Album Reviews

Various Artists: Sweet Relief III – Pennies from Heaven

Pennies-From-Heaven

Various Artists
Sweet Relief III — Pennies from Heaven
(Vanguard)
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5

Twenty years since the first Sweet Relief album, a tribute to and benefit for Victoria Williams, and 17 away from the last edition dedicated to the music of the late Vic Chesnutt, the third entry finally rolls around. Why it has taken so long for it to appear is unclear, but the musical approach is slightly different. Rather than covering one artistโ€™s songs as the previous sets have, volume 3 features a variety of acts interpreting tunes looselyโ€”sometimes very loosely– about support and assistance.

The covers are predominantly dialed down, occasionally totally acoustic and range from inspired (Ben Harperโ€™s read of Van Morrisonโ€™s โ€œCrazy Loveโ€) to heartbreaking (a sweet, touching version of Merle Haggardโ€™s โ€œHow Did You Find Me Here?โ€ by k.d. lang), to overwrought (Tina Schlieskeโ€™s unnecessary note for note copy of Joe Cockerโ€™s far better interpretation of the Beatles โ€œWith a Little Help from My Friends.โ€)

Itโ€™s difficult to find the thread that connects the Beach Boysโ€™ โ€œSurfer Girlโ€ and Sam Phillipsโ€™ sultry twist on the Sweet Charity standard โ€œBig Spenderโ€ with the โ€œsupport and assistanceโ€ theme, but both turn in wonderfully nuanced and personal performances of songs they clearly relish singing and rearranging. Along with Schlieske, another artist new to most readers named Genevieve Toupin delivers an emotional, dramatic reading of Neil Youngโ€™s โ€œHeart of Goldโ€ on solo piano. Shelby Lynneโ€™s jazzy, bluesy โ€œBrother Where Are Youโ€ is moving, sublime and arguably the discโ€™s high point.

As with most various artist collections, there are a few missteps. She and Himโ€™s tossed off โ€œKing of the Roadโ€ feels rushed and inconsequential and as wonderful as it is to hear Victoria Williams, her idiosyncratic childlike voice doesnโ€™t have the gravitas to pull off Sam Cookeโ€™s classic โ€œChange is Gonna Come.โ€ The generally delightful Ron Sexsmith turns in a string laden, beautifully sung but ultimately snoozy โ€œPennies from Heavenโ€ which, as the opening and title track, is disappointing.

But the cause — the money raised goes to musicians in needโ€”is a good one, and there are enough winners in the 13 selections to recommend this to fans of any of these performers, all of whom selflessly donated their services to help raise funds for their peers who have fallen on hard times.