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Tom Russell: An Authentic American Treasure Written by Terry Roland Imagine if over the last century all of
the great American literature went undiscovered, floundering in obscurity.
Imagine how America would be today without the insights of Steinbeck, O'Conner,
Faulkner, or Hemingway to portray and describe its character and its realities?
It may well be argued that this is exactly what has happened to the American
singer-songwriter. With perhaps one exception (and his initials are BD)
some of the greatest creative minds have gone
Russell's music, his art, and his life
are rooted deep in the heart of the real American experience that emerge
from his songs and stories. Be it his fondness for tragic American biographies
(Mickey Mantle), epic stories ("Gallo del Cielo"), or satiric political
statements ("Who's Gonna Build the Wall"), Russell's insights and love
for the American landscape and history shine through. The songs themselves
are little pieces of life in full dimensions . In his career, Russell never
succumbs to the self-reflective, self-absorbed temptations and traps that
taunt many singer-songwriters of his generation. His songs are always outside
of himself. He is the author and the visionary; his medium is the place
where the songs become our camera lens into another life. The tales are
so colorfully vivid and close to the earth; if they're not true, the listener
sometimes wishes they were. These are stories of the American West, of
a man's memories of his lover and their Navajo rug, of desperate immigrants
from south of the border, of the undersides of a city as seen through the
poetic visions
Both in concert and in the studio, Russell
brings these images and visions alive - like walking through an exhibit
of Andrew Wyeth or Ansel Adams. Russell's work is not only about songs.
He also has a great interest in American literature (on his website he
lists Graham Greene as his current favorite author). He paints in his own
unique southwestern style with a Woody Guthrie earthiness. He has also
written a detective novel and even published a book of letters with
Russell draws from his influences and has
also deepened the songwriter's vision and storytelling as a medium. In
1999, he recorded a landmark CD some have called a "folk opera." Titled
The Man From Who Knows Where, it is an episodic story brought together
in song about the generations of his family, spanning back to his great
grandfather in Norway. He recorded the CD near his ancestor's birthplace.
The follow-up to this CD is Hotwalker, based on his
If having a distinctive, visionary songwriting career is not enough, Russell had some fun putting together a U.S. to Canada music train tour complete with concerts and workshops. Russell also completed a 2005 documentary on this project of love called Hearts on the Line. The year 2007 found Russell weighing in
on the immigration question. A native of Los Angeles, he now lives on what
he calls a three-acre "badland" farm near the border of El Paso and Juarez.
Over the last few years the government has discussed building a wall to
help keep illegal immigration at a minimum. In response to this, Russell
wrote a song called "Who's Gonna Build Your Wall?" The songs asks if all
the illegals go home, who will build the wall to keep them out? This song
can be found on the 2007 release, The Wounded Heart of America.
Along with "Wall," the CD is a unique compilation of artists Russell
In the long run, perhaps the stories that must be told about a passing and soon forgotten America are best left covered in independent works like those of Tom Russell. There may come a time in the future when generations will wonder whether America in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries were about more than homogenized pop music, easy psychology, shallow new age religions, and corrupt politicians. As is the case today, when we listen to an artist like Tom Russell, they will find the true heartland of a wounded and weathered, but always hopeful America. In 2008, independent label Hightone released a career-spanning anthology CD called Veteran's Day that helps to summarize his own visionary pilgrim's progress up to now. But at age 55, he still has a long way to go, with many more songs to write and more stories to tell. To read more about Tom Russell go to:http://www.tomrussell.com Terry Roland
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