Dolly Parton exudes such charisma and personality that it is easy to
forget just what made her a star in the first place. While Parton has
earned a place in the popular conscience through movie roles, variety
shows, and a theme park, she was able to do all those things because, very
early in her career, she established herself as an amazingly gifted
composer with a stunning voice.
Somewhere along the way, Parton got so famous that even she seemed to
forget how fantastically talented she is. While she achieved a great
deal of success and paved the way for today's crossover country stars by
performing pop material, she did so at the expense of her country roots,
and by the mid-1980s, it seemed that Parton was concentrating more on
glitzy arrangements than the songs themselves.
Having lost much of her audience and relevance, Parton rethought her
career in the late 1990s, and returned to composing and singing
traditional country on her album Hungry Again. In 1999, Parton went a step
further by releasing her first bluegrass album, The Grass Is Blue, which
won widespread critical acclaim and reestablished her as a vibrant
force in the music world.
Wisely, Parton has decided to keep the same players in tow for the
follow-up, Little Sparrow. Steve Buckingham once again produces, while
Jerry Douglas, Bryan Sutton, Stuart Duncan, Jim Mills, Barry Bales, and
Alison Krauss return as backing musicians. As on her previous effort,
Parton mixes original compositions (old and new), country and gospel
classics by other composers, and unexpected bluegrass arrangements of pop
songs. The big surprise on The Grass Is Blue was a convincing
bluegrass rendition of Billy Joel's "Travelin' Prayer". This time, Parton
reinvents Collective Soul's alternative rock hit "Shine", complete with a
lilting banjo line.
What makes Little Sparrow different from its predecessor, and in some
ways more exciting, is that it frequently goes right back to the source
of bluegrass -- Celtic music. Not only are there banjos and autoharps
on the album, but Northern Irish group Altan contributes whistles,
bouzoukis, and haunting Gaelic verse.
The album's traditional flavor is strongest, however, in the deeply
poetic and tragic lyrics of the Parton compositions "Little Sparrow",
"Mountain Angel", and "Down from Dover". All three are epic tales of love
and loss in which Parton creates a landscape littered with the broken
hearts of women who have lost everything after loving the wrong men.
Anyone who isn't touched by these songs must be brain-dead.
Few would have guessed in the days of "Islands in the Stream" and "9 to
5" that Parton would return to pure country music, and do so with such
spectacular results. Little Sparrow contains some of the most
beautiful and affecting music Parton has ever made, and the fact that she is
doing it in her fifth decade makes it all the more dazzling an
achievement.