Lucinda Williams steering beyond ‘Car Wheels’
Singer-songwriter moves in different direction — ‘West’ — on new album
![]() Marina Chavez / AP "Car Wheels on a Gtavel Road" introduced Lucinda Williams to the world. An undeniable career highlight, it's been a straitjacket for its creator, too. |
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NEW YORK - The album "Car Wheels on a Gravel Road" is the work that introduced Lucinda Williams to most of her fans. It won a Grammy. Rolling Stone and Spin called it one of the top discs of the 1990s. It has sold twice as much as anything else she's done.
An undeniable career highlight, it's been a straitjacket for its creator, too.
"Ever since ‘Car Wheels’ I've been struggling with where do I go now? What do I do?" she told The Associated Press. "I was defined by ‘Car Wheels’ and everything I've done since gets compared to ‘Car Wheels.’"
"West," released Tuesday and her third collection of new music since that 1998 landmark, may be the disc to set her free. Produced by Hal Willner, it's a sonic departure with tight writing and experimental song structure. Williams' weathered voice and depressing subject matter sound familiar, but it's miles away from the gravel road.
Frozen by the pressure of following up her signature disc, Williams went nearly five years without writing a thing. She kept touring, playing the same songs over and over.
Like so many other songwriters, she took a specific inspiration from Bob Dylan — in this case his late-career resurgence started by the 1997 "Time Out of Mind" album. Williams, 54, saw it as Dylan moving forward and not worrying about topping classics like "Blood on the Tracks" or feeling he had to write in the same way.
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For an artist with a reputation for skating the line between perfectionism and paralysis — one sensitive enough to precisely quote from years-old negative reviews — that did take some work.
Her 2001 composition "Lonely Girls," a succinct song built around repetition of the title phrase, was another key moment for Williams.
‘Can I put it on a record?’
"I thought, ‘Can I do this? Can I get away with this and put it on a record? What are people going to think?'" she said. "It did draw some mixed reviews. It took a while. That's what's happening with my stuff. At first people are not quite sure."
That may be the case with "West," a smoldering disc that moves at a slow pace, with only two full-out blues rockers. Willner's background is more avant garde than alt country, with Lou Reed, Bill Frisell and tribute albums to Charles Mingus and Thelonius Monk on his production resume.
Willner surrounds her songs with new flavors. Strings and an organ often swirl beneath Williams' voice and guitar, all anchored by Jim Keltner's apocalyptic drumming.
The rocker "Come On," a blistering put-down of an ex-lover's sexual inadequacies, has already been alternately described by critics as hilarious or juvenile.
The songs' inventiveness and sturdy character on the new album unfold during repeated listenings. Several steer clear of traditional structures. "Mama You Sweet" opens with the repetition, four times, of the line "I love you mama you sweet," moves to lyrics detailing the psychic toll of pain, then ends with the same phrase, again, repeated four times.
"Wrap my Head Around That," essentially a nine-minute rap, is another new song some fans might find jarring.
"I've always had an eclectic approach to things, but it took a while to getting around to making it happen," she said. "I'm just more serious now. I'm more confident as a writer. I'm not afraid to leap over into different styles."
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