It can be
argued that all great popular songwriting is about relationships—the bond between
friends, the seminal one between lovers and the larger connection between
society and its leaders. On Roots & Branches, the latest release from Los
Angeles-based singer/songwriter and activist Darryl Holter, he draws
inspiration from relationships of every stripe.
“The product
of age and reflection, many of the songs on Roots & Branches are upbeat
affirmations,” Holter says, “and most have universal themes like love and
regret, memory and nostalgia, hope and death.” Like his first four albums—Darryl
Holter, West Bank Gone, Crooked Hearts, and Radio Songs—Roots & Branches is
beautifully recorded and produced by the multi-talented, composer/saxophonist
and Holter family friend Ben Wendel.
The album is
divided into two distinct sections, each with its own band. The more
traditional and acoustic Roots section that opens the album and harkens back to
Holter’s days a folk features the heavyweight talents of Greg Leisz (pedal and
lap steel), Todd Sickafoose (bass), Gabe Witcher (violin, piano, guitar) and Don
Heffington (drums).
Equally
important to the success of Roots and Branches, is Holter’s relationship with
his daughter Julia Holter, who was also a part of his landmark 2016 album,
Radio Songs: Woody Guthrie in Los Angeles 1937-39. Duet partners here on
‘Magazine Street” and “No Depression,” Julia is an accomplished
singer/songwriter who has released four solo albums, the last of which, In The
Same Room, was released on Domino Records in 2017. In the same year she also
premiered her score for the 1928 silent film, The Passion of Joan of Arc.
Holter added
more depth to his compositions by bringing some extremely talented guest
vocalists including jazz singer and Snarky Puppy collaborator Becca Stevens,
singer/Broadway stage actor Shayna Steele, singer and composer/producer of the
folk opera Hadestown Anais Mitchell, New York-based bassist/singer/songwriter
Chris Morrissey, and a man who really needs no introduction, the great
singer/songwriter and record producer, Joe Henry.
A tuneful,
provocative collection that explores the intricacies of relationships both
personal and universal, Darryl Holter’s Roots & Branches, points this
vital, opinionated, historically aware artist in exciting new directions,
hinting at the next chapter for this social activist and folk singer who loves
his relationship with making music, that starts in time honored fashion, as he
says in the liner notes, with “a guitar, a chord progression and a handful of
lyrics.”
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