KERRY  POLK: Hardtop Jubilee

Kerry Polk

Hardtop Jubilee

© 2004 Kerry Polk

CD IN STOCK. ORDER NOW. Will ship immediately.

Songs of the American South featuring storytelling that draws from truth and myth alike ranging from subjects of an artist's loneliness, drugs in a small town, and coming of age (stems from a strong Texas songwriting tradition)

try this

genres you will love

By Location

Recommended if you like ...

notes

"...Polk's songwriting is seamless and engaging."
Margaret Moser, The Austin Chronicle

"Having got your attention, she holds it with thoughtful songs, full of evocative, often Southern rural images, her tour de force being Jukebox '59, about the power of music."
John Conquest, 3rd Coast Music

"Kerry Polk is an incredible vocalist and songwriter. The poetry and stories found in her songs always leave me wanting to hear one more."
Joe Angel, KEOS, College Station

"I knew Kerry Polk was a gifted performer and songwriter when I first heard her perform... Kerry's 'Swing With Me,' is pure magic and, in my view, even surpasses her previous achievement [Home of the Brave]. The vocals are gorgeous, the melody is simple but beautiful, and the finger-picked guitar playing provides the perfect accompaniment."
Austin Kessler, Co-producer, Live Oak Coffeehouse Series

About Kerry Polk and Hardtop Jubilee

Musicians/Instruments: David Hamburger (Dobro, National Steel, Pedal Steel, Electric Guitar), Karen Mal (Mandolin), Mark Hallman (Drums, Electric Guitar, Harmony Vocals), Elana Fremerman (Violin), Glen Fukanaga (Stand-up Bass), Jane Gillman (Dulcimer), Catherine Berry (Harmony Vocals), Lenny Ashcraft (Bass), Michael Austin (Clarinet) and Rich Brock (Blues Harp).

Freedom, with an edge of responsibility. It's the thrill of driving a vintage car down a Mississippi Delta Highway. But it's not a convertible, it's a hardtop. With the windows down, you still feel the rain. Hardtop Jubilee is Kerry Polk's first solo CD. Kerry Polk grew up witnessing incredible change as desegregation swept through her hometown of Jackson, Mississippi. She has since found a home in Austin and a home in Texas music. She formed Polk, Barton & Towhead with John Barton in 1995 releasing their debut CD, The Way Things Are, to favorable reviews in 1997.

Now on her own, Kerry's music features stories from family experiences and asks questions perhaps we'd all like to ask. Her tales are drawn from truth and myth alike ranging from subjects of an artist's loneliness to the simple mystical moment of twilight. Wrote the Austin Chronicle, "Kerry Polk and John Barton touch on Iris Dement, Son Volt, Kelly Willis, and Bob Dylan to sculpt their own milieu of thoughtful lyrics and rustic moods."

Produced by Mark Hallman, (Eliza Gilkyson, Tom Russell, Colin Gilmore, Ani diFranco) Hardtop Jubilee is a collection of Austin singer-songwriter Kerry Polk's songs that remind us of how much the past influences the present. The writing is quintessentially southern, and truly Austin in its celebration of sweet nostalgia. Literally, Polk's song "Juke Box '59" takes you right back to the Civil Rights era in the South; and since it includes sections of his "Baby What You Want Me to Do", is a posthumous co-write of sorts with Jimmy Reed. Polk's "Swing with Me" tells the story of her great-great grandparents who met just before the Civil War, and includes an invitation to swing in the perfumed air of a mimosa tree.

The ballad "Horse in These Hills" puts the hardtop on the jubilee, telling the story of a Vietnam Vet who returned to his small-town home with a heroin addiction. "In the Twilight" features Michael Austin's beautiful, jazz-inspired clarinet solo, evocative of the Cowboy Junkies' "If I was the Woman and You Were the Man". Rootsy and flirtatious, "'65 Ford Fairlane" wanders the roads of the South in a celebration of freedom, with the reckless abandon of an 18-year-old whose dream car paves the way to a true coming of age.

Featuring David Hamburger, Glen Fukanaga, Elana Fremerman, and Karen Mal, Hardtop Jubilee is rich in melody and textured in its instrumentation, production and mix. Much like the music of John Prine, Polk's songs come through with a rare combination of grace, power, and vulnerability, and have a healthy dose of twang. She is strong and resolute in "Wheel Keeps on Turnin'", and wistful as she sings "Song to a Poet", a tribute to Townes Van Zandt.

Polk, Barton & Towhead's 1997 release, The Way Things Are, was produced by Rich Brotherton (Robert Earl Keen, Caroline Herring) and was recognized by the Austin Music Awards in six categories. Kerry's songwriting received honors at Kerrville's New Folk Competition when she represented regional performers at the Kerrville Music Festival. Recently, Kerry was named one of the top ten finalists for the 2004 Wildflower! Songwriting Competition and a finalist in Utah's 2004 Founders Title Bluegrass Festival Songwriters Showcase. She was one of twenty finalists in the 2005 South Florida Folk Festival Emerging Songwriters Showcase.

reviews

Please log in to review this album.

  • Incredibly well done, makes me homesick for good ole country dances.
    author: Les

    This cd is spectacular. I heard Kerry in Austin, bought the cd online, drove 500 miles the day after receiving it and listened to it the whole way and back. Incredibly rich meaningful music coupled with a beautiful voice.

email

Please log in to email this artist.