Speed of the Whippoorwill

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (78 ratings)
Speed of the Whippoorwill album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 43:06

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

A disappointing follow up...

veralee

I don't think this is nearly as solid as their 2005 release, Route 23. It's not bad, but it is a disappointment after that album.

user avatar

i told the whippoorwill all about you...

Kidds

Anyone who listens to Doc Watson will immediately recognize his influence on CCL. Listen a bit closer and you'll hear John Hartford's ghost. But just as John Hartford forged new paths through the staid bluegrass landscape in his time, CCL takes their influences and creates a beautiful new bluegrass tradition. Their instruments blend seamlessly and then rise and fall in swooping solos. But, best of all, the four band members cluster round a single microphone and rely upon their own natural abilities (and not a mixing board) to create their soaring and yet perfectly harmonized vocals. Download it now.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

On their third album in four years, Chatham County Line enlisted producer Brian Paulson to help them bring their raw & ready vision to digital. Featuring ten new Dave Wilson originals, a co-write between him and mandonlinist John Teer, a Teer original, and one by banjoist Chandler Holt, along with a cover of Don Robertson, the formula isn’t all that different — most of this is contemporary bluegrass that could have been recorded in the heyday of the Stanley Brothers or Bill Monroe’s Bluegrass Boys. Speed of the Whippoorwill is more sophisticated, however, mostly in the lyrics of Wilson, who employs humor along with heartbreak in his songs. There is a more Mark Twain-like view of the world, even if it is obvious in places. Check the lyrics to “By the Riverside”: “Skipped out of work, just to ease my thoughts/Went down to the riverside, just to get lost/Got some fishing line and a hickory limb/Sat there thinking about Huck & Jim.” The bluegrass stomp is plentiful here and it always works: “Company Blues,” “Rock Pile,” the breakdown “Savoy Special,” and “Coming Home.” Less successful are the ballads, such as the Louvin Brothers-inspired “They Were Just Children” and “Waiting Paradise.” They’re too long, even as story-songs, and they are wordy and overly redundant of their forbears. However, the swinging bluegrass of “Day I Die” is tight, melodic, full of killer harmonies, and punchy as all get out. “Confederate Soldier” is a straight-up country tune with Greg Reading playing pedal steel, and lyrically it works, but again, it takes too long for the story to reveal itself. For those who enjoyed the first pair of Chatham County Line records, this one will not come as a surprise, but will appear more adventurous. For those just coming to the band, either the band’s self-titled debut or Route 23 would be better places to begin. – Thom Jurek

more »