Joe Henry – The Gospel According to Water (2019)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 53:53 minutes | 562 MB | Genre: Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © earMUSIC
Beloved singer/songwriter and Grammy winning producer Joe Henry has confirmed the release of his thirteenth album “Invisible Hour”. The album follows a busy period for Henry who produced songs for Bonnie Raitt’s Grammy-winning 2012 album “Slipstream” (including covers of two of his own), and produced Billy Bragg’s acclaimed 2013 album “Tooth & Nail”. Henry also produced albums for Rodney Crowell and Mary Karr, Natalie Duncan, Hugh Laurie and Over the Rhine. In 2013 Henry released “Furious Cool”, his much-praised book about Richard Pryor’s life and work, co-written with his brother, David Henry.
The album is called The Gospel According To Water. It was recorded over two days this past June, and fairly by accident, when I thought I was merely making demos of thirteen new songs ahead of forgetting them––all but two written between Valentine’s and Father’s Day; all having flowered from the black earth of recent experience––namely a cancer diagnosis late last fall that left me reeling—though, as well, set into motion many blessings and positive shifts in my life, as well as an unprecedented songwriting flurry.
With only a handful of friends playing in support, I entered the studio and tore through these songs with determination and abandon, then went home. I had let nothing clutter or distract me from the essential and true heart of these songs; and upon waking the morning after, I listened and understood that something had transpired that was more than I’d bargained for; that the songs as articulated had sparked an ember that somehow remained bright and alive before me, moving beyond my expectations.
I unexpectedly heard the songs as complete, and vividly so; and knew that the casual circumstances had not limited my expression but in fact liberated me from the cloying aim for posterity that can make weighty any session—and landed me instead in a place both unencumbered by the past and unattached to futures.
Though they have all grown out of darkness, I don’t believe any of these songs themselves to be “dark” in nature, nor about the circumstance that promoted their discovery. In them, I hear deep gratitude, and a compassion toward self that I don’t always possess; an optimism I did not know I’d allowed to flourish.
These recordings are raw and wirey and spare because the songs insisted they be. But I believe them to be as wholly realized––as “produced”––as anything I’ve touched, as well as being deeply and fundamentally romantic: in love with life, even when that life founders and threatens to disappear; lustfully aglow, not in spite of the storm but because of one.
Come November, then, I will hand this all over—while the sky is bright, and leaves are still turning and descending––the days listing as they grow brisk and shorter. (Joe Henry)
Tracklist:
1. Joe Henry – Famine Walk (04:58)
2. Joe Henry – The Gospel According to Water (06:10)
3. Joe Henry – Mule (03:43)
4. Joe Henry – Orson Welles (05:43)
5. Joe Henry – Green of the Afternoon (04:17)
6. Joe Henry – In Time for Tomorrow (03:41)
7. Joe Henry – The Fact of Love (04:30)
8. Joe Henry – Book of Common Prayer (03:30)
9. Joe Henry – Bloom (03:38)
10. Joe Henry – Gates of Prayer Cemetery #2 (02:50)
11. Joe Henry – Salt and Sugar (04:47)
12. Joe Henry – General Tzu Names the Planets for His Children (03:12)
13. Joe Henry – Choir Boy (02:48)