Album Reviews

Kelly Willis: Back Being Blue

Kelly Willis
Back Being Blue
(Thirty Tigers/The Orchard)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

Duets, in any genre, are a double-edged sword. For every act whose sound is defined by the interaction of two voicesโ€”think the Everly Brothers and Simon & Garfunkelโ€”there are as many where the individual singers lose their distinctive qualities when paired with others.

Austin based singer-songwriter Kelly Willis fell somewhat into that latter problematic territory when she released two well-received projects with husband and producer Bruce Robison. As enjoyable as both 2013 Cheaterโ€™s Game and its follow-up Our Year were, Willisโ€™ expressive voice got a little overshadowed when combined with Robisonโ€™s. She contributed a few solo tracks to those albumsโ€”her frisky version of โ€œHarper Valley P.T.A.โ€ was especially funโ€”but you couldnโ€™t help but be disappointed that Willis seemed to put her own career on hold, especially after 2007โ€™s terrific Chuck Prophet-helmed Translated From Love.ย 

After 11 years she has returned with Back Being Blue, produced by, but not featuring, Robison. Perhaps the key word is โ€œback.โ€ Itโ€™s an album that confirms her vocal talents havenโ€™t diminished and adds strong original songwritingโ€”she penned six of the 10 tracksโ€”not something she was always known for. Willis has typically been as much about pop as country, twanging up her approach to the more countrypolitan style of Rosanne Cashโ€™s hits. Willisโ€™ work in conjunction with Robison leaned to a stronger roots approach so itโ€™s particularly refreshing to hear the bittersweet, opening title ballad revert to that earlier vibe. It captures everything Willis does well: her sensitive voice expressing ache, regret and heartbreak with a subtle country influence all in service to a bluesy tune youโ€™ll sing back after one spin. She goes full country swing in borrowing a hit from the similarly styled Skeeter Davis with โ€œIโ€™m A Lover (Not A Fighter)โ€ (will anyone under 50 will get the Cassius Clay reference?), and taps the always dependable pen of Rodney Crowell for his regretful strummer โ€œWeโ€™ll Do It For Love Next Time.โ€

Itโ€™s saying plenty that Willis originals like the rollicking โ€œModern World,โ€ the lovely fiddle enhanced acoustic โ€œFoolโ€™s Paradise,โ€ and the remorseful, stripped-down weeper โ€œWhat The Heart Doesnโ€™t Know,” not only hold their own with the four covers, but are arguably stronger than them. Even though sheโ€™s most comfortable infusing pop to her songs, the charming, folksy โ€œFreewheelingโ€ feels like a decades-old country tune rather than a freshly written entry.

Even after over a decade away from the solo focus, Back Being Blue feels less like a return than a natural progression. Thatโ€™s not to knock Willisโ€™ two fine collaborations with Robison, but itโ€™s a pleasure to have her talent front and center and not sharing the spotlight.