Old Yellow Moon

Old Yellow Moon
Studio album by Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell
Released February 26, 2013 (2013-02-26) (US)
Recorded 2012
Genre Country, folk
Length 41:06
Label Nonesuch
Producer Brian Ahern
Emmylou Harris chronology
Hard Bargain
(2011)
Old Yellow Moon
(2013)
The Traveling Kind
(2015)
Rodney Crowell chronology
Sex & Gasoline
(2008)
Old Yellow Moon
(2013)
Tarpaper Sky
(2014)
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic(7.5/10)
75/100, 14 critics
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
Aftonbladet link
Paste Magazine link
Rock Cellar Magazine link
Rolling Stone Germany link
Slant Magazine link
Stereo SubversionB+ link
The Independent link
Uncut link
USA Today link
Vue Weekly link

Old Yellow Moon is a Grammy Award-winning collaborative album by American country music singer-songerwriters Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell, released on February 26, 2013 in the United States by Nonesuch Records.[1] It is the twenty-seventh and tenth studio albums for both Harris and Crowell, respectively, as well as Harris' fifth album for Nonesuch Records.

Produced by Harris' ex-husband and longtime producer Brian Ahern, Old Yellow Moon was recorded in 2012 at Eastern Island Sounds and Ronnie's Place, both in Nashville.[2] In the autumn of 2012, the album's opening number "Hanging Up My Heart" was premiered on YouTube.

Album information

Old Yellow Moon is the latest of many collaborative projects of Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell and the first that ultimately resulted in an entire album. As both artists have stated multiple times, the duet album was being planned for a long time. In the liner notes of Harris' 2007 Songbird: Rare Tracks and Forgotten Gems box set she writes that "we've been talking for 34 years about doing a duet record, and I swear we're going to do it."[3]

Having met nearly 40 years before the release of this album, in 1974, the two started working together almost instantly, by recording the Crowell-penned "Bluebird Wine". The song became the opening number for Harris's 1975 Pieces of the Sky album and has been re-recorded for Old Yellow Moon with slightly altered lyrics and, for a change, Rodney Crowell singing lead.

During 1975, Crowell became part of Harris' backing band "The Hot Band". As such he toured with her and is featured as musician on most of her 1970s and 1980s albums. In addition, Emmylou Harris has recorded roughly 20 Crowell-composed songs over the years, such as "I Ain't Living Long Like This", "Leaving Louisiana in the Broad Daylight" and "Till I Gain Control Again". Emmylou returned the favor and can be heard prominently as backing vocalist and musician on Crowell's debut LP Ain't Living Long Like This, released in 1978.

The disc was another Top 10 Country album for Harris and won her a 13th Grammy Award in 2014 for "Best Americana Album".[4]

Song information

Track listing

No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "Hanging Up My Heart"  Hank DeVito 2:52
2. "Invitation to the Blues"  Roger Miller 3:38
3. "Spanish Dancer"  Patti Scialfa 3:44
4. "Open Season on My Heart"  Rodney Crowell, James T. Slater 3:41
5. "Chase the Feeling"  Kris Kristofferson 3:31
6. "Black Caffeine"  Donivan Cowart, DeVito 3:23
7. "Dreaming My Dreams"  Allen Reynolds 3:18
8. "Bluebird Wine"  Crowell 2:56
9. "Back When We Were Beautiful"  Matraca Berg 3:40
10. "Here We Are"  Crowell 3:15
11. "Bull Rider"  Crowell 3:05
12. "Old Yellow Moon"  DeVito, Lynn Langham 3:37

Personnel

Additional musicians

Recording staff

Charts

Chart (2013) Peak
position
Belgian Albums Chart (Flanders) 38
Belgian Albums Chart (Wallonia) 115
Danish Albums Chart 32
Dutch Albums Chart 22
French Albums Chart 123
German Albums Chart 71
Irish Individual Artist Albums 33
New Zealand Albums Chart 24
Norwegian Albums Chart 6
Swedish Albums Chart 12
Swiss Albums Chart 47
UK Albums Chart 42
UK Country Albums Chart 1
US Billboard 200 29
US Billboard Top Country Albums 4
US Billboard Top Folk Albums 3

References

  1. "Emmylou Harris | Nonesuch Records". Nonesuch.com. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
  2. Old Yellow Moon, booklet
  3. Emmylou Harris (2007): Songbird: Rare Tracks and Forgotten Gems (box set), booklet
  4. Whitaker, Sterling. "2014 Grammy Awards – Country Winners List". Retrieved 2 February 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, February 18, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.