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Tracy Nelson - Live From Cell Block D
Throughout her illustrious career, now spanning five decades, Tracy
Nelson has never been one to abide boundaries. Certainly, in terms
of musical genres, she's been able to meld and / or incorporate
folk, blues, rock, country and whatever else you might throw at
her into her own musical persona. Tracy has always been her own
master, as strong of character as she is of voice. She's a far cry
from today's Svengali-controlled pop princesses who are, essentially,
puppets of packagers and marketers whose interest in real music
is both limited and limiting.
One boundary Tracy has crossed is the very real one that keeps
prisoners and performers apart. Late last year, she journeyed to
Mason, Tennessee to entertain the inmates at West Tennessee Detention
Center and gave those guests of the state in which she, herself,
resides a performance that has been documented by Memphis International
Records on Live From Cell Block D. Tracy's "prison record," so to
speak, is in the tradition established by Johnny Cash and B. B.
King but she had her doubts going into the project when it was proposed
to her by producer David Less. "Would we seem like dilettantes in
the profound reality of a prison setting?" she wondered. The prison
population, both male and female inmates at separate concerts, gave
her a stirring reception that undercut her initial insecurity. The
result in an album that is a singular statement of the humanizing
power of music.
Tracy's journey to Cell Block D began in the early 1960's when,
while growing up in Madison, Wisconsin, she immersed herself in
the R&B she heard beamed into her bedroom from Nashville's WLAC.
"It was like hearing music from Mars," she recalls of the alien
sounds that stirred her so. Later, she was bitten by the folk music
bug, which she refers to as "the folk scare of the sixties." As
an undergrad at the University of Wisconsin, she combined her musical
passions singing folk and blues at coffeehouses and R&B at frat
parties as one of three singers fronting a band called The Fabulous
Imitations when she was all of 18. In 1964 she went to Chicago to
record her first album, Deep Are The Roots, produced by Sam Charters,
and released by Prestige Records. A young harmonica player from
Memphis named Charlie Musselwhite played on the album and the two
would explore the city's famed south side where she met and was
inspired by such legendary figures as Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf,
Otis Spann and others.
A short time later, Tracy moved to San Francisco and, in the midst
of the era's psychedelic explosion, formed Mother Earth, a group
that was named after the fatalistic Memphis Slim song of that title.
(The song is included in Live From Cell Block D.) Mother Earth,
the group, true to its origin, was more grounded than freaky but,
nonetheless, was a major attraction at The Fillmore where they encountered
the likes of Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix and Eric Burdon who, as
legend has it, was once bitten by Tracy's dog. In 1968 Mother Earth
recorded its first album, which included her own composition "Down
So Low." It became her signature song and was later to be covered
by Etta James, Linda Rondstadt and Maria Muldaur with Tracy's own
stirring latest version included on Live From Cell Block D.
The second Mother Earth album, Make A Joyful Noise was recorded
in Nashville in 1969, leading Tracy to rent a house and later buy
a small farm in the area where she still lives today. As a side
project, she soon recorded Mother Earth Presents Tracy Nelson Country
for which she coaxed Elvis Presley's original Sun-era guitarist
Scotty Moore out of retirement to produce (with Pete Drake) and
play on her rendition of Arthur "Big Boy" Cruddup's "That's All
Right Mama." In a way, the phenomenon that is Tracy Nelson is encapsulated
in that circumstance: it's a blues song, made famous by a rock 'n
roller, recorded on a country album by a folkie turned Fillmore
goddess, produced by a rockabilly cat and a pedal steel player.
Eclecticism, thy name is Nelson.
After six Mother Earth albums for Mercury Records and Reprise Records,
Nelson continued to record throughout the '70s as a solo artist
on various labels. In 1974, she garnered her first Grammy nomination
for "After the Fire Is Gone," a track from her Atlantic Records
album, a hit duet with Willie Nelson that Tracy reprises on Live
From Cell Block D. Willie (who, despite the rumors, is not related
to Tracy although he contends they just might be "the illegitimate
children of Ozzie and Harriet") provided liner notes for the album
CD, noting of Tracy's remarkable instrument, "that tremendous voice
has only gotten better over the years."
Though she's done straight blues albums, Tracy prefers eclecticism
and that's what she served the prison population on Live From Cell
Block D. Of course, there's country, including "Walkin' After Midnight"
which made a memorable impression on Tracy. "I was stunned to see
a young black woman in the second row singing along with the all
the lyrics. It reinforced my belief that Pasty Cline is god." Blues
are present with Big Bill Broonzy's "Feel So Good" and, a truly
brave choice for a prison performance, Bessie Smith's "Send Me To
The 'lectric Chair." Lyle Lovett's contemplative and longing "God
Will" is given a wonderfully strong reading by Tracy and the same
is true of Bobby Charles' "Tennessee Blues" that struck a special
chord with the inmates. Tracy's collaboration with buddy Marcia
Ball, "Got A New Truck" is a lighthearted look at upward mobility
shared with a population who has none.
Tracy Nelson is a singer without parallel in terms of both technical
ability and emotional directness. John Swenson, writing in Rolling
Stone, asserted, "Tracy Nelson proves that the human voice is the
most expressive instrument in creation." Live From Cell Block D
underscores just how awesome that instrument is and the inmates
who heard her that day, many of whom didn't really know who she
was, responded as only those personally touched by such greatness
can. With heart and soul.
For furthur press and publicity inquiries please contact
Bob Merlis.
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