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Mare Wakefield
Take Me Home
Mare Wakefield
2006
www.marewakefield.com

Mare Wakefield’s voice comes rolling out of the speakers in a soothing wave on her new album Take Me Home. Though there’s a definite twangy vibe, Wakefield’s music is an anodyne to the ear-pain produced by most New Country artists; her songs are warm and rich, without a hint of the jangly Shania sound so often flooding the airwaves these days.

Like any country artist worth her salt-of-the-earth, Wakefield is a compelling story-teller. She sings about lost love, found love, and that old country standby, the tragic “pickup truck that drove off a cliff” tale. What is it about fiddles and suicide songs that mesh so well? Dave Matthews should take note. Along with the fiddle, Wakefield’s band backs her with piano, bass, banjo, a dobro, and what the liner notes charmingly if cryptically refer to as “road noises.”

Take Me Home is slickly produced, leaving a slight pop aftertaste that isn’t necessary for this artist. Though the musicians backing her are talented, I’d like to hear Wakefield’s voice stripped of the surrounding gloss, sitting rough in a room with a guitar. Still, the album is well worth picking up – a sensual, vibrant work that knows its strengths but doesn’t take itself too seriously.

Favorite Track: Track 7, “Love vs. the USA”

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Kris Larson works as a freelance writer in the San Francisco Bay Area. She has a degree in English Literature from San Francisco State University and reads an alarming amount of Edith Wharton in her spare time. She can be reached at kris@cementhorizon.com, or you can visit her website at krislarson.cementhorizon.com.
 
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