Devon Sproule's vintage dresses suggest a
Gillian Welch acolyte worshipping at the shrine of
the Carter Family. But if the 24-year-old singer/songwriter isn't exactly averse to playing that sepia-tinged trump card (witness the traditional "The Weeping Willow"), she's far too adventurous to settle for easy comparisons. That restless, eclectic spirit is what transforms
Keep Your Silver Shined into the best album of the young artist's already noteworthy career.
Sproule served notice with 2003's
Upstate Songs: she is an enormously gifted singer and songwriter, spinning out songs full of finely realized details, and singing with unrestrained playfulness and glee. If anything,
Keep Your Silver Shined ups the ante. The spare accompaniment of the previous album is replaced here by a full if idiosyncratic band consisting of upright bass, acoustic and electric guitars, pedal steel, brushed drums, and clarinet.
Sproule's formerly pensive coming-of-age songs give way on this album to joyful, woozy celebrations of love, as song after song chronicles her recent courtship and marriage to folk artist
Paul Curreri. And the New York of
Upstate Songs is here replaced by a distinctly Southern setting, as
Sproule returns to her native Virginia. Her considerable charms are best exhibited on the album's centerpiece, the marvelously languid "Dress Sharp, Play Well, Be Modest." Behind an atmospheric country-noir accompaniment that gives her plenty of room to stretch out vocally,
Sproule conjures images of a lazy summer evening in the South, a lingering conversation over rum-ginger zingers, the slow, languorous turning from friendship to something more than friendship. It's a perfectly realized moment, augmented by singing that is equal parts
Joni Mitchell folk confessional and
Victoria Williams looseness and sweet playfulness. And it's emblematic of the album as the whole.
Sproule revels in her new life, taking inventory of a hundred minor joys on the title track, turning the cabin fever lament of "Let's Go Out" into what ought to be a new jazz standard, complete with swinging
Benny Goodman clarinet solo, and transforming "Old Virginia Block" into a celebratory bluegrass stomp. It's a marvelous collection of songs and, frankly, it evokes a sense of place better than any album since
Lucinda Williams' 1999 masterpiece
Car Wheels on a Gravel Road.. Yes, alt-country and singer/songwriter fans, it's that's good. Much has been made of
Devon Sproule's youth and precocious gifts, but this kind of musical wine is rare in any vintage: sweetness and wisdom, memorable words and melodies that hallow the simplest acts of life. "Let the humidity curl your hair/And the mulberries stain your toes',"
Sproule sings on "Stop by Anytime." With an album this warm and inviting, you'll gladly take her up on the offer. ~ Andy Whitman