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Album Review

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*** 1/2 Freakwater, “Springtime,” Thrill Jockey. In the multi-platinum world of mainstream country, it’s the artists on the fringe who are most likely to avoid the music’s exaggerated, often hollow emotions.

Participating in a rich tradition that extends from the Flying Burrito Brothers in the late ‘60s to the Cowboy Junkies in the ‘80s, Freakwater is a Kentucky band whose grass-roots recordings and Appalachian ballads have remained loyal to the most soulful strains of country music while still expressing contemporary sensibilities.

Armed with a passion for the “high lonesome” bluegrass sound of Bill Monroe, the quartet’s Catherine Irwin and Janet Beveridge Bean have been writing songs together for more than a decade, blending their voices and reinterpreting timeless themes such as death, broken hearts and redemption.

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Irwin’s writing is most compelling in her stories of ordinary folk caught in complex situations, such as sinners searching for truth in a faithless world.

This is the fifth album for Freakwater, which will be at the Troubadour tonight, and it’s another advance for a group whose brand of Southern Gothic suggests something far more than mere cowpunk affectation.

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Albums are rated on a scale of one star (poor), two stars (fair), three stars (good) and four stars (excellent).

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