Whew! That last entry had a lot of links. Time to get back to good old regular writin’ and reviewin’ of the collection.
This next record landed at #2 on the Top 10 albums of 2024. So yeah, I liked it.
Disc 1796 is…Woman Creature (Portrait of a Woman, Part 2)
Artist: Mean Mary
Year of Release: 2024
What’s up with the Cover? It is the aforementioned woman creature, long rumoured to stalk these very woods and trails!
Those creeps from Deliverance better hope they don’t run into Woman Creature. In addition to teeth and claws and an immunity to any and all bullets not made of silver she also has a banjo, and she knows how to use it.
How I Came To Know It: I read a review over at my latest music review website, Americana Highways. It is fair to say my purchases in 2024 skewed slightly toward folk and Americana as a result of adding that site to my regular visits.
How It Stacks Up: I have fallen hard for Mean Mary. I have two of her albums so far, a third is on the way and five more are on my wish list.
For now, it is just the two, and of those “Woman Creature” comes in at #1.
Ratings: 5 stars
I am always discovering new music, to the point where the experience of ‘newness’ itself can become fairly routine. Yes, I’m having a good time, but it is within the context of expecting a good time. But every now and then in my musical journey an artist comes along that stops me in my tracks, forcing my full and immediate attention, and making the hair on my arms raise at the excitement of it all. Mean Mary did this to me. So if I wax poetic in the paragraphs to follow, please forgive a love that is new and unbridled.
Mean Mary (aka Mary James) is not a new artist, with eight studio albums under her belt, and plenty more of live playing and appearances prior to that. I still have properly explore her back catalogue, but listening to “Woman Creature” it was hard not to feel like everything she’s been working at was destined to culminate in this record, which reflects a bit of every facet of the best of what folk music has to offer, and a bit more besides.
One of the first things I noticed was the songwriting, which is top notch, landing exactly in the right spot between folksy narrative tale and literary mood poem. “Woman Creature” explores multiple facets of womanhood, including delving into the artificial and unfair expectations of society that pull – sometimes painfully – on that experience. James explores how self-expression gets misrepresented as something monstrous (“Woman Creature”), the dangers of how self-loathing can lead to settling for a self-aggrandizing jackass (“Mr. What A Catch I Am”) and the destructive force of ill-placed competition (“Murder Creek”).
“Murder Creek” is the best song on the record, an eight-minute ballad of envy, murder, revenge and possibly even a ghost. The song would be exquisite as a poem, but set to music its terrible and twisted crimes properly come to life. The opening stanzas eerie tone are the harbinger of things to come:
“I can’t close my eyes in the dark
I dream in black and bleak
I get chills when a rooster crows in the night
And I find myself at Murder Creek.”
“I wade through the water to the fallen tree
That’s been down since the storm in July
I sit until the dark begins to fade
And I’m staring at a bloodstained sky”
It goes downhill from here, with our narrator finding motivation to do fell deeds, motivated by the flash of a shirt on a clothesline (perhaps a certain man’s?), and a knowing laugh from a rival signaling she has what our narrator covets. I won’t give away the ending, but I will note the name of the song is “Murder Creek”.
Add to this songwriting prowess a prodigious talent on the banjo. James plays with exceptional range. She can be fierce and fast on “Woman Creature” and its frantic themes, light and playful on the whimsical “Tarzan” and downright gentle on the pastoral instrumental “Sweet Spring”.
Completing the trifecta is her voice: a classic folk birdsong warble with many octaves of range, which James is not afraid to put to the test. She mostly sings in a high clarion bell of a belt, but she is equally adept at reverberating power in her lower register, or a breathy whisper when the tale calls for it. Because she is a natural storyteller you might be momentarily fooled into thinking she’s more style and delivery than substance, but that would be a mistake. This record tells many brilliant tales, yes, but without Mean Mary’s voice they wouldn’t have half their dread import.
As if to prove her mettle, the album’s final song, “Bring Down the Rain,” sees James shelving the warble in favour of something between a seventies country crooner and a forties lounge diva. The result is sublime.
If you don’t like folk music, you may find “Woman Creature” is not your cup of tea. That’ll be your loss. Sometimes greatness reveals itself in heavy metal, sometimes punk, sometimes pop. Today, folk gets its day. Embrace it and enjoy.
Best tracks: all tracks