Album Reviews

Sam Amidon: Bright Sunny South

sam amidon

Sam Amidon
Bright Sunny South
(Nonesuch)
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

Being born and raised in Vermont but now living in London (with wife Beth Orton) gives Sam Amidon a unique perspective on the (mostly) traditional, acoustic folk of both continents. His fourth album in six years follows the blueprint of the previous ones by drastically rearranging a few pop songs and making them seem like the centuries old music that dominates his catalog. Mariah Careyโ€™s โ€œShake it Offโ€ and Tim McGrawโ€™s โ€œMy Old Friendโ€ get the nod this time. The former is given a stark, skeletal solo piano reading far removed from its glossy original. McGrawโ€™s song is enhanced with bass, guitar and drums but still seems dredged up from some long forgotten Folkways recording. Amidonโ€™s plaintive, boyish vocals make up in character what they lack in uniqueness.

Amidonโ€™s appreciation of free jazz makes a startling appearance when legendary trumpet master Kenny Wheeler adds edgy, even experimental improvised lines to a fairly radical rearrangement of โ€œI Wish I Wishโ€ that even moves into cool dissonance. The raw, unruly, jarring electric guitar that drives โ€œHeโ€™s Taken My Feetโ€ off the road is another unexpected departure that shows Amidonโ€™s penchant for taking chances.ย Despite its luminous title, Bright Sunny South is a melancholy listen, filled with loss and loneliness yet delivered with a ray of hope through multi-instrumentalist Amidonโ€™s everyman voice.ย  Atmospheric, lovely and occasionally eerie, this is haunting music rescued from the sooty pages of history for a fresh go-round. He treats it with appropriate respect but pushes enough creative buttons to make these predominantly ancient tunes bloom for a new generation.