Jul 31st 2010
Cambridge, United Kingdom
Kathy Mattea, the beloved, Grammy-winning singer of such classics as “18 Wheels and A Dozen Roses,” “Where’ve You Been,” and many other hits says that her new album offered her a “re-education” in singing. That album, COAL, is a re-education for the listener, as well, a record that reshapes the way we think about music, reminding us of why we love it so much in the first place.
The songs on COAL are more than just mining songs. Mattea says she wanted to pay tribute to “my place and my people.” Raised near Charleston, West Virginia, her mining heritage is thick: both her parents grew up in coal camps, both her grandfathers were miners, her mother worked for the local UMWA.
Mattea’s childhood was steeped in the culture of mining and Appalachia but despite having a wide range and “being a sponge about music,” she wasn’t exposed to much traditional mountain music. “I never thought I had an ear for singing real heavy Appalachian music,” she says. “I marvel at the wonder of someone like Hazel Dickens, I just never thought I could do that.”
Still, she dreamed quietly about one day recording an album like COAL, cataloging mining songs over the years. The idea began to gel during the Sago Mine Disaster, which killed twelve West Virginia miners in 2006. “I thought, now is the time to do these songs. Sago was the thing that brought it all back to the surface,” she says. “I thought, ‘I need to channel all this emotion.’ And I knew the time was right.”
It was a life-altering decision, one that would forever change the way she thinks about music and singing. “I had to unlearn a lot. These songs are about getting out of the way; it’s about being with the song, opening a space and letting the song come through you.”
Mattea, known as one of the consummate songcatchers, meticulously chose songs for the album. “I wanted some labor songs, some songs that articulated the lifestyle, the bigger struggle, and I wanted a wide variety musically,” Mattea says. She picked songs by such celebrated songwriters as Jean Ritchie, Billy Edd Wheeler, Hazel Dickens, Si Kahn, Utah Williams, Merle Travis, and Darrel Scott.
“With these songs, it’s not about how you sound, it’s about sheer communication and expression, and a way to give voice to someone else’s life experiences. It’s being a voice for a whole group of people, a place, a way of life. And that’s a sacred use of music.,” Mattea says.
Her delivery of the songs approaches the sacred as well. Mattea bares herself on performances like her a capella vocal of “Black Lung,” which reveals a singer at the height of her powers (and left studio onlookers in tears). She never oversings, quietly and subtly working her way through the powerful ballad “The Coming of the Roads” so that she delivers an emotional punch before the listener has even realized it. There is the pumping energy of “The L&N Don’t Stop Here Anymore,” and “Coal Tattoo,” the beautiful, understated pain of songs like “Red-Winged Black Bird” and “Lawrence Jones.” Her delivery of “Green Rolling Hills” is so full of pride and joy that the listener will wish to be a West Virginian, too, just to feel such beautiful homesickness.
Mattea found a guiding hand in Marty Stuart as her producer. “Marty has a relationship to a commercial career and to this music, just like me; he understands that balance. And he’s been playing it since he was thirteen; he has a vocabulary in hillbilly music,” Mattea says. “He brought things into focus that I couldn’t see on my own. He’s a dream to work with, he’s just brilliant and so generous.”
The pickers on this album are a small, impressive lot that were as carefully chosen as the songs and the producer. Mattea is joined by Bill Cooley, who has been playing guitar with her for 20 years. Providing percussion on Mattea’s first drum-less album is Byron House on upright bass. (“His slap bass is a big part of the sound.”) Stuart Duncan offers mandolin, banjo and fiddle. These three main pickers are joined by Stuart, who plays guitar, mandolin, and mandola. He also sings background vocals, along with Patty Loveless and Tim and Mollie O’Brien. Also making appearances are cellist John Catchings, veteran session man and Mattea bandmate Randy Leago, and legendary steel player Fred Newell.
Singer, songs, producer, and pickers have all come together flawlessly to form a career record for Mattea and a great gift for music lovers.
Mattea says she had to dig really deep to get to the dark and light places that held the power for her to let these songs come forth. But on the other hand, she sometimes worried that the songs were “almost too effortless to sing.” Upon admitting this to Stuart, he didn’t miss a beat before telling her that he wasn’t surprised. “That’s because it’s in your blood, pal,” he said. Mattea likes this explanation. “I think there’s a mystery there. That somewhere in me, in my DNA, there’s my great grandmother singing, and my grandma, and my people, singing through me, with me.” she says. “Maybe that’s why it didn’t feel like work.”
| Coal Tattoo | 3:18 | Kathy Mattea |
| Red Winged Black Bird | 2:56 | Kathy Mattea |
| The L&N Don't Stop Here Anymore | 4:13 | Kathy Mattea |
Mattea remains one of Nashville’s most spiritual singers, and the songs she sings about love lost and humility are as fine as any she has recorded.
USA Today
Her voice stands out as a rare blend of warmth and power …
Hartford Courant
…Mattea’s articulate, quietly resonant voice and pop-rock arrangements put her in modern country’s honors sections with the likes of Mary Chapin Carpenter and Nanci Griffith.
Newark Star Ledger
The West Virginia-born singer and acoustic guitarist… has finally eased herself out of the Nashville mainstream, and it suits her well.
Bill Ellis – Memphis Commercial Appeal