 |
Chuck Ragan
Gold Country
(Hot Water Music)
Ten Four
Released on September 22, 2009
Sorry, but this item is no longer available
|
For most of us the phrase Gold Country evokes memories of the 49ers who flocked to California by
boat and covered wagon in order to seek fortune for themselves and their families. Chuck Ragan’s latest
disc may be coming out a few lifetimes after the gold rush of the mid-nineteenth century, however
there’s a timeless quality to the album that embodies the hope and hard work that helped define that
period in the American consciousness. That has a lot to do with the fact that there’s nothing preconceived
about Gold Country. It’s simply the sound of a talented songwriter doing what his kind has been
doing for centuries: playing simple songs alongside a close group of friends not for hope of financial
gains, but because he literally has no other choice.
“We recorded the record at Flying Whale Studio up on this six acre mining claim called Arrowhead
Mines. It’s an old local mine that was pretty well known back in the day,” Ragan explains. “The record
is just another page in the book and another chapter in life and it’s documenting where we are in that
moment of time. Right now Gold Country is what I’ve lived for, everything I’ve worked to achieve and
hold sacred and everything I strive to get home to.” Ragan knows a thing or two about paying his dues:
since the early nineties he’s co-fronted the legendary punk act Hot Water Music and over the past few
years he’s released a string of well-received solo acoustic efforts in the spirit of fellow folk troubadours
like Steve Earle and Pete Seeger.
Produced by Ragan in Northern California and performed alongside longtime collaborators like violinist
Jon Gaunt and Hot Water Music drummer George Rebelo, Gold Country is a striking collection of
songs that show how much Ragan has progressed since his 2007 solo debut Feast Or Famine. “Even
though these songs were written in a short period of time, it’s some of the most mature music that I’ve
ever had a chance to take part in,” Ragan acknowledges, adding that he spent more time on Gold
Country than he has on any other recording in his career. “I’d say all in all I’m the most satisfied with
this release than with anything I’ve ever done.”
|