The Standard Times

Savoy a musical ambassador for Cajan culture

- By DAN FERGUSON

Those with memories of the forerunner of the annual Rhythm & Roots Festival will no doubt have fond recollecti­ons of its Labor Day weekend predecesso­r, the Cajun & Bluegrass Festival, held at the Stepping Stone Ranch in Escoheag, R.I. from the late 1980 to the late 1990s. Those memories would no doubt include the Savoy-Doucet Cajun Band featuring the husband and wife combo, Marc and Ann Savoy, with Michael Doucet. Memories or not (and hopefully you have them), now many years later Ann Savoy is still making music and has a wonderful solo album just out called Another Heart. We give it the Ear Bliss look-see this week along with the new album from long-time troubadour Tim Easton. When I think of singer/songwriter­s who bring the whole package from songs that resonate to a terrific delivery of them, not to mention flawless ability on the chosen instrument, in his case guitar, Easton ranks high. Easton furthers that high level of quality craftsmans­hip on his new album called Find Your Way. Let’s take a look.

Ann Savoy

Another Heart Smithsonia­n Folkways Records

A native Virginian residing in the heart of Cajun country in Eunice, Louisiana, the singer, songwriter, musician, historian, producer and author Ann Savoy has made quite a mark on Cajun culture. Call her an ambassador, even with her Viriginia roots, for all things Cajun culture. Some may remember her for her work with accordion player and husband Marc Savoy along with fiddler extraordin­aire Michael Doucet in the award-winning Savoy-Doucet Cajun Band, as well as the Savoy Family Band, each of which frequented these parts going all the way back to the 1980s and into the ‘90s at the onceupon-a-time Cajun & Bluegrass Festival in Escoheag, R.I. Or perhaps you may recall the all-woman folk group The Magnolia Sisters which was co-founded by Savoy and who released four albums from 1995 to 2009. Perhaps Savoy’s greatest contributi­on to Cajun culture has been as the compiler of the two volume Cajun Music: A Reflection of a People, a collection which chronicles the history of Cajun and Zydeco music. There have also been movie appearance­s and various other recordings during her life and mostly in the folk and roots style, but on Savoy’s recently released solo debut album called Another Heart she spreads her music-loving wings far and wide from Bruce Springstee­n to The Kinks and more. Says Savoy herself of this new project, “It’s blowing my mind to smithereen­s!” Good for her! It draws from Savoy’s full lifetime of musical experience­s and influences from growing up in Richmond to her travels abroad to Europe and thereabout­s in her youthful days to of course, her time in Louisiana. As Savoy tells it, “It’s the culminatio­n of my life, because all of the things I’ve done my whole life have been drenched in music since I was in kindergart­en choirs.” Mixing originals songs with covers, the album is a personal affair. It takes the listener from those aforementi­oned Springstee­n and Kinks covers (“Stolen Car” from the Bruce archives and The Kinks’ classic “Waterloo Sunset,” the latter given a touch of Cajun seasoning courtesy of Savoy’s sons Joel and Powell on fiddle and accordion, respective­ly) to songs by Joni Mitchell, Richard Thompson, Donovan, and Sandy Denny joining Savoy’s own songs such as the rollicking hot-stepper “Cajun Love Song” written for her husband Marc and “Triste Samedi (A Sad Saturday/ A Hurricane Song)” about the devastatin­g storms that have hit Louisiana on all too many occasions. Savoy’s voice has always been one of comfort and soul and that quality is imbued throughout all of Another Heart. It is an album very easy to warm up to. Recommende­d. Visit www.folkways.si.edu/ ann-savoy/another-heart or sample some tracks at annsavoy. bandcamp. com/ album/another-heart.

Tim Easton

Find Your Way

Black Mesa Records

Given the way folk and rock merge so often in popular music these days, it could be said that the singer and songwriter Tim Easton was way ahead of the curve when it came to perfecting such a blend as he did on such early solo albums as his debut Special 20 (1998) and The Truth About Us (2001) and has continued to do to this day in masterful fashion as his new album called Find Your Way clearly attests. A singing and songwritin­g troubadour of the first order with his trusty acoustic guitar always at his side, Easton remains a restless sort eager to bring his music and message far and wide. As much a poet as a songwriter, over time he has demonstrat­ed a keen ability to strike a nerve with his songs, a fete he has accomplish­ed numerous times over the course of some dozen or so solo albums. Find Your Way deviates little in sound and style from past Easton albums. It is a recording on which he works his formula of an earnest voice, tight picking within a rich mix of instrument­ation, and crafty lyricism all done with precision and warmth. For it, Easton headed North of the border to British Columbia to work with long-time collaborat­or Leeroy Stagger who produced the album and employed an all-Canadian cast of supporting musicians. The songs, all originals, draw from the daily tumult of humankind as seen through Easton’s own lens. Easton himself describes them as “feature films inside three-minute chunks of music.” Find Your Way features ten of these “feature films” from this top-shelf tunesmith, each as cinematic as it is engaging. Visit www.timeaston.com or sample some tracks at https:// timeaston1.bandcamp.com/ album/find-your-way.

FESTIVAL ALERTS: Just a month-and-change until the first two major New England summer music festivals and each now has both weekend and single day tickets available. The Green River Festival happens at the Franklin County Fairground­s in Greenfield, MA from June 21-23 mixing Americana, folk, rock, and worldly sounds with headliners including CAKE, Fleet Foxes, and Gregory Alan Isakov. Visit www.greenriver­festival.com for the full lineup and ticket informatio­n. The following weekend, June 28-30, the Solid Sound Music Festival takes over MASSMoCA in North Adams, MA. Hosted and curated by the band Wilco who will play closing sets on Friday (a “deep cuts” set in on the docket!) and Saturday nights, consider Solid Sound one of the most eclectic music festivals you’re likely to encounter encompassi­ng everything from indie rock and pop to jazz to Americana to comedy, not to mention offering full access to the entirety of the art contained within galleries and spaces encompassi­ng MassMOCA. Among the featured performers for the 2024 edition of Solid Sound in addition to Wilco include Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit, Nick Lowe & Los Straightja­ckets,

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