Escondida is the actual studio debut by Texas-born
singer/songwriter Jolie Holland. While critics and music fans alike lauded
Catalpa as her "first" album, it was never actually intended for release.
Anti issued it after the volume of reviews reached fever pitch and
Holland could no longer keep up with requests for it. As such,
Escondida is a very different recording. Not as drenched in Gothic southern images and architectures,
Escondida offers an even more evocative portrait of
Holland as an American traditionalist who uses history as the framework for her new direction; she is not an
Americana songwriter. One need go no further than
"Sascha," the opener, for evidence. In beautiful early
swing vernacular, complete with self-played Piedmont style guitaristry,
Dave Mihaly's whispering snare brushes, and
Ara Anderson's trumpet loping languidly in the background,
Holland offers a love song as humid as a summer night full of stars and quiet front porches. It's startling because it is at once so classic and yet so wonderfully foreign. Her voice evoking
Billie Holiday and
Bessie Smith without imitating either, and her words coming from the heart of her own 21st century. Contrast this with
"Black Stars," which follows it. Featuring only guitars and cymbals, it's closer in feel to the material on
Catalpa, yet
Holland's voice comes from the land of the ghosts; where the spirits of
jazz singers and
blues singers jointly crooned in the streets of Old New Orleans. Likewise,
Ma Rainey might have sung the
blues line in
"Old Fashion Morphine" if she and
Tampa Red had been accompanied by
Sidney Bechet and
Kid Ory in a late-night
swing session.
Gospel,
folk, hints of early
country music, and
swing lie down together and kiss, languidly caressing one another in this blend of organic, sultry, sexy
American blues. With her eclectic band -- which includes banjo boss
Enzo Garcia on musical saw -- and lyrics that are both full of irony, pathos, and sly humor,
Holland offers listeners a loosely constructed yet deeply moving tour through her mystical and esthetic archetypes -- the popping vocal and drum jive tune that is
"Mad Tom of Bedlam"; the deep, bottom-land acoustic
blues of
"Poor Girl," that touches
Blind Willie McTell, the
Mississippi Sheiks, and
Rosetta Tharpe; the Civil War melody that lies at the heart of
"Faded Coat of Blue" -- and rewards them with a listening experience that is singular, startling, and soulful. ~ Thom Jurek