NEW YORK (Billboard) – Robert Plant may seem an unlikely Americana artist. But the educated know the original Band of Joy — which he and future Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham played in, as well as Zep — was profoundly influenced by what drifted across the pond.
Plant’s latest solo album, “Band of Joy,” follows in the fertile vein of 2007′s Grammy Award-winning “Raising Sand” with Alison Krauss. The new set incorporates an edgier, resonant kind of ambience from producer Buddy Miller, a more aggressive female vocal foil in Patty Griffin and (on several of the 12 tracks) a greater ensemble attitude.
The material is just as fascinatingly diverse, from the trancey flow of Los Lobos’ “Angel Dance” to the doo-wop-by-way-of-Nashville treatment of the Kelly Brothers’ “I’m Falling in Love Again” and the swampy but spare groove that frames the mid-19th-century poem “Even This Shall Pass Away.” A pair of Low songs — “Silver Rider” and “Monkey” — are solidly in the wheelhouse Plant is working here. And the Plant-Miller original “Central Two-O-Nine” is a train song so authentic in tone that it almost sounds like a Johnny Cash classic.
Plant has steadfastly resisted a return to the Zep fold; “Band of Joy” makes us glad for that.
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