|
To watch Patty Loveless' new video "Keep Your Distance," please Click Here
Top Country Singer Patty Loveless
Mixes Musical Styles On New CD Dreamin' My Dreams
By Jeff Crossan
You’d never know it to listen to her sing today, but Patty
Loveless hasn’t always been a confident vocalist.
 |
| Patty Loveless |
That may be difficult to believe for anyone familiar with
the stunning vocals that have graced her recordings for nearly two decades.
Nobody sounds more at home with a country song than Loveless, who critics have
consistently praised as one of the most gifted and authentic performers the
genre has ever known. Female Vocalist of the Year awards from both the Country
Music Association and the Academy of Country Music further underscore her
appeal and her skill.
But while her talent was evident by the time she was four
years old, so was a shyness and insecurity that made her a reluctant performer.
“My mother would have Sunday dinner with my aunts and uncles
and cousins and they would be my little audience,” Loveless recalls. “Mother
would get me to sing for them. But what
I would do was run out of the living room into the kitchen and sing as loud as
I could, so I wouldn’t have to sing in front of them.”
Some reticence remains to this day, Loveless admits. “There
are times when I’m still very reserved, and until I get to know someone I can
be very shy. That’s just the way I am.”
That shyness may be an ingrained part of her personality,
but insecurity is nowhere to be found on Loveless’ new CD, Dreamin' My
Dreams on Epic Records.
Yes, there’s vulnerability, but it’s an endearing quality
born of the kind of honest interpretation that effectively communicates a song
like Thom Schuyler’s “On the Verge Of Tears.” And there’s certainly tenderness
and world-weary resignation as heard on tunes like “Old Soul,” by Lee Roy
Parnell and Tony Arata and “My Old Friend The Blues,” a Steve Earle song.
But there’s also a strong resolve in evidence on the
up-tempo first track “Keep Your Distance,” a Richard Thompson song and a bold
and sexy giddiness driving the bluesy rocker “Same Kind Of Crazy,” written by
Delbert McClinton and Gary Nicholson.
 |
| The CD cover of Patty Loveless' new album Dreamin' My Dreams. |
No, there’s nothing tentative about the vocals on this,
Loveless’ 13th album. It’s the work of an artist obviously confident
of her abilities and intimately familiar with the content of the material she
chooses. It’s a self-assurance that has come with time.
Dreamin' My Dreams, co-produced by Emory Gordy, Jr.
and Justin Niebank, is Loveless’ first CD release in two years and she credits
the time between projects for her growing confidence as a singer. Country
artists weren’t always afforded such a lengthy break between projects, points
out Loveless, who admits that when she listens to her early recordings she’d
“love to go in and do them all over again.”
“In the ‘80s I was recording at a time when it seemed like
we were putting out records every eight or nine months, “ she says. “I didn’t
really get enough time to live with the songs. I believe if you didn’t write a
song you have to live with it to let it become your own. The more comfortable I
get with the songs I choose, the more confidence I get and I feel like the
better singer I become.”
One method Loveless employs, both to familiarize herself
with the songs she records and to allow her to put her own stamp on them,
begins long before she enters the studio. This pre-production work involves
stripping down the song, which is often presented to her as an elaborately
produced demo, to its bare basics. The fact that her producer Emory Gordy, Jr.
is also her husband is extremely helpful, she says, when it comes to
pre-production experimentation.
“It’s a great advantage being married to Emory,” she says.
“Emory and I do pre-production with vocals and guitar. Even if full demos are
sent to us we still do home demos just to get a feel, because when we take a
song (in the studio) we want the session players to be able to create from our
home demos rather than try to redo the demo that was sent to us. It helps me
know which way I’m going to go with the song.”
 |
| Patty Loveless |
Loveless’ confidence and self-reliance has also grown in the
area of song selection. While some
artists depend upon their record company’s A&R staff to help find their
material, Loveless praises label chief John Grady and the brass at Epic
Records/Nashville for giving her free rein in choosing what she wants to
record. When looking for new material she follows the advice given to her years
ago by another singer.
“I used to go through the whole process of trying to figure
out what the public wanted to hear,” says Loveless. “Finally, Naomi Judd said
to me, ‘Honey, just go with your own heart. Just go with what you feel.’ Well,
I knew she’d been around so I thought, ‘Okay,’ and when I did that – just let
myself go and follow my heart and listen to what it was saying, then I was able
to made some decisions about which way I wanted to go with my music.”
Loveless followed her heart down memory lane when she chose
to record the title cut of her new CD. Originally a hit for Waylon Jennings in
1975, the Allen Reynolds song “Dreaming My Dreams With You” has an appeal that
crosses generational boundaries, Loveless believes. Still, the idea to cut the
country classic didn’t occur to Loveless first.
“Emory brought it to my attention, “ she says. “It was
always a favorite of mine but I’d never thought of recording it. He played me
Waylon’s version and I said, ‘Goodness gracious, yes, I love that song.’ To me,
it has timeless lyrics. Even if you’re of the now generation, when you hear a
song like ‘Dreaming My Dreams With You,’ you go, ‘Man, where did this song come
from?’ It sounds new.”
In fact, several of the 14 songs on the CD are not new
tunes, including Loveless’ version of the Delaney Bramlett song from the 70s,
“Never Ending Song Of Love” and “When They Ring Those Golden Bells,” an old
gospel standard which is included as one of two unadorned hidden tracks.
Loveless describes the project as a “blend of styles including rockabilly,
raucous rock ‘n’ roll, edgy country, bluegrass and blues.” It’s a diverse mix
of musical styles, to be sure, but it was blended with dual intent. Loveless’
first desire was to duplicate on CD the dynamic scope of her live shows which
range from a full-blown, electrified portion, as heard on “Keep Your Distance,”
to a more scaled-down acoustic segment, illustrated by the lively bluegrass
tune, “Big Chance,” which Loveless and Gordy wrote.
“The whole concept of this record, “ Loveless explains, “is
to give you a feel from the very first song, “Keep Your Distance, “ to the last
“When I Reach The Place I’m Going” that you’ve attended a Patty Loveless
concert.”
Loveless’ other aim, with the hidden tracks in particular,
was to provide listeners with some insight into her creative process.
“I wanted to give people an idea of how it all starts from a
song – just me picking up a guitar in a dressing room and messing around and
singing or just sitting around with somebody after the show and singing a song
together. The hidden track, ‘I’ve Got Something In Mind,’ has that kind of
feel. That’s the way it came to me after a show one night. I went backstage
because I was still pumped up and the melody started to come to me so I brought
it home to Emory. That’s the way it all starts – just the guitar and a voice.”
And when that voice belongs to Patty Loveless, the end is
impressive, indeed.
Hit songwriter Jeff Crossan is a recipient of the BMI Million Air Award for one million broadcast performances of a single song. Crossan, who is based in Nashville, is also a freelance journalist and cartoonist. He can be contacted at: crossanworld@bellsouth.net
Special Feature: Streaming Video
You can watch the video of Patty Loveless' new single "Keep Your Distance" by clicking one of the links directly below:
Return to Table Of Contents
Return to Top Of Page
|