has written tales about romantic incongruities on albums like
Lone Star State of Mind, Little Love Affairs and
Late Night Grande Hotel. Vocally, though, she often does disservice to her own work. With its trademark reedy twang, Griffith's voice can weigh itself down with a preciousness that falls emotionally flat.
Although she doesn't do a complete about-face, Other Voices, Other Rooms presents a palatable alternative direction for Griffith. Her fragile playacting is not so much a liability on this album but a reverential nod to old friends. Lassoing an all-star cast of singers and musicians Harris, Arlo Guthrie, Guy Clark, Chet Atkins, Carolyn Hester, John Prine, Indigo Girls, John Gorka and even Dylan himself Griffith and producer Jim Rooney assume their roles as archivists with efficiency and warmth.
Whether childlike and transcendent on Frank Christian's "Three Flights Up" or cheerfully smartass with Guy Clark on Woody Guthrie's "Do Re Mi," Griffith takes inordinate care with each track as if restoring a worn masterpiece. Recorded in Nashville, Los Angeles and Dublin, Other Voices resonates with layer upon layer of full-bodied acoustic arrangements. There are lovely surprises Griffith's pairing with Arlo Guthrie on Townes Van Zandt's "Tecumseh Valley" and a luminous duet with Iris DeMent on Cook and Roland's 116-year-old lament "Are You Tired of Me Darling" are marvels of spare grandeur. Sadly, her cover of Dylan's "Boots of Spanish Leather" pales next to previous covers, not to mention the original.
Ending with a gimmicky but goodnatured throwaway of "Wimoweh," Other Voices, Other Rooms comes full circle for Griffith and her friends. These days on the pop charts the songwriter often seems a marginal figure, quietly following the footprints of a perfectly coiffed artist and a producer and maybe a remixer, too. For songwriters like Nanci Griffith and her cronies, the lyric is still as mighty as the groove or the guitar riff. And to seek out mislaid words and breathe new possibilities into them, as Griffith has done on Other Voices, Other Rooms, is a sublimely generous gesture. (RS 654)
KARA MANNING