Roots music has appeared on pops concerts before, most often sung awkwardly by classical figures or pop stars. This live release by the increasingly successful
Cincinnati Pops Orchestra under conductor
John Morris Russell, however, breaks new ground. The program, as the title indicates, is centered broadly on the year 1918, when new musical currents swirled around the U.S., set in motion by the Great War. Those currents include popular songs, African American songs of various kinds, and even the string band music that was the ancestor of the bluegrass and country genres as we know them today. The orchestra teams with musicians who understand these genres, and have the talent to look beyond them and collaborate broadly. Soprano
Rhiannon Giddens, who came on the scene in the rare but fascinating genre of black string band music, vocalist
Pokey LaFarge, and bluegrass band the
Steep Canyon Rangers are well known to anyone who follows roots music, but less so either to classical or mainstream listeners. All are a great deal of fun in a variety of old songs, like
Walter Donaldson's How Ya Gonna Keep 'em Down on the Farm and
Eubie Blake's I'm Just Wild About Harry, interspersed with orchestral pieces that may be patriotic or proto-jazz influenced. All the soloists come together on the ultimate I Ain't Got Nobody (there is a bluegrass bonus track, Auden's Train, that originated with
Steve Martin and is derived from Orange Blossom Special). The musicians take some liberties with the 1918 date but do not stray too far from it, and the mix works. If there's one complaint, it's that the
Steep Canyon Rangers are less successful in
Irving Berlin's Remember than in tunes more suited to bluegrass treatment. There's also a tap dancer, nicely rendered by the orchestra's engineering team, and the energy never really flags. The arrangements, mostly by
Rob Mounsey, are also artful, showcasing the roots musicians but making enough room for the orchestra to keep things familiar for traditional pops concertgoers. This is the second
American Originals Cincinnati Pops album, and it perhaps even exceeds the successful first one. ~ James Manheim