Singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist
Marty Stuart has born the torch for historic country music since his career began. He's literally spent most of his life making and producing records and writing songs that reflect that.
Stuart's made some wildly innovative and eclectic recordings that nonetheless bear the watermark of authentic country.
Ghost Train is his first studio offering since 2005's twin concept albums
Souls' Chapel and
Badlands. His last outing was 2006's excellent
Live at the Ryman. In his wonderful liner essay,
Stuart claims that the inspiration for
Ghost Train: The Studio B Sessions occurred on August 29, 2005, in an empty train station in Philadelphia, MS after he heard the news of Hurricane Katrina's arrival in the Gulf. He went and stood on the empty tracks until he heard a northbound train, then moved and stood as close as his courage would allow and had an epiphany. The result is this program of 14 songs, all in the hardcore country tradition, mostly recorded in the famed
RCA Studio B in Nashville.
Stuart wrote or co-wrote 11 -- three with wife
Connie Smith, one with
Johnny Cash, and another with
Ralph Mooney, whose
"Crazy Arms" is here. The other cover is
Don Reno's classic
"Country Boy Rock & Roll." Stuart is backed by
the Superlatives -- guitarist
Kenny Vaughan, drummer
Harry Stinson, and bassist
Paul Martin -- with a host of pedal steel players. There isn't a weak track on the set, but there are some real standouts: the
Reno cut is one, as is the stomping opener and single,
"Branded." The ballad
"Drifting Apart" has harmonies worthy of the
Louvin Brothers and a pedal steel solo by
Mooney that'll make you weep.
"Hangman," co-written with
Cash, is a spooky ballad in the old-school storytelling tradition; while
Stuart does a fine job singing it, one can hear
Cash's ghost rambling through the lyrics. The country boogie of
"Ghost Train Four Oh Ten" is a punchy hillbilly rocker, while the instrumental
"Hummingbyrd" is a killer tribute to the guitar genius of both
Don Rich and
Clarence White.
"A World Without You," a duet with
Smith, is as moving and true as country ballads get.
Stuart may not sell millions of records anymore, but he can still make fine records that will stand the test of time;
Ghost Train is among the very best of them. ~ Thom Jurek