back to Rockville," turns out to be about domestic violence. There are drug fixes in abandoned hotels, hard times in the cold mines, and lots of cars, on crooked roads and in junkyards. Chris used to run from the past, he tells us in the closing "Go On Home", but now he runs from the future. "Stupid's in the water these days," he says. Stop the world and let him off.

  • They Say...

    Heart of Stone adds to Chris Knight's already impressive collection of hardscrabble songs reflecting life in rural, small town America. In the dozen tunes here, the Kentucky native explores, with an unflinching honesty, the lives of troubled ordinary folks. There's the meth-maker in "Hell Ain't Half Full" who sees a world where there's no law, no love, and "God wasn't paying much attention at all", and the working man in "Another Dollar" who realizes that "I'll never make enough money to get me what I need." The title track spotlights a man who was abandoned by his dad and now worries that's he turning out like his father. Knight has a knack for populating his songs with small but telling details, like the winter coat in "Miles to Memphis," that a man thinks his estranged wife might need, or the guy in "Something to Keep Me Going" (another tale of lost love) who holds on to his ex-love's photograph while admitting "I don't know why I don't throw it away." Two of Knight's finest efforts here are "Danville" and "Crooked Road," a pair of rough-hewn story-songs that rival John Prine's best. The former is a harrowing tale about a woman escaping from her abusive husband -- whom she calls "the devil's little brother" -- but Knight also weaves in how the woman's hometown believes she's to blame (because "it's half filled with people with his last name") as well as her sadness over not being able to see her mother's grave. "Crooked Road," another subtly complex narrative, concerns a coal miner's hard life, where "things have turned out a little worse than they should." Besides talking about his difficult life, the song also delves beneath the coal miner's skin and gets into his soul. In fact, Knight delves more deeply here into his characters' psyches and concerns himself less with describing the bar fight body counts. "My Old Cars," for instance, uses memories of old cars to trigger thoughts of an old love. This disc also finds Knight turning up the guitars a little more and giving his songs a harder edge to go with his hard-edged lyrics. Part of this rockier approach might be due to the presence of ex-Georgia Satellite Dan Baird as producer and guitarist (he also produced two of Knight's earlier discs Pretty Good Guy and Jealous Kind). The opening track "Homesick Gypsy" is a rather standard "life on the road" number that's juiced up by some raucous roadhouse guitar work. Similarly, the electric guitars on "Hell Ain't Half Full" (one of the several co-writes here with top Nashville tunesmith and another returning Knight collaborator Gary Nicholson) provide the tune with added grit. After over a decade of troubadouring, Knight's body of work places right up there with the John Prines, Steve Earles, and James McMurtrys of the Americana singer/songwriter scene, even if he isn't as well known as these brethren. Heart of Stone, another excellent example of Knight's terrific talent, offers a vividly written gallery of characters struggling with the hardships and heartbreaks that life has dealt them.

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