| An interesting idea, given the talented family tree of the McGarrigle 
        Sisters: Gather the family together (including Kate's ex-husband Loudon 
        Wainwright) and record a CD as they play the family piano and sing traditional 
        folk tunes, originals, and old pop standards. Add in some friends (Emmylou 
        Harris turning in a stirring vocal on "Skip Rope Song"), Linda 
        Ronstadt, and Chaim Tannenbaum, and the end result is a pleasant yet somewhat 
        mediocre CD. But even a mediocre release from this family has several 
        redeeming qualities. Kate and Anna's harmonies have never sounded tighter, 
        and the choice of using Joe Boyd as producer (he produced their first 
        two albums) was a good one, as he seems able to highlight their vocals 
        and harmonies. There are some truly amazing songs as well, especially 
        when they tackle pure, traditional folk tunes. Loudon Wainwright's "Schooldays," 
        the opening track, is an early highlight, featuring great vocals and a 
        great tune. The traditional folk song "Dig My Grave," featuring 
        Chaim Tannenbaum, is chilling, and Anna's version of her own "Cool 
        River" is incredibly moving -- all beautiful songs. The problem with 
        this album is that there are no new songs, which is a real shame since 
        this is the follow-up to 1996's brilliant Matapedia. This may be a small 
        complaint, as the songs all mean something to the family, as evidenced 
        in the notes in the package. Overall, however, a good album, but not the 
        best release from the McGarrigles.  (by Aaron Badgley , All 
        Music Guide) | 
   
    |  Attempting to recapture the spontaneous informality of their childhood 
        home in Saint-Sauveur-des-Monts, Quebec, the McGarrigles surrounded themselves 
        with siblings, children, ex-husbands, and longtime musical friends to 
        create this 21-song document that not only revisits the significant stops 
        in their 22-year recording career ("Talk to Me of Mendocino") 
        but also stretches to cover songs dear and familiar to their family, from 
        the works of Cole Porter and Irving Berlin to Sonny James's 1956 pop confection 
        of teen innocence, "Young Love." This family songbook reaches 
        far into the past for traditional folk tunes like "Dig My Grave" 
        (done in a stunning a cappella version) and the piano-sweet "Gentle 
        Annie" by Stephen Foster, as well as sampling old French radio hits 
        like the wistful, accordion-flecked "Bon Voyage" and even a 
        smoking Cajun version of D.G. Menard's "La Porte en Amiere." If that weren't enough of a musical spread, the McGarrigles also accompany 
        their children, Martha and Rufus Wainwright and Silvan and Lily Lanken, 
        on new, next-generational songs of their own. The musical cast of this 
        family and friends reunion recording also includes sister Jane McGarrigle; 
        Kate's ex-husband Louden Wainwright III; Anna's current husband Dane Lanken; 
        longtime collaborator, tourmate (and philosophy professor) Chaim Tennenbaum; 
        musical friends and interpreters Joel Zifkin, Michel Papin, Linda Ronstadt, 
        and Emmylou Harris; and producer Joe Boyd and engineer John Wood, the 
        two who created their first album (Kate and Anna McGarrigle, Warner Brothers 
        BS 2862) in 1976. Even Randy Saharuni, the photographer and record jacket 
        artist for the early McGarrigle albums, is on hand to design and illustrate 
        this effort! The result is a homespun jewel that reflects feelings of reassurance, 
        reconciliation, and gentle nostalgia while sparkling with the intuitive--and 
        at times idiosyncratic--vocal interplay that has characterized the McGarrigles 
        throughout their performing career. At poignant moments, the intertwining 
        of these distinctive voices says it all--the McGarrigle-Wainwright foursome 
        who, until now, had "never sat down to a Christmas turkey together 
        let alone sing a song," come together on Irving Berlin's "What'll 
        I Do," a song the McGarrigles had chosen and sung at their mother's 
        funeral in 1994; or Kate and Anna's version, with Linda Ronstadt, of Stephen 
        Foster's "Gentle Annie," a song that was their father's particular 
        favorite, and that father and daughters harmonized to around the piano 
        as they were growing up; or the three sets of family duets that weave 
        through the sexually mischievous "Schooldays," a song penned 
        by Louden Wainwright III, and which first appeared as the leadoff cut 
        of his first album (Louden Wainwright III, Atlantic SD 8260) in 1970. Stellar cuts abound, from the aforementioned tunes to a wonderful reprise 
        of Jesse Winchester's classic "Skip Rope Song" (with Emmylou 
        Harris providing just enough weary vocal rasp to connect this haunting 
        ballad to its Appalachian roots), and Anna and Audrey Bean's stately and 
        regret-filled "Cool River," which producer Joe Boyd had first 
        included on Maria Muldaur's second album, Waitress in a Donut Shop (Warner 
        Bros. MS 2138) in 1974 (with McGarrigles on backing vocals and piano--a 
        performance that would lead to their own contract with Warners and their 
        first album, released eighteen months later). Sister Jane remembers that first recording experience over two decades 
        ago:  "I was struggling through twenty-seven takes of the organ part 
        of "Heart Like A Wheel" and finishing off the bass line down 
        on my knees playing the Hammond B3 pedals with my hands. Joe Boyd was 
        down on the floor with me, giving me moral support." With the group busking that went on during the recording of "Baltimore 
        Fire" for the current album--not to mention the major partying allegedly 
        involved in Rufus Wainwright's "Heartburn"--it's clear that, 
        along with a deep love of tradition, the spirit of oblique innovation 
        and mischievous fun is still very much alive and a part of the McGarrigle 
        family and their music. As engineer John Wood remarked upon his reunion 
        with this musical family for the current album, "It's nice to see 
        that everyone has held up so well." Indeed it is. And indeed, they 
        have! (George H. Lewis, University of the Pacific) |