Browse Music
Rock & Pop
R&B & Hip-Hop
Country
Blues
Jazz
Classical
Latin
Christian
Soundtracks
Collections
Loretta Lynn
Van Lear Rose
Loretta Lynn:  Van Lear Rose

$6.99
Listen

Album Review

Released: 2004
Label: Interscope
Selection #: 152694
The White Stripes’ Jack White embellishes his idol’s acclaimed set. Portland Oregon, Little Red Shoes, Miss Being Mrs., This Old House, title track, more.
Listen RM WM
1 Van Lear Rose
2 Portland Oregon
3 Trouble on the Line
4 Family Tree
5 Have Mercy
6 High on a Mountain Top
7 Little Red Shoes
8 God Makes No Mistakes
9 Women's Prison
10 This Old House
11 Mrs. Leroy Brown
12 Miss Being Mrs.
13 Story of My Life
  
Download Player:    Real Media Real Media    Windows Media Windows Media
Album Review

Loretta Lynn retired from the music business in the '90s, returning to her home in Nashville to take care of her husband, Oliver Lynn, as he was dying. As it happens, she left the spotlight at a time that was not kind to country legends like herself, as they were exiled from country radio and left with a fraction of their audience. Some tried to adjust to modern radio, some railed against it, and others, like Johnny Cash, retooled their sound and wound up appealing to a younger, hipper audience raised on alternative country. By the time Lynn decided to return to recording in 2000, Cash's path had been followed by other veterans like Merle Haggard, but Loretta turned out a fairly pedestrian comeback on Audium called "Still Country", which garnered little attention, but then a funny thing happened. The following year, Detroit garage punk duo the White Stripes dedicated their breakthrough album, "White Blood Cells", to Loretta and covered her "Rated X" as a B-side. Word worked its way back to Lynn, and soon she invited Jack and Meg White down to her home and, not long after that, she agreed to cut a new album with Jack as the producer, which wound up being 2004's "Van Lear Rose". On paper, this sounds like a strange pairing, yet upon further inspection, it makes sense. Loretta Lynn has always been an independent spirit, taking risks within the confines of Nashville country, yet respecting the rules of Music City. Jack White works much the same way, adhering to traditional American musical conventions yet pushing against their borders, while imposing strict aesthetic rules for each of the White Stripes albums with the intent of giving each its own distinct feel. The brilliance of "Van Lear Rose" is not just how the two approaches complement each other, but how the record captures the essence of Loretta Lynn's music even as it has flourishes that are distinctly Jack, such as the slide guitar that powers their duet, "Portland Oregon."

Upon its release, Lynn claimed that the album is "countrier than anything I've ever cut," which is no doubt a reference to the charmingly ragged, lively feel of "Van Lear Rose". Working with a band of kindred garage punkers, including Dave Feeny of the Detroit-based country outfit Blanche, White insisted that Loretta and crew keep to a minimum of takes, preserving the energy and excitement of musicians cutting an album when the music is still fresh to their ears. Often, the classic records she made with Owen Bradley were cut in a handful of takes, but he was producing a fine-tuned machine. White, in contrast, keeps things loose and fresh, as if it was a jam session. The end result is quite different than Lynn's classic hits in terms of production, but the feel is strikingly similar, since White focuses on the essence of her music and subtly shifts his approach according to the demands of a song. If it demands it, he'll lay down some crunching guitar, as he does on the aforementioned "Portland Oregon" and the bluesy stomp "Have Mercy." He keeps things spare and sad on "Miss Being Mrs.," where Loretta is mourning the loss of her husband, and "This Old House" is lean and tattered, appropriate for the uptempo old-timey singalong. Unlike Rick Rubin's productions for Johnny Cash, which were deliberately somber and monochromatic, White's work on "Van Lear Rose" is multi-textured, with the layers of steel guitars, muffled drums, and echoed guitars lending a dramatic, impressionistic quality to the songs -- and unlike Daniel Lanois' productions, it feels organic, not studied. "Van Lear Rose" also gives equal import to every side of Lynn's persona, so this is equally sad and funny, sacred and secular. On a sheer sonic level, the album is enthralling -- it's easy to get lost in the music, and Lynn sings with a vigor that's startling for a woman of 70 -- but it's an instant classic because of how that sound is married to set of songs that are among the strongest she's ever had. On her last studio album, she wrote only one song. Here, she's penned all 13 tracks, and there's a sense that these are songs that she needed to get out of her, particularly in a setting as intimate as this. While not all the songs are as explicitly personal as "Miss Being Mrs.," that's for the best, since the variety of styles and types of songs on "Van Lear Rose" -- everything from heartache ballads and country rave-ups to story-songs and gospel -- illustrate the depth and range of her writing. These are songs that hold their own with her greatest hits, and while it's unlike anything else she's cut, this is surely one of her great albums. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Back To Top
About This Artist
Biography


Other albums by: Loretta Lynn
Loretta Lynn:  Number 1's Listen Greatest Hits Loretta Lynn
Number 1's

$6.99

Loretta Lynn:  Gold Listen Greatest Hits Loretta Lynn
Gold

$13.98 2-CD Set

Loretta Lynn:  The Christmas Collection NEW Listen Loretta Lynn
The Christmas Collection

$6.99

more
Related Artists
Glen Campbell
Patsy Cline
Brenda Lee
Barbara Mandrell
Reba McEntire
Dolly Parton
Charlie Rich
Ernest Tubb
Tanya Tucker
Conway Twitty
Kitty Wells
Loretta Lynn, Dolly Parton & Tammy Wynette
Chely Wright
more

Any reproduction, publication, further distribution, or public exhibition of materials provided at this site, in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited.
©2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Portions of content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC