When artistic and entertainment worlds collide.


Remember the episode of Seinfeld in which George’s two worlds collide? A couple days back I was watching Property Brothers on HGTV, and the bros went to talk to the client they were remodeling a house for on that week’s show. He was at a photo studio in Nashville, taking pics of an artist of whom he is filming a documentary. He introduced the brothers to the artist, none other than Mary Gauthier. I was flabbergasted!

If you haven’t yet heard her (or even OF her), Mary was a New Orleans chef who didn’t write her first song until age 35. And not only was she 35---hard to start a musical career at that age, but also a recovering alcoholic and drug addict. If you’ve known any addicts, you know how hard it is to survive that life, and escape that world.

I like Mary a lot (in the way I like Lucinda Williams, but darker), and recommend either her 2005 Mercy Now album (her fourth, on the great Lost Highway label), or her Gurf Morlix-produced Filth & Fire from 2002. Gurf was guitarist, bandleader, and album producer for Lucinda up through and including her Car Wheels On A Gravel Road album. He not only produces F & F, but plays all kinds of instruments. Good sounding recording, too.

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Nice headsup guys. I do not listen to the radio, haven’t since about 1967. I like getting recommendations a lot. My favorite way to get good music. And here on top of that there are people like bdp24 and others that give back stories a lot of times.
On another note. I was watching pbs yesterday evening about American Indians in popular music. As bdp24 probably knows Robbie of The Band has American Indian roots, Jimi Hendrix, and many others. How their unique styles and sounds contributed to our musical landscape.

Thanks slaw, I have to get the rest of Mary's albums I don't yet have, on LP when possible. I think Mercy Now was a CD only release, but Filth & Fire may have been on LP.

Mike, Robbie Robertson's mother was Native American, his father Jewish. An unusual combination! My girlfriend and I had just entered a movie theater on Sunset Blvd. in the mid-90's, and I saw Robbie a few yards away talking to his woman companion, she about to go to the restroom, he to the concession counter. I knew he is a huge film fan, but was still startled to be breathing the same air as one of my favorite music makers.

My three other startling encounters were being face-to-face with Brian Wilson in the Tower Records on (again) Sunset Blvd., for the release of his first solo album, Levon Helm in Book Soup (across the street from Tower) at his autobiographical book signing---Ringo was also there to get his copy signed, and being about ten yards from John Lennon at The Cow Palace in 1965. I was only 15, but I realized he was indeed another human being, though a special one. By the time I worked with Emitt Rhodes and Evan Johns in the late-90's, I was very aware that artists are mere mortals, for better or worse. Now Dylan, that's a whole 'nother story ;-) .