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In
contemporary country music, it’s a rare performer who will dare to
take on the industry on her own hogs-and-kisses terms. But for the
artist whom Nanci Griffith has called “this generation’s Loretta
Lynn,” it takes a certain tenacity to meld smart attitude with
classic tradition, the credibility of a life lived with genuine
hillbilly passion, and the integrity to write an acclaimed cache of
uncommonly cool songs. In other words, for Elizabeth Cook, it takes
balls.
Her latest CD, Balls, is the bold declaration of an uncompromising
artist unafraid to be exactly who she is. Produced by Rodney
Crowell, 9 of the album’s 11 tracks are written or co-written by
Elizabeth – including the brash anthem “Sometimes It Takes Balls To
Be A Woman” – and the album stands defiant in its devotion to
smiles, tears and sexy, sassy swagger. It’s a fiercely independent
ride where shuffles, ballads and even the occasional juice harp can
soar alongside an exquisite cover of The Velvet Underground’s
“Sunday Morning.” Balls is, quite simply, Elizabeth Cook’s unabashed
breakthrough. “I still can’t believe I got away with going into the
studio and cutting these songs,” she says with a laugh, “I feel like
I’ve just robbed a convenience store.”
“In an era of fabricated fame, Elizabeth is the real deal,” says
Rodney Crowell, the legendary singer/songwriter whose work as
producer has also included acclaimed records with Guy Clark, Beth
Nielsen Chapman, Jim Lauderdale and five landmark albums with
Roseanne Cash. “Elizabeth has a quirky Loretta sensibility that is
positively poetic. She’s got that Emmylou quality that inspires
those around her. Then factor in her amazing family history - You
simply cannot make that stuff up.”
To say that Elizabeth Cook’s background is like something out of a
country song would be wildly underestimating the entire genre. The
youngest of 11 half-brothers and sisters, she grew up in rural
Florida where her musician parents met while playing in local
country bars. Her father learned to play upright bass in a Georgia
prison band while serving 11 years for running moonshine. Her
mother, a singer and mandolin player from the hills of West
Virginia, wrote her daughter’s first songs, including “Does My Daddy
Love The Bottle More Than He Loves Me,” and had Elizabeth singing on
stage at 4 years old. Elizabeth had her own band at 9 – as well as
the regional hit “Homework Blues” – and performed prolifically
throughout her school years. “The way I sound and my musical
references came from what I heard and learned as a child,” Elizabeth
explains in her rich twang, “I had this accent when I was 2 years
old. It’s not an apology or even an explanation; it’s just what I
am. My way of talking, singing and writing is just how I use
language, my cultural vernacular. The only difference between me and
most of my family is knowing that there’s actually a word such as
‘vernacular’.”
Elizabeth graduated from Georgia Southern University in 1996 with
dual degrees in Accounting and Computer Information Systems, and
accepted a job offer from Price Waterhouse’s Nashville office. But
her gift for music proved inescapable and the young accountant
signed a publishing deal within a year. She released the independent
album Elizabeth Cook/The Blue Album in 2000, and made her major
label debut in 2002 with Hey Y’All. But following a corporate
re-structuring that left the album virtually abandoned, Elizabeth
fought back with her 2004 independent release This Side Of The Moon,
drawing raves ranging from The New York Times (which named her One
Of The Top Ten Unheard Artists Of The Year) to No Depression (who
called her “an artist to whom attention must be paid, reminiscent of
Dolly Parton or a more burnished Julie Miller). Through it all,
Elizabeth remained a relentless performer, playing shows across
America – as well as in South Korea, Japan, Norway, Sweden, Poland
and France – and well over 200 performances at The Grand Ole Opry.
All of this leads directly to Elizabeth’s Balls. “This is a very
‘indie’ album,” Crowell says. “In order to get it made, we all had
to pull together and pitch in. But, Elizabeth brings out the best in
people. Most of the record was performed live. There’s very little
overdubbing and no layering. What I wanted was a snapshot of
Elizabeth’s sensibilities. In the end, it was almost as if we filmed
these songs. “ The album bounces from the box with the hardcore
hillbilly abandon of “Times Are Tough In Rock N’ Roll,” which boasts
such plucky couplets as “All my feelings, all my fears/Were
confirmed with Britney Spears.” “Don’t Go Borrowing Trouble” and
“What Do I Do” are torchy roadhouse shuffles, while “He Got No
Heart” sears like the second coming of Wanda Jackson. and “Gonna Be”
is a fiery honky-tonk affirmation. “Mama’s Prayers” is a loving
testament to simple spirituality; the delicate “Down Girl” is a
tender ode to survival, and “Always Tomorrow” – written by
Elizabeth’s husband, the iconoclastic songwriter Tim Carroll – is
both plaintive and powerful. “Rest Your Weary Mind” is a stirringly
cinematic mountain ballad performed with Bobby Bare Jr., and
Elizabeth transforms Lou Reed & John Cale’s elegiac “Sunday Morning”
into a stunningly beautiful declaration of love and hope. ”I think
that country music and country people can sometimes be associated
with ignorance,” Elizabeth says, “But being poor does not equal
being stupid. Country music and country people can be funny and
smart and quirky and unique, and that’s exactly what I love about
it.”
But it’s the album’s centerpiece that has already taken on a life of
its own as a runaway anthem for strong women everywhere. “I started
writing ‘Sometimes It Takes Balls…’ as a joke,” Elizabeth says, “and
never thought I’d ever perform it live. But when I started playing
it at shows, the song would get this crazy response whether I was
opening for Nanci Griffith in the Northeast or playing the NASCAR
Festival in downtown Nashville.”
“If you mention Emmylou or Lucinda or Patty Griffin or other artists
who have longevity, it’s because their work is based on recognition
of their artistry,” says Rodney Crowell. “My hope for this album is
that Elizabeth is recognized as the same kind of artist that
deserves to be heard. She has something to add to it all.” And for
the artist who dares to describe herself as “a girl with an affinity
for vintage cocktail dresses but believes in baiting her own hook,”
her new album is the twanged clarion of a bold new stage in an
already fearless career. “I write what I love,” says Elizabeth, “And
I love to communicate what I write. Most of all, I write to help
heal myself. Music has traditionally helped people feel better and
gotten them through hard times. With this album, I want people to
feel like they got a laugh and got a cry. I want people to feel
understood, if only for a few minutes.” Because for Elizabeth Cook,
having Balls is just the beginning.
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Artist's Web Site
See a YouTube clip from Elizabeth Cook
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