July 2017

Too Sad For The Public - Reviewed by Mike Regenstreif in Folk Roots/Folk Branches

Too Sad for the Public – Vol. 1 – Oysters Ice Cream Lemonade: American Folk Fantasies Written and Arranged by Dick Connette

By Mike Regenstreif

For 20 years, since the release of the first CD by Last Forever, I’ve greatly admired the work of composer/songwriter/producer Dick Connette. In Last Forever, he teamed with the late vocalist Sonya Cohen to produce several albums of completely reimagined traditional songs and original songs steeped in tradition. I continue to find great musical riches whenever I return to the Last Forever albums – which I have done often.
 
Much of the material on Vol. 1 – Oysters Ice Cream Lemonade: American Folk Fantasies Written and Arranged by Dick Connette, his new project – recorded under the group name ‘Too Sad for the Public’ – continues in the vein of Last Forever with original songs based on traditional themes and a couple of fascinating covers of pop songs. The lead vocals are in the capable hands of Suzzy Roche (four songs), Rachelle Garniez (one song), Ana Egge (two songs) and Gabriel Kahane (one song).
 
All of the vocal songs on the album are entirely praiseworthy. Perhaps my favorite, if I had to pick just one, is “Black River Falls,” sung by Suzzy. The melody and chorus are based on Karen Dalton’s version of the traditional folksong “Same Old Man,” and the verses, each of which stands on its own, are based on Michael Lesy’s book. Wisconsin Death Trap.
 
Other favorites include “Old Alabama,” sung by Ana, which takes its inspiration from several traditional songs, most notably “Old Country Rock,” a country blues first recorded by William Moore in 1928 (the group name, Too Sad for the Public, comes from a repeated line in this song); and “Orphée in Opelousas,” sung by Gabriel, Dick’s reimagination of the Orpheus legend from Greek mythology which he sets in Louisiana to a score based on traditional Cajun songs.
 
I also love what he’s done with the two covers. “He’s a Bad Boy,” sung by Suzzy, was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin in the early-1960s. As John Cohen of the New Lost City Ramblers (and Sonya Cohen’s father) pointed out to Dick, the song is a teenage variation on “Stagger Lee.”
 
“Young Loves to Love,” sung by Ana, is a medley of two early Van Morrison songs – “Brown Eyed Girl” and “Sweet Thing.” The latter song came from Astral Weeks (my second favorite Morrison album) and the arrangement is reminiscent of it – and prominently features the nylon-string guitar playing of Jay Berliner, whose playing was a key component of Astral Weeks.  
 
The other theme that runs through the album is a tribute to the late Chuck Brown, a Washington, D.C. guitarist who was known as “The Godfather of Go-Go,” a form of funk music. This is first heard in “Liberty City,” a Jaco Pastorius tune that Brown quoted in one his own tunes. Dick offers three short passages from “Liberty City” as strategic interludes during the album. Then, as the penultimate track, there is the 12-minute go-go instrumental “Chuck Baby,” a direct tribute to Brown, whose intensity never stops swirling and building.
 
While the go-go tracks might initially seem an odd coupling with the folk-inspired material, Dick Connette and the musicians of Too Sad for the Public bring it all together in a way that just seems right.
 

Dick variously plays harmonium, piano, bass and bass drum throughout the album. In addition to the singers, he is joined by a core group of five musicians – including Chaim Tannenbaum on harmonica –and 12 other contributing musicians. Dick’s arrangements are masterful from the opening notes of the first track until the end of the album.

Black River Falls Video Premiered on No Depression

No Depression

Dick Connette and Suzzy Roche Debut Striking New Video for "Black River Falls"

by Brittney McKenna

Photo by Lydia Panas.

A few weeks after the release of his new album Too Sad for the Public - Vol. 1 Oysters Ice Cream Lemonade (American Folk Fantasies), composer and producer Dick Connette has shared a video for the Suzzy Roche collaboration "Black River Falls." Visual artist Lewis Klahr created the eye-catching clip, which features a mix of found objects, photographs, and drawings, many of which were vintage store finds. 

"Working on my digital film for 'Black River Falls' was a great pleasure as I got to collage images to the music of two longterm faves—composer Dick Connette and singer Suzzy Roche," Klahr explains. "The lucidity and power of the lyrics gave me a great deal of freedom to create a visual montage that complemented and enlarged the overview of the town being described. The imagery was culled from a 1930s encyclopedia that I purchased in a highway rest stop restaurant/used bookstore on the Massachusetts turnpike way back in the early 1980s."

Connette wrote and arranged the haunting tune, which lends Roche's ethereal vocals the perfect spare backdrop and plenty of breathing room. He found inspiration for the song's lyrics in a 1973 book of photographs and anecdotes about the Wisconsin city Black River Falls.

"Most of the stories told in this song came from Michael Lesy’s Wisconsin Death Trip, which I recommend unreservedly to your attention, as well as anything else he turns his attention to," Connette explains. "The shape of the melody and the banjo/cello part I got from Karen Dalton’s version of 'Same Old Man.' I feel the same way about her as I do about Lesy."

Other vocalists on Too Sad for the Public include Ana Egge, Rachelle Garniez, and Gabriel Kahane, with guest spots from instrumentalists Rayna Gellert, Chaim Tannebaum, Erik Friedlander, Steve Elson, and Jay Berliner.

Too Sad for the Public is out now. Watch the video for "Black River Falls" HERE.