Lucinda Williams has never had a comfortable relationship with the commercial side of the recording industry -- her battles with various major labels in the '90s are the stuff of legend -- and even though she had a reasonably stress-free partnership with
Lost Highway Records from 2001's
Essence to 2011's
Blessed, it seems fitting that she would eventually decide to strike out on her own. 2014's
Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone is
Williams' first album for her own label,
Highway 20 Records, giving her complete control over the creative process, and though this doesn't always sound like an album where
Williams is challenging herself musically, for a musician who has long believed in the power of nuance, this is an album that feels unerringly right for her, full of sweet and sour blues, acoustic pondering, and simple, bare bones rock & roll that slips into the groove with
Williams' literate but unpretentious songs. Love and its infinite complexities have always been some of
Williams' favorite themes, and they certainly pop up a few times on this double set, but she has just as much (if not more) to say about the world around her this time out, setting one of her father's poems to music as she pleads for "Compassion," spits venom at a dilettante from the perspective of someone living in poverty in "East Side of Town," recounts a real-life tale of justice gone wrong in "West Memphis," and issues a call to action on "Temporary Nature (Of Any Precious Thing)."
Williams also gives herself plenty of room to stretch out on
Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone, offering 20 songs spread out over two discs and running an hour-and-44-minutes, and despite its epic scale, there seems to be precious little filler here; if these songs sometimes take a while to find their spiritual and emotional center, they invariably get there, and the powerful litanies of "Wrong Number," "Something Wicked This Way Comes," and "Big Mess" mesh comfortably with the implacable rhythm of this music.
Williams produced the sessions with
Tom Overby and
Greg Leisz, and the performances are steeped in deep, satisfying grooves, with
Pete Thomas and
Davey Faragher of
Elvis Costello's
Imposters holding down the rhythm on most tracks and
Leisz,
Stuart Mathis,
Bill Frisell, and
Tony Joe White among the guitarists who lend their magic to these recordings.
Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone is the sound of
Lucinda Williams doing what she does best and letting her muse do the speaking, and if that sounds simple, in practice it is and it isn't -- this music is taut and soulful, but also a document of one woman baring her spirit and mind to the world, which has always been the case with her best music, and if this isn't a masterpiece, it's as pure, straightforward, and compelling as anything she's done since
Essence. ~ Mark Deming