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“Everybody ought to have a stone love”
So says Ruthie Foster on the opening cut of The Truth According to
Ruthie Foster. And when Ruthie lays it down, you’d be well advised
to listen.
This extraordinary songwriter/performer tackles life’s big issues
throughout her sizzling new album. On it, Ruthie repeatedly
testifies to her core message - that through all of the ups and
downs of living, you must stay true to yourself. The pain as well as
the joy of love, the strength it takes to weather life’s challenges,
the hope that grows from seeds of faith and wisdom: All of this
breathes inspiration and celebration into The Truth According to
Ruthie Foster.
And the music brings it to life. Truth be told, Foster could sing
the phone book, jam on a laundry list and send everyone home happy.
But the combination on The Truth According to Ruthie Foster of
uplifting lyric and electrifying vocals, backed by a band of
world-class players bristling with soul, proves impossible to
resist.
Even fans who have followed her trajectory from her self-released
debut through the aptly-titled The Phenomenal Ruthie Foster in 2007
will find something different in The Truth According to Ruthie
Foster - namely, the summing-up of the various influences in this
artist’s growth.
The music of The Truth According to Ruthie Foster is in fact the
soundtrack of a young but remarkable life. From her beginnings in
the Brazos Valley of Central Texas, she was launched by a strong
mother and a large supportive family down a path whose pitfalls
Ruthie learned to avoid and whose destination she charted on her
own, with talent, faith and determination lighting her way.
On her previous albums and gigs that have taken her from choir lofts
to folk bistros and onto stages in Europe and Australia, Foster has
raised the multiple flags of American music. There’s Southern blues
in her groove, rock in her rhythm, a blend of gospel redemption,
country poetry and jazz elegance in her singing. But not until The
Truth According to Ruthie Foster have all the pieces fit into a
picture this powerful.
For all the facets of this album, the heat of soul music burns at
its core. That’s what drew her to Memphis, where she set up shop in
the legendary Ardent Studios with a stunning assemblage of
musicians. Symbolically, Ruthie began working on the very day of
Hayes’ funeral - the same studio with many of the same musicians
that Isaac Hayes often used. Once there they began working to convey
the energy of Ruthie’s performances, cutting almost everything live,
going for feeling above all else…and making their own kind of
history.
With a sound that ignores demographic lines and a charisma that can
ignite any audience, Foster emerges on The Truth According to Ruthie
Foster as an artist of all-encompassing appeal. This was only a
matter of time. Even as a young girl, she was taking in a wide
variety of music, whether through the hymns her mother taught her,
the Beatles songs she analyzed in a book given by her guitar
teacher, the 45s her truck-driving uncle would drop off during his
visits, the old-school country she heard while watching various
country variety shows with her grandfather, or the pop songs that
crackled through the family radio.
“It didn’t matter to me what genre it was,” she remembers. “I just
took it all in as great music - music that moved me.”
Even before her debut at age 14 as a soloist in the choir her uncle
conducted, Foster knew that her life would revolve around music.
After moving to Waco to attend McClennan Community College, she
mixed classes in music and audio engineering with visits to clubs at
night, where the curriculum wasn’t based not on textbooks but on the
power of performance. After a while she was fronting a blues band in
biker bars and other venues from Dallas to San Antonio.
Foster immersed herself so deeply in music that eventually she
decided she needed to step back and regain a little real-world
perspective. “For years, all I did was eat, talk, dream and live
about music. It got to the point that I wanted to find out if I
could even hold a conversation about anything else,” she recalls,
laughing. “But I was also curious about what was going on with the
rest of the world. So I joined the Navy.”
Even there, music tracked her down. At a Christmas party for her
helicopter squadron, she couldn’t resist sitting in with the band to
sing a few choruses of “Red House.” It was a short step from there
to being signed up by Pride, a Navy ensemble that played the Top 40
and funk hits of the day at recruitment drives, mainly throughout
the Southeastern states.
“There were seven of us, and I was the only woman in the band,” she
recalls. “That’s where I learned how to work and hold my own on the
road, and that was huge for me too.”
From there, Foster’s path led to New York, where she absorbed more
influences by performing at folk venues and collaborating with some
of the city’s better songwriters. Supported at the time by a
contract with Atlantic Records, she expanded her lyrical and musical
range.
But it became apparent that she wasn’t the mainstream power-ballad
singer the label wanted her to be, and that her writing was veering
away from commercial pop and drawing instead from the roots that had
nourished her personally and artistically in her youth. Then, her
duty as a daughter called her to look after her mother during her
final illness, and Foster took that as her cue to pack up and head
back home to Texas.
Since that time, Foster has progressed through five albums and a
steady regimen of hard work, whether fronting a full band or working
solo, writing at her digs in Austin or taking it to the people. Her
shows have inspired a string of reviews in which the essential
points are made repeatedly: Ruthie Foster merits comparison to the
legends that inspired her, even as her unique contributions stake
out a place of her own in the spotlight.
“Ruthie’s drawn comparisons to Ella and Aretha, but musically
neither is really close,” observed the Philadelphia City Paper in
one such rave. “What she does have in common with Fitzgerald and
Franklin is the irresistible blaze. It’s impossible to look away,
even close the eyes, for one second.”
That becomes truer still on The Truth According to Ruthie Foster,
where a group of superlative musicians brings Foster’s music to
fruition. With roots-music producer Chris Goldsmith (Blind Boys of
Alabama, Charlie Musselwhite) overseeing the proceedings, all of the
essentials - the hard-edged blues of guitar icon Robben Ford (the
Yellowjackets, Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, countless others), the
Memphis magic conjured by keyboardist Jim Dickinson (Rolling Stones,
Aretha Franklin) and organist Charles Hodges (Al Green, Ann
Peebles), the rock-steady rhythm anchor of bassist Larry Fulcher (Taj
Mahal, Los Super Seven) and drummer Rock Deadrick (Tracy Chapman,
Ben Harper) - settle into their unique pocket, with trumpeter Wayne
Jackson and the legendary Memphis Horns adding a distinctive coup de
grace.
It’s a diverse lineup, able to reflect the universalism of Foster’s
music: the raw punch of “Nickel and a Nail,” the urban strut and
affirmative lyric of “Dues Paid in Full,” the aching romance buoyed
by a bubbling reggae beat on “I Really Love You” and all of the
other bases touched throughout this tour de force.
If any one song can encapsulate the cascade of emotions of The Truth
According to Ruthie Foster, it would be “Truth!” This track gave the
album its name and enforces its essential message. After a
slash-and-burn guitar intro by Ford, Foster sums it all up in one
line:
“Truth is right where you are,” she proclaims. So it is throughout
The Truth According to Ruthie Foster, Ruthie Foster’s greatest
triumph to date. And that is as true as truth can get.
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Artist's Web Site
Hear an mp3 clip from Ruthie Foster
See a YouTube clip from Ruthie Foster
Presented in conjunction with NCBPAC & Landshark Entertainment
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