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Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Joan Shelley

 
 
The stunning, self-titled fourth album from the Kentucky singer, songwriter, and guitarist Joan Shelley began, surprisingly, with a fiddle.

In the summer of 2014, Shelley fell for “Hog of the Forsaken,” a bowed rollick at the end of Michael Hurley’s wayward folk circus, Long Journey, then nearly forty years old. Hurley’s voice, it seemed to Shelley, clung to the fiddle’s melody, dipping where it dipped and climbing where it climbed. This was a small, significant revelation, prompting the guitarist to trade temporarily six strings for four and, as she puts it, “try to play like Michael.” That is, she wanted to sing what she played, to play what she sang. She tried it, for a spell, with the fiddle.

“Turns out, I wasn’t very good at fiddle,” remembers Shelley, chuckling. “But I took that idea back to the guitar and tried that same method. I did it as a game to make these songs, a way to find another access point.”

But that wasn’t the end of the trials. After collaborating and touring with ace guitarist Nathan Salsburg for so many years, Shelley decided to put her entire guitar approach to the test, too. Each day, she would twist and turn into a different tuning...  more
 
 
 

credits

released May 5, 2017

JOAN SHELLEY / guitars, vocals, dobro, baritone ukulele

NATHAN SALSBURG / acoustic and electric guitars

JAMES ELKINGTON / piano, Dobro, organ

JEFF TWEEDY / bass, Theravox, electric guitar

SPENCER TWEEDY / drums and percussion

Produced by Jeff Tweedy.

Engineered and mixed by Tom Schick at The Loft in Chicago December 2016. Design Lacey Guthrie. Cover photo by Ebru Yildiz. Mastered by Greg Calbi at Sterling Sound.

Songs © joan shelley (BMI). No Quarter 2017 NOQ05

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