Band of Joy Rounder [Three and a half stars]
Band of Joy ”“ named after Plant’s first band with late pal John Bonham ”“ smartly takes some cues from Raising Sand. Plant uses an A list of country voices and players (Patty Griffin, Buddy Miller) and an inspired mix of vintage and modern songs. If
it’s not quite as seamless and sublime a record, well, it’s pretty damn good, and what it lacks in coherence it makes up for in magnified rock & roll mojo.
Miller helps with the latter. The journeyman guitarist-songwriter (and former Emmylou Harris collaborator) co-produced the record with Plant, and he contributes muscular playing and singing. His guitar is low and nasty on the lead cut, a coiled, mandolin-dusted cover of Los Lobos’ ”˜Angel Dance.’ And he opens up on ”˜House of Cards,’ a cover of Richard Thompson’s scalding 1978 folk rocker, bright leads carving the air while Plant and Griffin’s harmonies recall Zep’s ”˜The Battle of Evermore.’
But what’s most striking is Plant’s vocal versatility. As a solo act, his songwriting has been spotty, if impressively versatile. But he’s proved himself to be an excellent interpreter, from his 1984 Honeydrippers EP of old-school R&B and pop through Raising Sand. He does the same here, and the songs give him plenty to work with. He returns to the late, great Townes Van Zandt (whose ”˜Nothin’’ was a highlight on Sand) for the bleak ”˜Harm’s Swift Way,’ working a metaphor that turns the idea of time into a woman beyond a man’s control. Plant doesn’t oversing a whit, delivering poetic meditations on mortality with Griffin’s harmonies clinging to him like a spangled death shroud.
The two most striking songs are the most left-field, both penned by the brooding husband-wife indie-rock band Low. ”˜Silver Rider’ is a glittering dirge, another showcase for Griffin, who’s such a good songwriter that’s it’s easy to forget what a great singer she is. Plant sings ”˜Monkey’ almost as a whisper. “It’s a suicide/Shut up and drive,” he snarls, in what sounds like the opening scene of a David Lynch film. It’s as menacingly restrained as anything he’s ever uttered.
This is a record primarily about loss and time’s march, and Plant sings with gravity, working his middle range. It doesn’t all click. ”˜Even This Shall Pass Away’ tries too hard for profundity. And the old spiritual ”˜Satan Your Kingdom Must Come Down’ mostly makes you want to hear Plant back cruising Lucifer’s daughter on ”˜Houses of the Holy.’
But Plant isn’t singing like the old days. The closest he comes is ”˜You Can’t Buy My Love,’ first recorded in 1965 by R&B singer Barbara Lynn. Plant knocks it out playfully, like a lost demo from Led Zeppelin I, with a few hollers and sexy woo-oh-ohs. And in 3:10, it’s over. You can’t buy his love, and you can’t turn back time. It’s a notion other rock vets could do well to ponder.
Key Tracks: ”˜Angel Dance,’ ”˜Silver Rider’
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