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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Essential..., September 17, 2001
This review is from: Anthology 1968-1979 (Audio CD)
To paraphrase the great Jack Black in the movie "High Fidelity", 'it's...ridiculous if you don't own this album.' Seriously. Don't tell anybody. Just quietly go and purchase it and slip into your puny collection before anybody notices. All kidding aside, Townes Van Zandt is one of the few "cult" figures actually deserving of the mythology that has swirled up around him. His death in '97 has only excacerbated the situation, and the truck-load of hipster-cred he has garnered threatens to reach critical mass... But, to haul out another tired proverb, "the proof is in the pudding" and what a devilishly good pudding it is! These two discs make an argument for Van Zandt as one of a handful of truly transcendent songwriters. Writers whose songs go beyond the idiom of pop music and flirt dangerously with "high art", but not in a bad way. If you're a die-hard fan, a newcomer or anywhere in between you need to own this great collection. The sound is sparkling, the package is nice and you'll have all these great songs on two convenient discs. Also be sure to check out Lyle Lovett's awesome "Step Into This House" for Lyle's interpretations of some of TVZ's best tunes. Enjoy, and keep the faith!
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
most of the best of the late great, August 22, 2001
This review is from: Anthology 1968-1979 (Audio CD)
From the opening notes of the first cut, "Be Here to Love Me," one is reminded that, at his best (as he mostly is here), Townes Van Zandt was an American songwriter in the same league as Woody Guthrie, Hank Williams, and Merle Haggard -- though stylistically he owed more to the first of these than the latter two. Where there is not a lot of country in Van Zandt's music, the melodies of Anglo-Celtic-Appalachia and the white man's blues are very much in evidence. Some of his narrative songs, e.g. "St. John the Gambler," "Tecumseh Valley," and "Snake Mountain Blues" among others, have the rustic resonance of dusty frontier ballads. "Two Hands" is among the finest imitation African-American spirituals I've ever heard, and "Flyin' Shoes" is among the finest spirituals-period I've heard. This welcome collection brings back lots of good memories, taking me back to the day I came upon Van Zandt's brand-new first Poppy album at a college radio station and met a genius (later "The Genius," a song Robin & Linda Williams and I wrote two or three days after his death on January 1, 1997; it's on their Devil of a Dream recording on Sugar Hill, also Van Zandt's last label). Unfortunately, this collection reminds one that Van Zandt was too often poorly served by his producers, who seemed not to grasp the simple but subtle requirements of his bare-bones roots style and who persisted in sometimes inexplicable decisions in the studio. Sadly, too, one is reminded of how short his productive career was, and how his personal excesses, which finally killed him, caused him to go whole years without writing anything of substance. (And speaking of which, what is piffle like "Fraternity Blues" doing here, in place of "Rake" or "Nobody" or "White Freight Liner Blues"?) In the end, however, we can only be grateful for what he did give us in those few years: a body of work brimming with intelligence, insight, beauty, humor, and sorrow -- the art, as is almost always the case, greater than the artist.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Blues and Zippedy-Doo-Dah, February 12, 2002
This review is from: Anthology 1968-1979 (Audio CD)
Townes Van Zandt once said, "There are two kinds of music, the blues and zippedy-doo-dah." Townes stood firmly outside the zippedy-doo-dah camp and was a masterful painter of despair...the blues. When he died on the first day of Janurary, 1997, Townes didn't have much of anything, but a handful of adoring fans (Townies), who would have probably would have laid down life and limb for their cherished Townes Van Zandt albums. Such an ignoble passage for a man born into wealth, and even has a west Texas county named for his ancestors. Townes had no regrets, because he led the life he sang. "Anthology" captures that life of drinking, gambling, carousing, and tempting the devil himself. Townes always seemed saddled with well-meaning indie record labels and their miniscule distribution networks. Before the rise of internet, you could spend the day searching for his albums and come up empty handed, even in major markets like Chicago or Boston. What I like about "Anthology" is it has an equitable distribution curve of all of his career highlights, even the harder to find stuff. This is a great sample of his early seventies work with Tomato Records before his plaintive, smokey baritone was ravaged by booze and hard living. I quibble with the fact that "Nothing" and "Rake", his two most sublimely dark and introspective songs, fell off the list in favor of lighter fare. There are two "essential" Van Zandt recordings for any serious collector of country or folk music collector. One is the live recording "Rear View Mirror", and the other is this solid anthology. Gram Parsons often comes to mind when searching for a "musician's musician" of comparable stature to Townes. Both Parsons and Van Zandt were born about the same time, raised in priviliged circumstances, were notorious drinkers with dark erratic personalities, and were drawn to American roots music for inspiration. Gram's musical legacy has been brought to a broader audience by his devotees, and if there were any justice in the world, the same would happen to Townes. Townes would probably just sneer and say, "At least I got a darker hole in hell than him."
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