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CD Review: Mary Gauthier

Between Daylight and Dark

Between Daylight and Dark
Lost Highway
Music   •••
Sound   ••

There's really no getting around the simple fact that Between Daylight and Dark, the follow-up to singer/songwriter Mary Gauthier's stunning Mercy Now, is a major disappointment. What's not so simple is making sense of the reasons why — reasons that (to these ears, anyway) seem to be far less about Gauthier's skills as a lyricist and composer and far more about the overall tone and atmosphere created by producer (and fellow singer/songwriter) Joe Henry.

I guess Henry's thought process was that using a sparse mix of thin fingerpicked guitars, round prominent bass, and echoey backdropped percussion for every track would provide an effectively bleak and unsettling aural landscape for Gauthier's hard-eyed, hard-nosed tales of common people trying to cope with life's and love's uncommon troubles. Unfortunately, this conceptual approach backfires, and virtually every song falls victim to a sluggish sameness that works against, not for it.

The few songs that stand out — such as "Last of the Hobo Kings," about a vanished free-spirited America, and "Thanksgiving," about a family prison visit — succeed in spite of their surroundings. And they at least serve as small reminders of Mary Gauthier's unique talents.


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