Pretty Little Stranger is
Joan Osborne's Vanguard Records debut; it is also her country and Americana record. She's cut soul and R&B, she's sung with
Stevie Wonder,
the Funk Brothers,
the Grateful Dead and Phil Lesh & Friends, fronted
the Holmes Brothers (and she's produced their finest record to date), had one of the hugest hits of the '90s (that has been a millstone around her neck ever since), and just dug into just about every area of American music. Country, given its steady high profile popularity in the current consciousness, seems like a logical step.
Pretty Little Stranger was produced by veteran and Grammy winner
Steve Buckingham. The song selection is terrific.
Osborne wrote six of the album's songs, and she covers
Kris Kristofferson's "Please Don't Tell Me How the Story Ends,"
Jerry Garcia and
Robert Hunter's "Brokedown Palace,"
Patty Griffin's "What You Are,"
Beth Nielsen Chapman's and
Harlan Howard's "Time Won't Tell," the
Red Lane/
Larry Henley number "'Til I Get It Right," and
Rodney Crowell's "When the Blue Hour Comes," (co-written with
Roy Orbison and
Will Jennings;
Crowell guests on the track as a harmony vocalist). Other guests include
Sonny Landreth,
Alison Krauss, and
Vince Gill. Those are the particulars.
The laid-back approach
Osborne takes on this set is radical, a shock to the system even. With that big, ringing, soulful, bluesy voice, she's chosen understatement in the face of the great trend in modern country toward female singers who express themselves in that way -- check
Jennifer Nettles of
Sugarland,
Karen Fairchild of
Little Big Town,
Gretchen Wilson, and
Danielle Peck to name four.
Osborne's instrument is a natural for the music, in theory at least. The record is not tailor-made for the CMT or GAC channels perhaps, or even country radio for that matter, but it sounds like there is another theory at work here.
Osborne's showcasing her own songs on this record. Just as the late
Lowell George's
Thanks I'll Eat It Here was a singer's record,
Osborne's
Pretty Little Stranger is a songwriter's record. It's true that she may be too subtle in her approach on songs like the
Griffin,
Crowell, and
Chapman/
Howard cuts. She does a fine job of re-reading the
Garcia-
Hunter number because "Brokedown Palace" should have been a "real" country song in the first place. Her version of
Kristofferson's classic "Please Don't Tell Me How the Story Ends" has little of
Brenda Lee's drama or
Rita Coolidge's deadpan grace. What it does possess, however, is the matter-of-fact hangdog directness that the songwriter intended.
While it remains to be seen what Nashville will do with
Osborne's record, it hardly matters. The production techniques used by
Buckingham are for posterity; in ten years,
Pretty Little Stranger will sound as contemporary as it does right now.
Osborne's less aggressive approach suits the material very well, even if there is less distinction between some of the songs than there has been on her previous recordings. There is one number that does dig into the singer and songwriter's garden of roots and branches, and that's the slippery "Who Decided." Its electric piano, backbeat strolling guitar, and big snare underscore
Osborne's funky, soul strutting voice. Even if the refrain is closer to contemporary Nashville, the tune itself is gritty; bluesed-out and utterly real. She swings and swaggers in all the right places. When the Hammond B-3 kicks in, it's easy to hear
Osborne's R&B roots shining through in the sultry darkness and the brokenness in the grain of her voice. This is the voice of want, pain and thwarted desire. She follows it up with the glorious "Holy Waters," a pure country song that brings her into the terrain of true greatness as a gifted songwriter. Ultimately,
Pretty Little Stranger is very good indeed; it is still not the record this gifted vocalist and songwriter could make, but it's solid, bittersweet, and crafty. It's a winner that keeps its best secret for last: that most of the best songs on this little platter are
Osborne's. ~ Thom Jurek