March 21 street date. Lonnie Holley's life of survival and endurance is one that required - and no doubt still requires - a kind of invention. An invention that is also rich and present in Holley's songs, which are full and immersive on "Tonky", an album that begins with its longest song, a nine minute, exhaustive marathon of a tune called "Seeds", which begins with a single sparse sound and then expands. Chants, faint keys, strings, and atop it all, Holley's voice, not singing, but speaking plainly about working the earth when he was young, the violence he endured in the process of it all, going to bed bloodied and in pain from beatings. "Seeds" not only sets the tone for an album that revolves around rebirth, renewal, and the limits of hope and faith, but it highlights what Holley's greatest strength as a musician is - a commitment to abundance, and generosity. He is an incredibly gifted storyteller with a commitment to the oral tradition, such that many listeners would be entirely content sitting at the feet of a Lonnie Holley record and turning an ear to his robust, expansive storytelling. But "Tonky" is an album as expansive in sound as it is in making a place for a wide range of featured artists to come through the door of the record and feel at home, no matter how they spend the time they get on a song.
March 21 street date. Lonnie Holley's life of survival and endurance is one that required - and no doubt still requires - a kind of invention. An invention that is also rich and present in Holley's songs, which are full and immersive on "Tonky", an album that begins with its longest song, a nine minute, exhaustive marathon of a tune called "Seeds", which begins with a single sparse sound and then expands. Chants, faint keys, strings, and atop it all, Holley's voice, not singing, but speaking plainly about working the earth when he was young, the violence he endured in the process of it all, going to bed bloodied and in pain from beatings. "Seeds" not only sets the tone for an album that revolves around rebirth, renewal, and the limits of hope and faith, but it highlights what Holley's greatest strength as a musician is - a commitment to abundance, and generosity. He is an incredibly gifted storyteller with a commitment to the oral tradition, such that many listeners would be entirely content sitting at the feet of a Lonnie Holley record and turning an ear to his robust, expansive storytelling. But "Tonky" is an album as expansive in sound as it is in making a place for a wide range of featured artists to come through the door of the record and feel at home, no matter how they spend the time they get on a song.
March 21 street date. Lonnie Holley's life of survival and endurance is one that required - and no doubt still requires - a kind of invention. An invention that is also rich and present in Holley's songs, which are full and immersive on "Tonky", an album that begins with its longest song, a nine minute, exhaustive marathon of a tune called "Seeds", which begins with a single sparse sound and then expands. Chants, faint keys, strings, and atop it all, Holley's voice, not singing, but speaking plainly about working the earth when he was young, the violence he endured in the process of it all, going to bed bloodied and in pain from beatings. "Seeds" not only sets the tone for an album that revolves around rebirth, renewal, and the limits of hope and faith, but it highlights what Holley's greatest strength as a musician is - a commitment to abundance, and generosity. He is an incredibly gifted storyteller with a commitment to the oral tradition, such that many listeners would be entirely content sitting at the feet of a Lonnie Holley record and turning an ear to his robust, expansive storytelling. But "Tonky" is an album as expansive in sound as it is in making a place for a wide range of featured artists to come through the door of the record and feel at home, no matter how they spend the time they get on a song.