"Living with the Law" by Chris Whitley (1991)
He had me two lines into the opening that bares the CD’s
name:
Brother runnin’ powder
money, daddy’s somewhere on a drunk.
In the hours after
washing, I do my dreamin’ with a gun.
I had never heard anything quite like this lyrical poetry.
Add to this a voice that was so touching and genuine you had to listen and
resonator guitar work could make a grown man cry. I was thoroughly entranced
from beginning to end of the first listen.
So I listened to it all again. And again. And, you get the
idea. I couldn’t pull myself away from “Law.” I must have listened to it in its
entirety at least 30 times within the first week I purchased it. In fact there
is no need to break it down, track by track. It is a work that one should
listen to in full.
“Law” is beautiful,
haunting, even eloquently dirty at times. Each song is a work of art and
demands full attention, which I continue to be happy to give. The lyrics still
leave me shaken and awed. The guitar playing is crude, yet complex. By the time
he rattled off “Phone Call from Leavenworth” he had re-invented the blues. This
was the closest genre I could use to describe his songs whenever I tried to
explain to friends why they had to hear him. Usually, I would simply mutter,
“It’s not quite like anything happening right now. You just have to listen.” There
was definitely something going on with this soul that set him apart from any of
his contemporaries, assuming he had any.
Daniel Lanois, who had previously produced U2 and had released
his own, somewhat similar sounding “Acadie” CD, was my connection to Chris
Whitley. Impressed with Lanois’ work, I was intrigued by this artist he
felt compelled to produce--a young and unproven talent. So I bought Chris
Whitley’s CD with warm anticipation. In
hindsight, I’m not sure whether to be thankful or bitter. This work has had a significant impact on my musical tastes, as well as on my emotional life
at some level.
So struck by this effort, I followed Chris Whitley’s career
closely. I made it a point to see him whenever he came to Pittsburgh and was
honored to have spent a good deal of time talking with him about a wide variety
of topics—even raising our children—on a number of occasions. Funny, but my
wife was actually a bit intimidated by his stage presence and passed on joining
me in my first meeting with him. I road the waves of change that each new CD
represented, and I watched sorrowfully as he began to lose more and more of his
audience. His decline, in terms of both acceptance and health were so sad to
watch, and when I heard a snippet of “Law” being used as introduction to a late
night, bedside radio news story announcing his death at the age of 45, I cried
myself to sleep.
“Living with the Law” is a testament to Chris Whitley’s
genius (a word thrown around way too easily). It is a CD I still find myself
gravitating to regularly, just to remind myself how inspirational music can be.
Ironically, Chris at one time had said that “Law” was one of his least
favorites, due to the expectations for commercial success it set and that he
fought to distance himself from ever after. I would hope Chris would find some
solace in the knowledge that there is someone still around who considers this
CD not only his best, but the most impactful I’ve ever heard. And it is my
favorite of all time.

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