Ken D Webber
Sometimes it's country, sometimes it's jazzy and then sometimes it's just the lyrics that stab you right in the heart.
Favorite track: Careless.
Richard Shindell's new album, Careless, represents the culmination of years of work, preparation, and growth. Meticulously recorded over three years in Upstate New York and Buenos Aires, Argentina, Careless might be an anachronism: at a time when the very idea of the record-album is called into question—when technological developments and listening habits challenge its status as the natural vehicle of an artist's presentation of new material—Shindell offers us an ambitious, luxurious, full-length statement.
Accompanied by his co-producer Greg Anderson, engineer Scott Petito, and a group of A-list musicians, Shindell immersed himself in the studio, allowing the time and latitude to explore, experiment, take risks—to play—as each of these eleven songs was given form and substance.
“For this project, spending so much time in the studio allowed me to take a step back from the songs as I had originally conceived them. Things got tried. Hunches got followed. Entire arrangements were built up and torn down, taken back to zero, or almost. I’d hear a sound in my head, and look around the room for something that might make such a sound. Sometimes that meant picking up an instrument I don’t, strictly speaking, know how to play. It was pure happiness.”
While his signature acoustic guitar style is used to good effect here, Careless finds Shindell plugging in more.
"Returning to the electric guitar has transformed my relationship with all aspects of my career," he says. "The wider sonic and dynamic range of the electric has been a real inspiration, rejuvenating.”
Careless exhibits a wide thematic range as well, from terrestrial to celestial. It begins with seven songs whose feet are very much on the ground: the roots-of-rock’n’roll lope and twang of Stray Cow Blues; the epic mea culpa and pop catharsis of the title track; desire both human and insect in the “summer garden” of Infrared; the ruminant, dystopian, blues-grazing Deer on the Parkway; recovery and reconciliation between a father and daughter, in All Wide Open; a vintage instrument infused with the spirit of a prior owner in Your Guitar; and Abbie, wherein the disappearance of a beloved pet is explained. And from there to the view from above: the ether of Atlas Choking, heaven itself in Before You Go, and geosynchronous orbit in Satellites. With its only cover, The Dome, the album ends where it began: firmly on the ground, beneath a night sky, wondering, awaiting clarification.
“I spend a lot of time at a little farmhouse on the Pampa, in the Province of Buenos Aires. There's no internet connection, but perspectives and rhythms out there can sometimes feel quite binary and geometric. By day, the horizontal axis dominates: from the immediate flora and fauna of the summer garden, the surrounding farms (dairy, soy, alfalfa, corn), and then to the open plains in all directions to the horizon. By night, the landscape recedes, and all attention is drawn to the vertical axis: the night sky - stars, the moon, satellites. Living out there, the psyche settles into that alternation. These songs very much reflect it.”
I've come to your music a little late, but better late than never! Great songs--even better harmonies <3 . I hope the next time you get together it will be sooner than 20 years! sylvia_s
This is songwriting at its best, and how it has taken me so long to find the music of Caitlin Canty is a complete mystery to me. Every track beautifully delivered. followjohnreed
Collaborating remotely with 12 songwriters from all over the world, Kim Edgar emerged with a work of striking art pop. Bandcamp New & Notable Feb 11, 2023