The new studio album from the Grammy award-winning Nitty Gritty Dirt Band is their first record of new material since 1999. Featuring "It's a New Day" and "Walkin' in the Sunshine," the band also puts a new spin on the Gra... more »m Parsons classic "She" and the Beatles classic "Get Back." The music on this album had its beginnings in the spring of 1996 when they convened for five days at Ibbyi'ses' record collection. We caught up with Norah Jones in New York City where she took some time to sit down and talk to us about the musical influences in her life--the songs she heard in the car when she was a kid, the importance of Ray Charles, and why she loves the sound of Levon Helm's voice.« less
The new studio album from the Grammy award-winning Nitty Gritty Dirt Band is their first record of new material since 1999. Featuring "It's a New Day" and "Walkin' in the Sunshine," the band also puts a new spin on the Gram Parsons classic "She" and the Beatles classic "Get Back." The music on this album had its beginnings in the spring of 1996 when they convened for five days at Ibbyi'ses' record collection. We caught up with Norah Jones in New York City where she took some time to sit down and talk to us about the musical influences in her life--the songs she heard in the car when she was a kid, the importance of Ray Charles, and why she loves the sound of Levon Helm's voice.
Tom A. (CTA4him) from ANDERSON, SC Reviewed on 10/1/2014...
They consistently put out good music and this one does not disappoint either. Love their cover of the Beatles tune "get back". Tom A.
CD Reviews
Their best in years!
Mark Cloud | Murrieta, CA USA | 10/21/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"It's great to see The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band back on form. Not that their records over the last decade haven't been good...they have, and I enjoy them very, very much. But they always seemed a bit too "mainstream" to be ranked amongst the band's best work. I suspect it was due to major label interference preventing the genre hopping that made their music so amazing (something I strongly suspect also marred the recent "Circle 3 " record).
Not so "Welcome to Woody Creek!" The NGDB is back big time. I just hope their new label is able to give this CD the promotion and distribution it so richly deserves. Not a weak cut on the record! It's wonderful to hear the group doing their own songs again, too; not to mention, Bob Carpenter finally being allowed to sing a couple again! This is a GREAT CD by a legendary band; you won't be sorry you bought it."
Just another Dirt Band album....but that's good!!!!!
Cory L. Schwent | Bloomsdale, MO United States | 10/13/2004
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Yeah, unfortunately, this is just another Nitty Gritty Dirt Band cd, nothing earthshaking. But that's not a bad thing, the Dirt Band are one of the most consistant groups in Country Music History.
The thing that really differs on this cd is the fact that Bob Carpenter gets to sing lead on more than one song. His version of "She" is very well done. And also, their version of "Get Back" is one of the few Beatles covers that stands on it's own. It does't make you forget the Beatles version, but it doesn't sound like a copied version either.
In all, I wouldn't say the music here is similar to their cd, "Acoustic" but more like "Plain Dirt Fashion" or "Dream."
There is nothing bad about this album, you won't be upset if you get it. Personally, I am a huge fan of Jeff Hanna and would prefer that he took the lead on all of the songs, but I can live with this."
"Woody Creek" Welcoming
T. Yap | Sydney, NSW, Australia | 09/21/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Prime Cuts: Walking in the Sunshine, Any Love But Our Love, Forever Don't Last
Before current stalwarts like Emerson Drive and Rushlow jumped onto the 70s-style country pop bandwagon, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band is sui genesis. Again, rousing guitars, tight knitted harmonies and West coast breezy tunes earmarked the Dirt Band's latest CD and their debut for Dualtone Records. However, recorded at Woody Creek, Colorado, where the "long horizons (are) lit by eerie dawns and dusks of pastel alpine glows," a sense of serenity and rustiness also pervades throughout the album. Sonically similar to the Dirt Band's 1994 "Acoustic," there is an acoustic underpinning to these songs. Nevertheless, still sounding utterly contemporary, the Dirt Band is the lodestar as to how country music should be done.
Opening the disc with the perky and sunny Kostas/Jeff Hanna penned "Walking in the Sunshine," Hanna with a delightful tilt in his voice sings about basking in the euphoria of falling in love. "Forever Don't Last," though a regrettable lament on the transient nature of love, careens a rousing Eagles-like sounding melody boasting some excellent guitar riffs. Even better is the superbly catchy "Any Love But Our Love," one of just two co-writes from the Dirt Band's Bob Carpenter. Carpenter's other co-write with fellow band mates Hanna and Ibbotson, is the jovial "Party on the Mountain"-a bluegrassy square dance number that wouldn't be out of place on a Patty Loveless or Dolly Parton album.
With some tender vocals up front, Gram Parsons' "She" is a stately, poised and pensive ballad in tribute to the lady of the protagonist's dreams. Also in the ballads department, "Old Time's Sake," a plangent "can-I-have-the-last-dance" number is another stand out. Exquisitely delivered with a nuance that reaches to the recesses of heartbreak, it's another testament that only a seasoned band like the Dirt Band could be capable of accomplishing.
The Berg/Kregel penned popish "It's a New Day" is the vanguard single. Marked by a poignant message of buoyant optimism in the face of the deuces of life, "It's a New Day" is lyrically acerbic. Though Matraca Berg (who also happens to be Mrs. Jeff Hanna) is a top notched writer, melodically "It's a New Day" is not strong enough to contend for the much needed (and coveted) radio air plays to be a hit. Similarly forgettable is the bluegrass cover of the Beatles' "Get Back." "Get Back," in my opinion, is too contrived and too repetitious for my liking. The album closes with an instrumental "Midnight at Woody Creek," a jamming session where it's more for the delight of the players than the listener.
The Dirt Band has had its ups and downs in their lengthy odyssey in the music business. Their numerous albums have had reflected such a ride. I must say "Welcome to Woody Creek" with its high caliber of songs marks another high point in the Band's musical journey. Though not perfect, it's a fine return to form."