Gone Like the Cotton, the latest release
from the Cox Family, has been a long time coming. The album was actually
recorded back in late 1997 and early 1998, with Alison Krauss producing and
Union Station contributing, and was to have been the group’s second album on
Asylum. But when the label went through various changes and upheavals at the end of the ‘90s, the Cox Family found
themselves without a deal, and the album, still only half-finished, was
unceremoniously shelved, ending up in the Warner Bros. vault at Burbank.
For both Krauss and the Cox Family themselves the situation
was clearly a frustrating one. So it’s heartening that, 17 years on, Gone Like The
Cotton is finally seeing the light of day, with the group having
headed back to the studio this past April to belatedly finish the project. In
the intervening years, the Cox Family have experienced both professional success
(notably, their contributions to the O Brother Where Art
Thou? film and soundtrack, and the Down From the
Mountain tour) and personal sorrow (a car crash that left patriarch
Willard paralysed from the waist down, and, in 2009, the death of matriarch Sue
Marie from cancer).
Such events give added poignancy to a beguiling record that
has the feel and appeal of a family album brought to life. Natives of Cotton
Valley, Louisiana, the Cox Family are steeped in the traditions of gospel,
blues and country, and unaffected naturalness, charm and authenticity are
evident in every note they sing. The beautiful soulful harmonies of siblings
Evelyn, Sidney and Suzanne are the album’s main draw, and the range of material
is impressive as the record combines pure country elements with elegant,
well-judged pop and rock flourishes. Suzanne takes the lead on the punchy,
sultry opener “Good Imitation of the Blues”, while Evelyn follows it with a
delicate, plaintive “Lost Without Your Love”.
Sidney delivers a driving, catchy “In My Eyes” that, propelled by Sonny
Landreth and Pat Bergeson’s guitar work, skirts Fleetwood Mac. Given that he’s
now unable to perform, It’s also touching to hear Willard’s contributions,
including leads on a brisk, no-nonsense take on the Louvins’ “Cash on the
Barrelhead” and the Cline brothers’ “Honky Tonk Blues”.
Evelyn’s silky lilt makes beautiful work of Kim Richey’s
“Desire”, and Suzanne turns Kevin Brandt’s “Good News” into a gently funky item. The most personal
song, though, is clearly the title track: a Sidney/Suzanne co-write that pays
touching tribute to times and forebears now lost. Throughout Krauss’s production is unfussy, sympathetic
and alert to the subtleties of the vocal and instrumental interplay
.Gone Like the Cotton isn’t precisely a lost classic, but
having it’s a warm and lovely record whose availability, however belated, is
definitely good news.
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