Dirty
Linen, USA (Cold November)
This is smooth British Columbia
bluegrass and more from a fine Vancouver fiddler and singer who's also a
longtime member of The Paperboys. Shannon Saunders is a smokey-voiced singer
with a Norah Jones-like depth in her voice, and her songwriting and fiddling
draw from country, gospel, and Celtic sources as well as traditional bluegrass
roots. There's plenty of down-home fiddle, banjo, and high harmonies on this
disk, like on the travelling song "See You in the Morning" and
"San Juan Worm", a classic breakdown featuring Splinters banjo player
Cam Salay, plus some different sounds too, like the traditional "Dark
Hollow" arranged as a midtempo shuffle with slide guitar, or the slow,
meditative fiddle tune "Bell Housing". Don't worry about getting
splinters in your fingers; Cold November is a disk that fans of modern
bluegrass will want to grab.
(TN) Dirty Linen 2004
Maverick,
UK (Cold November)
Canada's Shannon
Saunders &
The Splinters have recently released their second CD COLD NOVEMBER
(SAS20042) Listening to Shannon and her band is a
refreshing experience. It is so good to
see an artist make a record with her own band instead of
bringing in hired
guns.
Shannon plays fiddle, upright bass, organ, accordion and ukulele and is joined
by Steve Mitchell on lead and rythm guitar, drummer Ed Sewell, master picker
Cam Salay on banjo, Steve Dawson on Weissenborn and slide guitar and Brad
Gillard on bass. Put all this together and you've got one good kickin' country
band. Put beautiful strawberry blond Shannon out front with her beautiful voice,
multi-instrumental skills and this just plain works.
In style it ranges from driving bluegrass instrumentals (I-Ninety, Bell
Housing) to haunting lyrical ballads (I Never Walk If I Can Ride and Chestnut
Skies). Classic country, Americanna rootsy music performed by a talented group that is
worth seeking out.
Dirty Linen, USA (The Yellow Book)
Shannon Saunders in the talented fiddler from the hot Vancouver folk-rock band
The Paperboys. On this acoustic disc she returns to her roots in bluegrass with
a fast-paced collection of mostly original songs and instrumentals, adding a couple
of traditional Celtic tunes and a Gordon Lightfoot cover for variety. Aside
from fiddle on all tracks, she also overdubs some accordion, bass, and cello,
and she's joined by a backing group that includes fellow Paperboys Cam Salay on
banjo and bass and Tom Landa on guitar. The title track is a high-flying
bluegrass breakdown with some sparkling fiddle/banjo interplay, while
"Blue Slate Hills" is a dark -edged Applachian-style homecoming song.
The Irish tune "Haste to the Wedding" leads off a fleet jig medley. A
plaintive, searching minor-key gospel song called "Angel" closes the
set.
#91 - December 2000/January 2001