Bill Staines, whose 1984 live album,
Bridges, was reissued by Red House Records in 1989 and who released a children's collection,
The Happy Wanderer, on the Minnesota-based folk independent label earlier in 1993, here completes his transfer from Rounder Records' Philo label by releasing
Going to the West, his next regular studio album, on Red House. He is credited for the collection's concept, which is encapsulated in the title, also a traditional song that leads it off. Between that rollicking tune, which recounts the singer's decision to journey, even in the face of his wife's opposition, and the closing track, a cover of
Tim Hardin's "Black Sheep Boy" (in which the singer returns home from the West),
Staines traces themes of travel, romantic displacement, and memory, mixing his own compositions, new and old, with those of others. His style is more suggestive than specific, his points often cloaked in nature imagery, such as in "'Neath the Moon and the Morning Star," a memory of lost love. In a warm, reassuring voice that recalls
Burl Ives, but is more reserved,
Staines celebrates a friendly greasy spoon ("Buffy's Quality Cafe"), shares with duet partner Melissa Javors a couple's devotion to their child ("Child of Mine"), apparently despite his wanderlust, and turns in an anthemic, if somewhat abstract, statement of encouragement in "Crossing the Water," which follows a re-recording of his '70s favorite "River." His style is always stately and deferential, and his lyrics usually couched in poetic turns of phrase, although "Distances and Miles" makes explicit the sense of missing love due to the demands of travel. ~ William Ruhlmann