At The House Of Cash (LP)

 
At The House Of Cash (LP) cover
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Chris Gantry
At The House Of Cash (LP)

[ Drag City / LP ]

Release Date: Friday 1 December 2017

This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.

At the end of 1973 Chris Gantry had in the can one of the weirdest records ever cut, on or off Music Row. A songwriter, storyteller and original Nashville outlaw, Chris started the wild new wave of young talent in town, a few years before Kristofferson, Mickey Newbury, Tony Joe White, Dan Penn and dozens more. He'd already been writing for years when, at the age of 25, his song, 'Dreams Of The Everyday Housewife', was a Billboard Pop Top 40 hit and a #3 Country record for Glen Campbell. He'd made his own records too - but so far, Chris Gantry hadn't done anything like this - and that was saying a lot.

His music was a stylistic fusion: his 1967 album debut 'Introspection' sounded a little bit folk, a little bit pop and only a little bit country, with smooth melodies and verdant string charts. However, the 60s were afoot and by the time of Chris' second LP in 1970, 'Motor Mouth', his approach had radicalized into a wide-eyed, hard-edged delivery. The critics dug it and Chris played on Johnny Cash's TV show but the next Gantry record didn't appear for five more years. Herein lies a tale: of dropping out, of a vision-quest and an exorcism of sorts and of sessions for a bunch of songs so far out from Nashville norms that it's only now they've seen release. This is the story of 'At The House Of Cash'.

High on the waves of the times, Chris had pulled apart the tropes of traditional voice-and-guitar singer-songwriting, pushing them into fevered, eclectic, entirely personal territory. He took in the scope of the freedom generation with whom he'd been riding shotgun, and turned it back out again with unhindered lyrical expressions reflecting both disillusionment and a deep sense of transformation, with deft gestures and songwriting chops nailing down the tunes.

A mood of ecstatic intoxication prevails throughout the album, whether in stark rock n roll performances or celestial ballads, with Chris's croon at times rivalling Tim Buckley's wandering vocals. Religious ripostes and lysergic lyric miniatures abound. The album didn't find a backer so Chris Gantry shrugged and moved on. He's kept on with singing and writing, doing books and plays too, appearing in the film 'Trash Humpers' and making three new records over the last few years - but 'At The House Of Cash' stands tall with its outlaw brethren from the golden age of Nashville and it is damn fine having it out in the open air with the rest of us at long last.

Tracks:

A1. Away Away
A2. Different
A3. Tear
A4. Dreaming' Of A Leaving' Train
A5. Saddest Song Ever Sung

B1. Flower Of The Mountain
B2. Hatred For Feeny
B3. Clair Oh Clair
B4. Oobabalap
B5. The Lizard
B6. See Ya Around