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DESCRIPTION
Sun Dirt Water is an album born of time and distance. The geographic
space between singer-songwriters Donna Simpson, Vikki Thorn and Josh
Cunningham, and the long hiatus since their last studio triumph, Up All
Night, created a kind of vacuum that these new songs could hardly wait
to fill.
We had more songs to choose from than we ve ever had, says Josh. We
ended up recording 21 or 22, so the hardest part by far was working out
what to leave out and what fit together, to give the fans something
that has some unity and variety and still represents where we ve come
to.
Vikki agrees. "This was by far the most difficult Waifs
album, in terms of finding cohesion with our different songwriting
styles. But for that reason I feel it's our most interesting and risky
album to date."
It's Vikki who sets the bar with the title
track. "Sun Dirt Water" is a worldly, seductive groove that meanders
between styles with insouciant authority slinky jazz, elegant country,
smoky blues and effortlessly nails what Josh calls "our finest recorded
moment to date."
"I think the recording has a really great
energy to it and the vocal is the best vocal on any Waifs record. It
really sets the tone for the album for me cause it has that great,
liberated energy and expression in it."
From the darkly
evocative storytelling of Donna's "Vermillion" and "Sad Sailor Song" to
Josh's upbeat country spiritual Eternity, this sense of liberation runs
an exquisitely loose thread through the Waifs' fifth album.
The
eerie introspection of "Love Let Me Down," the gleeful, organ-fuelled
pop of Stay, the electric riff rock of "No Such Thing As Goodbye" and
the old-time ukulele thrum of Sentimental are worlds apart
stylistically, but they spring from the same well of timeless roots
influences and an instinct for collaborative expression that only comes
with years traveling the same road.