Album Reviews

Review: Amy Ray Looks Towards Distant Horizons

Amy Ray/If It All Goes South/Daemon Records
Four out of Five Stars

Amy Ray is on a good roll lately. Recently accorded a lifetime achievement award for her efforts as part of the Indigo Girls, and a proud mom as well, she can also revel in the release of her seventh solo album, a dynamic set of songs that gives her an identity of her own, even as the Indigos continue to enjoy their own success. Ray isnโ€™t reticent about venturing out on her own, purveying a sound thatโ€™s markedly different from the approach she takes with her day job, but equally emphatic all on its own.

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Thatโ€™s evident at the outset with the tenacious trappings of โ€œJoy Trainโ€ and later, the country twang that permeates โ€œCowboys and Pirates.โ€ Ray is an astute observer of the human condition, and thereโ€™s little that escapes her gaze. Nevertheless, she doesnโ€™t shy away from more tender trappings, as evidenced by the easy pace and gentle ramble of โ€œChuck Willโ€™s Widow,โ€ the wistful reflection that illuminates โ€œFrom This Room,โ€ the quiet repose found in โ€œMuscadine,โ€ and the elegiac enchantment of โ€œThey Wonโ€™t Have Me.โ€ No matter what the tone or tempo, Ray clearly possesses an emotional clarity as well as the innate ability to shift the settings, a skill that results in a varied set of songs that can be, by degrees, both tender and tempestuous. 

Nevertheless, Ray finds her focus consistently. She was aided by an impressive list of fellow travelers, among them, Brandi Carlile, the trio Iโ€™m With Her (Sarah Jarosz, Aoife Oโ€™Donovan, and Sara Watkins), Natalie Hemby, Allison Russell, and H.C. McEntire, but regardless, Rayโ€™s ability to steer the proceedings with all original material, adds credence and conviction. If It All Goes South may portend an ominous attitude, but clearly the end results demonstrate the fact that sheโ€™s steering clear of any perilous possibilities.

Amy Ray Photo Courtesy Daemon Records