The Columbus Dispatch

Lucinda Williams still finding her muse, making music that matters

- Scott Stroud

“Stories From a Rock N Roll Heart” by Lucinda Williams (Highway 20 Records/thirty Tigers)

At least twice on her new album, Lucinda Williams worries about whether she can still write good songs.

She sings on one cut about putting herself “where the songs will find me.” And on the closer, “Never Gonna Fade Away,” she frets about what happens when “the words don’t rhyme, and I can’t find a line, and I’m looking for a sign, and I’m running out of time.”

Ironically, both are good songs. And while it’s sometimes a bad sign when songwriter­s bemoan the need for inspiratio­n, Williams’ muse visits her plenty on “Stories From a Rock N Roll Heart.”

The album is, as advertised by the name, a collection of hard-charging rock ’n’ roll. It reflects her resistance to being labeled as Americana – though she could legitimate­ly claim a spot on that genre’s Mount Rushmore.

Williams’ honesty and empathy serve her well on “Hum’s Liquor,” a tribute to Bob Stinson, one of the founding members of the seminal rock band, The Replacemen­ts, who died years ago at the age of 35. The song, which features Stinson’s younger brother and fellow Replacemen­ts founding member Tommy Stinson, demonstrat­es that Williams, who just turned 70, still has the chops to strike deep emotional chords.

Williams dedicates the entire album to Bob Stinson, “a true rock ‘n’ roll heart.”

Her band, a mixture of her regular touring ensemble and others, sounds especially good on a tribute to Tom Petty, who died in 2017. Starting with a winding guitar riff that could have come from Petty’s own Stratocast­er, “Stolen Moments” has the power to make you miss him all over again.

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