Nichole Wagner

Dave Rawlings Machine - "A Friend of a Friend"


The multi-talented Dave Rawlings (best known as Gillian Welch's record-producing, guitar-playing musical partner) has slipped into the front man's spotlight with his signature 1935 Epiphone Olympic and a batch of long-lost tunes from various projects.

While the Dave Rawlings Machine started as a psuedo-cover band, it quickly turned into a collective of old friends like Old Crow Medicine Show and new pals Benmont Tench, Karl Himmel and Nate Walcott (Bright Eyes), all of whom appear on A Friend of a Friend.

And though it has Dave and Gillian at the core, don't confuse with with the records put out under the "Gillian Welch" headline. Friend has the same poetic qualities but it's less sparse than say, Revival and focuses less on the duo in favor of highlighting the strengths of the supporting cast.

With Old Crow's strings, songs like "To Be Young (Is To Be Sad, Is To Be High)" (written with Ryan Adams) and "It's Too Easy" are ready for a jamboree.

Invoking memories of the Great Depression are "I Hear Them All" (also on OCMS' Big Iron World, Dave's version is more restrained and reflective, almost Woody Guthrie-esque in the delivery) and "How's About You."

"Sweet Tooth", with its gently intertwined vocals and use of the familiar "Salty Dog" melody, is as addictive as the sugar in the song.

Mixed in with the seven originals are two covers: a medley of Conor Oberst's "Method Acting" and Neil Young's "Cortez the Killer" and Jesse Fuller's lighthearted "Monkey and the Engineer" which fulfills the folk music "train song" requirement.

Dave and the rest of the Machine will be taking the record on tour starting Nov. 28 in Athens, Ga.

Originally posted on Uncommon Music

Views: 31

Tags: cd review, dave rawlings machine, david rawlings, gillian welch

Easy Ed Comment by Easy Ed on November 21, 2009 at 8:28am
I'd just finished listening to this again when I saw your post here. Since I've never seen Dave and Gillian live and only knew their work from her albums and other songs that have surfaced on a few tributes over the years, my expectations were....well, I don't know. Thought it could be a thinly released Gillian release with the guitar mixed up front or at best maybe some duets. But I had little idea beyond his always tasty guitar work that Dave could produce what can easily be considered one of the finest Americana releases of recent memory. You know that pair of jeans you've had for a few years...the faded ones that fit you great and feel soft and comfortable when you slide them up your legs? This is the musical equivalent.

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Created by No Depression Feb 17, 2009 at 9:06pm. Last updated by Kyla Fairchild Jul 6, 2011.