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Karen Dalton – In My Own Time LP

NEW. SEALED.

Recent reissue.

Light in the Attic Records

In My Own Time is the second and last album the mercurial singer Karen Dalton ever cut. Following It s So Hard to Tell Who s Going to Love You the Best, producers Michael Lang and Harvey Brooks (Dalton s longtime friend and the bassist on both her records) did something decidedly different on In My Own Time (titled after the slow process of getting the album done — in Dalton s relaxed and idiosyncratic manner of recording), and the result is a more polished effort than her cozy, somewhat more raw debut. This time out, Dalton had no trouble doing multiple takes, though the one chosen wasn t always the most flawless, but the most honest in terms of the song and its feel. The album was recorded at Bearsville up in Woodstock, and the session players were a decidedly more professional bunch than her Tinker Street Cafe friends who had appeared on her first effort. Amos Garrett is here, as is Bill Keith on steel, pianist John Simon, guitarist John Hall, pianist Richard Bell, and others, including a star horn section that Brooks added later. If Lang was listed as producer, it was Brooks who acted as the session boss, which included a lot of caretaking when it came to Dalton — who began recording in a more frail condition than usual since she was recovering from an illness.
In My Own Time is the better of her two offerings in so many ways, not the least of which is the depth she is willing to go inside a song to draw its meaning out, even if it means her own voice cracks in the process. The material is choice, beginning with Dino Valente s gorgeous Something on Your Mind. Brooks rumbling single-note bassline opens it with a throb, joined by a simple timekeeping snare, pedal steel, and electric guitars. When Dalton opens her mouth and sings Yesterday Anyway you made it was just fine Saw you turn your days into nighttime Didn t you know You can t make it without ever even trying And something s on your mind…, a fiddle enters and the world just stops. The Billie Holiday comparisons fall by the wayside and Dalton emerges as a singer as true and impure as Nina Simone (yet sounds nothing like her), an artist who changed the way we hear music. The band begins to close in around her, and Dalton just goes right into the middle and comes out above it all. She turns the song inside herself, which is to say she turns it inside all of us and its meaning is in the sound of her voice, as if revelation were something of an everyday occurrence if we could only grasp its small truth for what it weighs.
When the album moves immediately into Lewis and Wright s When a Man Loves a Woman, Dalton reveals the other side of Percy Sledge s version. This woman who was so uncaged and outside the world that she died homeless on the streets of New York in the 1990s was already declaring the value of loving someone even if that someone couldn t return the love as profoundly — which doesn t mean it isn t appreciated in the depths of the Beloved s being. Dalton sings the song as if wishing that she herself could accept such a love. Her voice slips off the key register a couple of times, but she slides into her own, which is one of the hidden places in the tune that one didn t even know existed. The layered horns don t begin to affect her vocal; they just move it inside further. And the woman could sing the blues in a way that only Bob Dylan could, from the skeletal framework of the tune toward the truth that a blues song could convey — just check her reading of Paul Butterfield s In My Own Dream, with some gorgeous steel playing by Keith. Her version of Holland-Dozier-Holland s How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You) has her singing completely outside the time and beat of the tune; floating through the tune s middle, she glides, slips, and slides like a jazz singer in and around its changes.
Another standout is Richard Man

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