|
|
John
Gorka’s new album bridges the past and present
John Gorka, “True In Time” (Red House)
The
past is present on “True In Time.” John Gorka digs into his songwriting
archives for several tunes, including two he had lost, and the
title cut was inspired in part by a 1970s Paul Simon song. But
the topics Gorka covers — love, guitars, dogs — never really go
out of style. And as always, his material benefits from his warm
tenor, eye for detail and neat turns of phrase. Take “The Ballad
of Iris & Pearl,” a tall tale about a pioneering partnership that
supposedly influenced the Carter Family and Elvis, with the punchline
to be found in the liner notes. There’s more music history on
“Blues With a Rising Sun,” a beautiful love letter to the late
bluesman Son House. “The Body Parts Medley,” a crowd favorite
at Gorka concerts for years, answers the challenge to find a rhyme
for “calves.” Best of all is the title cut, which pairs a fetching
melody with tempo shifts. It’s so good Gorka performs it twice,
once solo and once with accompaniment. “Maybe every song comes
true in time,” he sings, bridging the past and present.
|