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April 11, 2003
FILTH & FIRE
By DARRYL STERDAN
FILTH & FIRE Mary Gauthier (Signature/D7) There are two kinds of women in country and roots music: Pop-tart bimbos like Shania and Faith who seem to be doing their best to ruin it, and honky-tonk angels who do their best to keep it alive. The latter group includes women like Lucinda, Gillian and Emmylou, Neko. And now Mary Gauthier. Nashville-based but Louisiana-raised, Gauthier is a dark-hearted Southern gothic singer-songwriter of the first order, weaving a haunting spell with her world-weary twang and unflinching tales of drifters, drugs and downtrodden lovers. Filth & Fire, her addictive third album, will likely remind many of Lucinda, partly for its tragic narratives -- largely inspired, we suspect, by Mary's sordid past, which reportedly includes bouts of drug abuse and incarceration -- and partly because it was produced by Williams' erstwhile collaborator Gurf Morlix. But Gauthier is no one-note copycat; her sound is all her own, acknowledging the influence of everyone from Bobbie Gentry to John Prine and incorporating everything from reggae to tear-in-your-beer country. Don't be surprised if Gauthier turns out to be roots music's Next Big Thing. And just remember where you heard it first. Track Listing
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