NYT
                    March 7, 1999


                    Chroniclers of Wayward Souls

                    By ANN POWERS

                    Country has long been packaged as the classical music of
simple
                    American folks. The transformation of hillbilly
entertainment into
                    an official repository of our national traditions has
extended from
                    the fancy naming of the Grand Ole Opry in 1927 to the
appointment of
                    William Ivey, the director of the Country Music Hall of
Fame, to the chair
                    of the National Endowment for the Arts in 1998.

                    Not only Nashville's music
                    industry, but also the
                    "alternative" country made
                    by rock- and folk-schooled
                    rebels can be discouragingly
                    orthodox, its vintage
                    trappings turning cultural
                    preservation into historical
                    tourism.

                    Yet country music is also
                    grounded in dislocation -- in
                    the stories of people facing
                    upheaval in their home
                    towns, their families, their
                    daily life. This is a modern
                    music, tied like the blues to
                    the journeys of working
                    people across America and
                    the encroachment of the city
                    on rural life.

                    The poor wayfaring stranger is as much a honky-tonk cliche
as Mama
                    making cornbread, and as country's patina grows ever more
nostalgic, even
                    that character's vagrancy becomes strangely fixed. Exile has
become
                    another form of home in country, invoked with a warm glow.

                    Country music finds its power in the tension between
nostalgia and the
                    need for change, a contradiction mined on two new albums by
established
                    iconoclasts. "The Mountain," by Steve Earle with the Del
McCoury Band,
                    investigates country's most classical form, bluegrass. "What
I Deserve," by
                    Kelly Willis, is more eclectic. Both Earle and Ms. Willis
succeed where
                    many of their contemporaries fail by keeping their focus on
restlessness.

                    "The Mountain" (E Squared, CD, CD 1063-2) is an art project
in denim
                    and work boots, a self-conscious effort by Earle to pay
homage to the
                    bluegrass pantheon if not enter it.

                    "My primary motive in writing these songs was both selfish
and ambitious
                    -- immortality," he writes in the album's liner notes, and
on some songs he
                    has achieved an almost eerie timelessness. It's hard to
believe that the
                    murder ballad "Carrie Brown" or the funeral hymn "Pilgrim"
hasn't been
                    sung by anonymous town criers for a century, but it's also
easy to forget
                    that the plaintive form of "country jazz" that Earle is
reproducing emerged
                    a mere half century ago.

                    Working with the virtuoso ensemble the Del McCoury Band,
Earle
                    matches venerable themes of heartbreak and war, workingman's
struggles
                    and outlaw romance to his casually expert compositions. His
patented
                    rocker's snarl meshes with Del McCoury's unearthly wail to
form a link
                    across the generations of country renegades.

                    The album's musicianship is notable; its guest roster
features many of
                    bluegrass' finest players plus the alternative-country stars
Emmylou Harris,
                    Gillian Welch and Iris DeMent. But Earle's songs make "The
Mountain"
                    more than a fine generic exercise as they trace a path of
displacement
                    throughout American history.

                    Earle has often chronicled the violence of modernization;
his early forays
                    into country-rock updated that theme with a Southernized
Springsteen
                    sound and a countercultural attitude. Like those early
albums, "The
                    Mountain" uses its musical focus to further a strong social
agenda.

                    Earle seeks a common voice grounded not in wistful memory
but in
                    thorny reality; his ramblers are the former high school
football heroes,
                    drug dealers, gas station attendants and homeless people of
the New South.
                    "The Mountain" finds counterparts for those characters in
Civil War tales
                    and corny love songs.

                    The album begins with "Texas Eagle," an ode to trains made
                    unsentimental by its acknowledgment of the American rail
system's
                    economic woes. It moves through Irish immigration and the
Depression's
                    Dust Bowl before settling in heaven's waiting room with
"Pilgrim." There
                    is nothing but motion on "The Mountain," nothing but anxious
progress.

                    Earle drives this point home with the album's title track,
in which the
                    miner who declared his undying pride of place in "Harlan
Man" finds his
                    beloved mountain ravaged and himself devastated by the march
of
                    industrial capitalism.

                    In Earle's ruthless vision, those who stand fast against
cruel change can
                    only hope for obsolescence. By setting his anthology of
wandering to the
                    lonesome tones of bluegrass, Earle disturbs the complacent
aura that can
                    sometimes overwhelm country classicism.

                    Kelly Willis challenges a different set of rules with "What
I Deserve," her
                    new album for the independent label Rykodisc (CD, RCD
10458). Ms.
                    Willis made three albums for MCA Nashville in the early
1990s and had
                    modest success, but she never fit into the industry machine.
Living in
                    Austin, Texas, she allied herself with the line of
singer-songwriters that
                    travels between country, folk, and rock.

                    Free to explore fully the place where those poles meet, Ms.
Willis has
                    emerged with a rich representation of the unsettled life. It
begins, like so
                    many in pop, with a bad love affair. "Take Me Down," written
with Gary
                    Louris of the Jayhawks, is a sweet swoon of co-dependency;
the title track,
                    also written with Louris, chronicles a more complicated
crisis.

                    Set to a loping beat knocked off-kilter by Chuck Prophet's
phase-shifted
                    guitar, "What I Deserve" is the confused lament of an
ambitious woman.
                    Refusing to take solace in prayer, the beauty of nature or
any other
                    old-fashioned balm, Ms. Willis lambastes herself for never
slowing down
                    and the world for suggesting that she should.

                    This particularly feminine, very current perspective on
emotional
                    ambivalence enriches "What I Deserve." Ms. Willis has a
honey-lemon
                    voice that can be as soothing as a lozenge, and it works
that way on a
                    lullabye like Paul Kelly's "Cradle of Love," but she mostly
she uses it in
                    the service of more wayward desires.

                    She offers painful tales of lost love but then expresses the
resolve to move
                    on. Hovering between romantic fantasy and deflated realism,
Ms. Willis
                    taps a rare subtlety of feeling.

                    "What I Deserve" often returns to the subject of
contentment, something
                    Ms. Willis doesn't pretend to grasp fully. "If I ran so far
that my life can't
                    follow me, would it keep the world from up and swallowing
me?" she
                    sings in "Fading Fast"; with such a phrase, she makes the
saga of the
                    wayfaring stranger internal and completely contemporary.

                    Like Earle, Ms. Willis knows that the itinerant world is no
paradise, but
                    she's not willing to pretend that there's any other place
like home, even for
                    a simple country girl.






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