She didn’t leave her short-live tenure with Trigger Hippy completely behind either, In fact that band backs her on “Meat and Potatoes,” the title for which comes from how she describes them – a “meat and potatoes rock n’ roll band.” It was written with bassist Nick Govrik, extolling the virtues of Southern style down home cooking, and loving, yet another feel good song. Here is one of the most emphatic verses – “Just ask the ghost of Miss Monroe/Be the best in the world and have nothin’ to show/Be a meal for the wolves or a rich man’s prize/Look around at the world see the hunger in their eyes/Well it comes as no surprise.” Retro sounds color “Boy Doncha Know’ as Osborne sings about the obstacles those born female must overcome. The tone changes dramatically with the sweeping ballad “Whole Wide World’ with Osborne’s immense vocal range on clear display over a Chi-Lites R&B vibe and an unequivocally hopeful message. Similarly, even in the otherwise seemingly whimsical title track, she weaves in this verse, more than likely with Charlottesville on her mind – “Well the nice young men from the rodeo/Came down to Virginia just to say helot/They brought a lot of rifles/And they brought a lot of guns/Lord they were try na have some good clean fun/Next thing you know you’re runnin’ for your life/For ten long years of trouble and strife” Done in retro pop vein, she and the band take the serious subject into rather joyous and carefree musical territory. She co-wrote “Never Get Tired (of Loving You)” with Richard Hammond and her partner Keith Cotton, who mand the synthesizer for the tune written for her teenaged daughter, as if to day her love will remain constant despite the world’s surrounding chaos. Osborne says, “Her message is ‘I’m not afraid’ and her mission is to help other people who are in the same position she was in.” Moving into an angrier mode, we get the bluesy, excoriating “Hands Off,” aimed at exploiters of people and the planet and later “That’s Was a Lie,’ which could be directed to politicians, corporate types, and/or the media – take your pick. “What’s That You Sau” tell the story of family coming from Mexico City, where her father had been kidnapped, to the U.S. It begins with the voice of Texan Ana Maria Rea, whose family emigrated to the U.S. The second track goes in a completely different direction but ultimately points to uplift. The album opens in buoyant fashion with “Take It Any Way I Can Get It,” signaling the message of re-invigoration with “I’m still survivin’/I got to be dancin’’ bolstered by the duo of background vocalists. Osborne put plenty into this one – a wide span of genres, melodic hooks, gritty grooves, and fearless lyrics. And she does just as well in recruiting background vocalists Catherine Russell, Ada Dyer, Martha Redbone and Audrey Martellis, (no more than two singers on any track) many of whom she has also worked with previously. They are guitarists Jack Petruzzelli, Nels Cline, and Andrew Carillo, keyboardist Keith Cotton, bassist Richard Hammond and drummer Aaron Comess. Given Osborne’s status, she attracts gifted musicians, several of whom appeared on her most recent project, Songs of Bob Dylan. As for the lyrics, the songs ‘are the most political I’ve ever written.” She says, “ For a lot of the record, we were going for a ‘70s AM radio vibe. Musically it’s a mix of retro and contemporary, touching on the many roots genres where Osborne has proved to be adept. It’s Osborne, one of the best and certainly most versatile singers of our time, responding to the crazy world we live in now, rife with political commentary, but designed mostly to uplift as music should do. Trouble and Strife, self-produced on her own label, is her tenth solo studio album and the first album of Joan Osborne’s original material in six years, since 2014’s Love and Hate.
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