Album Reviews

Lindi Ortega: Liberty

Lindi Ortega
Liberty
(Shadowbox/Soundly Music)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

The first indication that this album takes a different approach to Lindi Ortegaโ€™s existing work is the credits; they read like a movie presentation. Liberty โ€œstarsโ€ Ortega โ€œwithโ€ Steelism, โ€œfeaturingโ€ players from veteran Charlie McCoy to Skylar Wilson and โ€œintroducingโ€ the Liberty Choir. Push play and you even get a 90-second introductory instrumental with music clearly influenced by Ennio Morricone, taking us directly into the Western scenario that serves as the backdrop for these songs.

Ortegaโ€™s fifth effort is divided into three parts (โ€œInto The Dust Parts l, ll, and lllโ€) and yes itโ€™s a concept set, something sheโ€™s proud to declare. But donโ€™t let the somewhat pretentious connotations of โ€œconceptโ€ deter you โ€” hey, Willie Nelsonโ€™s Red Headed Stranger also slotted into that description โ€” as these dozen selections and a handful of shorter connecting instrumental passages unfold with filmic intent.

Ortega could hardly have found better musicians to realize her vision. Sheโ€™s primarily backed by Steelismโ€™s Spencer Cullum Jr. on pedal steel and guitarist Jeremy Fetzer, a Nashville-based duo whose own predominantly instrumental work gravitates to a widescreen style. Musically, this leans to a windswept, dusty, Spaghetti Western vibe, weighty on an atmosphere that reflects Ortegaโ€™s fondness for Quentin Tarantino flicks. Itโ€™s heavy on ballads but with just enough dark, reverbed twang and occasional trumpet and Latin strumming to keep things from getting stuck in a Mexican B movie rut.

Lyrically, it helps to have Ortegaโ€™s track-by-track notes to understand and follow the story. Even with them, the concept is a bit fuzzy but there is death, desperation, sรฉances, resurrection, and a transition from dark to light of a nameless protagonist, portions of whose philosophical journey seem to reflect that of the recently married Ortega. Thankfully, the singer-songwriterโ€™s lovely, trilling voice and bold creative outlook allows the music to work without having to refer to, or even understand, the larger overall saga. Still, some tunes like the Tex-Mex title track, the rocking resurrection of โ€œThe Comeback Kidโ€ and the ominous heartbeat-driven โ€œYou Ainโ€™t Foolinโ€™ Meโ€ stand out amidst the predominantly ballad oriented fare.

Itโ€™s a compelling, often hypnotic listen and a huge leap forward for Ortega whose previous Americana work, as impressive as it was, just didnโ€™t have the scope or imagination found in Liberty. Whether you absorb it in bite-size pieces or jump into the 51-minute deep end of the pool while reading the lyrics, this superb and challenging album can be appreciated and enjoyed on a variety of levels.

Now whereโ€™s the movie?