Now this is a surprise. Country singer and songwriter
Rebecca Lynn Howard scored a Grammy in 1997 for "Singing Softly and Tenderly," which appeared in the film The Apostle starring Robert Duvall. In 2002 she scored a number five hit on the country charts for the single, and it ended up in the Providence TV soundtrack along with the title track from her album
Forgive. In the liner notes she claims she toured for three years in support of it.
No Rules is
Howard's first album in six years and it's a jump from anything she's done in the past. For starters, it was recorded in Muscle Shoals, AL, and it appears on the independent Saguaro imprint. That said,
No Rules is a record Nashville couldn't release. It's too up-front, too raw and immediate, too spontaneous. Produced by Michael A. Curtis, these 14 songs contain ten originals and four covers. The styles showcased here jump all over the map from hardcore funk (albeit it done Muscle Shoals style) to soul, gospel, and contemporary Nashville country -- but done without the cookie-cutter sound. The highlights are considerable, and include the burning opener "Shakey Ground," which was a hit for
the Temptations and written by the team of
Jeffrey Bowen, Al Boyd, and the late
Funkadelic guitarist
Eddie Hazel! The feel of the tune is very different, but she can sing funk like nobody's business. Its production is polished, its style is gritty and immediate, and
Howard sings her ass off on top of roughhouse guitars, fat basslines, and breakbeats! Her entire vocal range (three octaves) comes into play here. Another notable cover on the set offers
Howard's sheer chutzpah: the
Dan Penn-
Chips Moman standard "Do Right Woman, Do Right Man," so closely associated with
Aretha Franklin.
Howard doesn't try to imitate that version -- wisely -- but she doesn't need to. She does this strictly old-school Southern soul style, with a rhythm section that feels like
Booker T. & the MG's. She uses restraint and lets the subtlety in the lyric direct her. Her own "New Twist on an Old Groove" is a tough, rebellious blues-rocker that reflects more of the hard soul twist in
Howard's singing than either of the aforementioned classics. The saxophone, slide guitars, roiling B-3, and backing chorus that crosses between gospel and R&B in feel don't hurt, either. Oh yes, it's such a brazenly sexual song that its heat pours through the speakers. It's the kind of sentiment that men fantasize about regarding women all the time, but by and large can't handle in relationships. Her sweaty country-rocker "Just Let It Burn" shuffles and swaggers, spits and struts its carnal truth. There are a few ballads as well, including the moving -- and largely acoustic -- shimmering soul-pop-gospel ballad "As One as Two Can Be." Its lyric and musical structure are actually perfect, but it is made nearly divine by
Howard's powerful from-the-gut delivery. It would make any man's heart melt were he its subject. This is pure pop poetry, body and soul. "I'm Over You," written with Rachel Thibodeau, would be the perfect radio single (and video) were its programmers smart enough to pay attention.
No Rules reflects the enormous leap in creative growth that is the measure of a consummate artist; it is easily
Rebecca Lynn Howard's finest, most consistent record to date. ~ Thom Jurek