Let’s
linger over Thanksgiving music through this four day weekend and
before we plunge headfirst into Christmas fare. No reason or need to rush the jingle bells
and tinsel. We’ll start with
a piece by Mary Chapin Carpenter off her 2008 album Come Darkness,
Come Light: Twelve Songs of Christmas.
Chances are unless you are a hardcore fan you have not heard Thanksgiving
Song which generated almost no airplay when it came out or
since.
Carpenter
is an original and some say quirky country music/Americana
singer songwriter who is much beloved by other artists across many genres
and scored against-the-odds country hits. In the
1990s she earned five Grammy Awards, two Academy of Country Music
Awards (Top New Female Vocalist in 1990 and Top Female Vocalist
in 1992), and Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year in 1992
and’93. Despite these accolades and a
series of well-reviewed albums since then, she found herself increasing locked
out of country radio because her powerful, personal lyrics
no longer fit with narrow expectations.
Carpenter
was born on February 21, 1958 in Princeton, New Jersey, to Chapin
Carpenter Jr., a Life Magazine executive, and Mary
Bowie Robertson. She led a privileged
life living abroad with her parents in Japan from 1969 to 1971
before they moved to Washington, D.C.
She was educated in prestigious private schools. Her parents divorced when she was 16, a traumatic
event that affected her deeply.
She turned to her guitar for solace and sang folk music
by Peter, Paul & Mary, Judy Collins, and The Mamas
& The Pappas.
Shortly
after she graduated from The Taft School her father encouraged her to
sing at a bar open mic, an experience that was so stressful for
the intensely shy girl that she became physically ill. Yet she continued to perform at local open
mics and even hosted one for a while.
She
attended Brown University and graduated in 1981 with a degree in American
Civilization. Over summer breaks she
would sing at Washington clubs but had no intention to make a career in
music. When she found no interesting
work in which to use her degree, she finally decided to give music a
go. A regular on the Washington folk
scene she met and connected with guitarist John Jennings, who would
become her producer and long-time collaborator. It was Jennings who suggested she work on original
music instead of covers.
Carpenter’s
first album, Hometown Girl was produced by John Jennings
and was released in 1987. Songs from the
LP got play on public and college radio stations, but it
was not until her label Columbia began promoting her as a country
artist that she found a wider audience. Carpenter was ambivalent about being
pigeonholed. She preferred the term to be called a singer-songwriter or “slash
rocker” as in country/folk/rock. She told Rolling Stone in
1991, “I’ve never approached music from a categorization process, so to be a
casualty of it is real disconcerting to me.”
Despite
the qualms the albums State of Heart, Shooting
Straight in the Dark, Come On Come On, and Stones
in the Road produced a slew of country and cross-over hits
making her one of the top Country artists of the ‘90’s. But her background and her music didn’t
fit easily into the usual Country music scenes in Nashville, Austin,
and on the West Coast. She was
never going to be invited to join The Grand Ol’ Opry.
As
Carpenter aged and became more experimental, her album and singles sales
slacked off. She left Columbia and
started her own label Zoë giving her more creative latitude and control. Her more recent albums have come to grips
with recurring depression, aging, and complicated relationships. She has also been free to experiment
with different styles and unconventional instrumentation. While her songs seldom charted very
high, she kept and expanded a dedicated core following who
still pack her concerts.
She also has spoken out on several issues including mental health and
progressive politics. This was
rewarded in 2008 with the Americana Music Honors & Awards Spirit of
Americana/Free Speech Award. She was
also inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in
2012.
It
seems that most country artists release one or more Christmas album. Most cover the same familiar mix of popular
seasonal covers and traditional carols. Often a catchy original tune is
included in a bid for it to become a lucrative new seasonal
standard. Chapin’s album Come
Darkness, Come Light: Twelve Songs of Christmas was nothing like that. It had twelve holiday-themed songs, six of
which were written or co-written by Carpenter. The other tracks consisted
of rare traditional holiday songs. The album features collaborations
with Carpenter’s with producer John Jennings and covers of songs by Robin
and Linda Williams, Tommy Thompson, and composer John Rutter.
The opening track Once in Royal David’s City was originally
performed during the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols in Cambridge,
England, which Carpenter says she listens to every Christmas. Mark Deming of Allmusic thought
that the album focused more on the “thoughtful and spiritual side of the season”,
while Scott Sexton of About.com said that the album’s arrangement
evoked “a calming vibe that is perfect for any holiday event.”
Her
Thanksgiving Song is certainly worth a listen!
Thank you for posting “We Gather Together.” Just beautiful!
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