Dirt Farmer

by admin on August 22, 2009 · 13 comments

in Rock

Dirt Farmer

Levon Helm’s early solo albums, made in the 1970s after the Band initially broke up, were hit-and-miss affairs, but his first solo studio release in 25 years represents a rich return to his Southern roots. With co-production and musical support from daughter Amy (of Ollabelle) and multi-instrumentalist Larry Campbell (long a mainstay of Bob Dylan’s band), Helm gives organic unity and rough-hewn vitality to a selection of Cajun fiddle waltzes, country blues, hardscrabble folk, and [Read More...]

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{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }

Tabitha August 22, 2009 at 3:22 am

5.0 out of 5 stars
:)
This was a gift and the receiver was thrilled!
The only questionable thing, is that on the cover it said it was a limited edition numberd record…

Yates August 22, 2009 at 5:42 am

5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautifully played and recorded
Levon Helm is a legend, no doubt about it.
Released in 2007, Dirt Farmer brings an absolutely outstanding group of musicians together.

Zuna August 22, 2009 at 5:49 am

Levon Helm, the voice behind ‘The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down’ and ‘The Weight,’ is in fine form here. This music would have been good fifty years ago, and will be good fifty years from now. Levon’s voice is perfect for these songs about life’s sorrows and joys, full of perseverance and hope. The songs are real beauties with excellent traditional arrangements. I am a long-time fan of traditional folk, bluegrass, and blues music. What I liked best about this CD is that it is fresh, making these tunes vibrant and not museum pieces. Bravo!

Italia August 22, 2009 at 7:23 am


Levon Helm is listed as ‘Americana Roots’ in some music charts. That is the perfect description of his music. This CD celebrates the American Way and Levon’s roots in his music. A member of The Band, all those years ago, that glorious group that made the music we would sing, dance and love to. When I hear ‘the Weight’ I think of Levon, it is really his song, no matter whose name is on the label.

Levon Helm lives in Woodstock, NY, and this is where he makes his music. He has a home and an old barn that he has converted into a stage, where he and his friends sing. Every week he has what he calls a ‘Midnight Ramble’. I receive his monthly mailings and one of these days I will see Levon in all his glory. Levon has recovered from throat cancer. It has been a struggle. For a while it was questionable whether he would ever speak or sing again. He has made it and this CD is a celebration of his recovery and his roots. His voice is throaty but it is Levon and his music. His daughter, Amy has been the driving force behind this CD, and she and Larry Campbell both contributed in voice and music. Levon Helm has dedicated this album to his parents. Levon, the only real American in ‘The Band, was born in Arkansas and started his career in the South. He met up with other musicians on the road, and they came to form ‘The Band, and the rest is history. Levon is my hero. Nate Chinen says, In singing the song ‘Wide Rover To Cross’ “I’ve come a long, long road,” Mr. Helm sings in the chorus of that song, “but still I’ve got some miles to go.” Coming around to the point — “I’ve got a wide, a wide river to cross” — he sounds like the voice of experience, humbled as well as emboldened.”

Several of the songs on his CD, ‘Dirt Farmer’ are from his childhood. ‘False-Hearted Lover Blues’, ‘Single Girl, Married Girl’ and ‘Blind Child’. ‘Dirt Farmer’ title song is a story of a farmer who has lost his crops and can’t pay off his loan. He only is able to make stone. It has a Cajun beat and we can feel the misery and loss in the voice of Levon. He has the weight of the world on his shoulders. ‘The poor old dirt farmer fell off his tractor and it rolled over his head.’He ain’t got a loan and he can’t grow no corn’. He sings about ‘The Mountain’ and ‘The Girl I Left Behind’. ‘Cavalry’, Anna Lee’ and ‘Got Me A Woman’ are the songs of life and love. ‘Feelin’ Good’ is one of my favorite tunes. It seems to set the stage for the philosophy of the CD- and a tune to go out into the night with.

“Dirt Farmer seizes the southern pastoralism that always lurked in the Band’s music and blows it up full size, in all its gritty, rollicking, joyous, melancholic, and even absurd wonder.” Richard Marcus

This is a remarkable CD and is a rolling stone for the American south land and the roots of Levon Helm.

Highly, Highly Recommended. prisrob 10-30-07

A Musical History

Live at the Palladium NYC, New Years Eve 1977

The Midnight Ramble Music Sessions, Vol. 1

Levon Helm

Ulla August 22, 2009 at 7:45 am

If you loved The Band way back when, then you will love this recording. There were those who considered Robbie Robertson the quintessence of The Band, but I always connected this voice with the greater output of the music from The Band - and, thirty years on…after winning a war with cancer…Levon Helm’s raw, wide-open sound has not dissipated all that much.

This is real mountain music, presented in the manner it was meant to be - oral tradition through song. It’s not possible for me to determine which songs are relatively new and which are old, old stories derivative of Celtic tradition, brought to the mountains generations ago from Scotland and Ireland. The yearning, sorrow, and loss of some of the songs is perfectly projected in Mr Helm’s evocative country voice - False Hearted Lover Blues, typical of the mountain songs I learned as a child, with the title of the song being all you need to know; Anna Lee, about a young mother cut down heartbreakingly early. There are humourous songs as well, like Got Me a Woman, with the man in the song describing a woman perhaps not what you’d call a looker but high in character that just knocks his socks off; Single Girl, Married Girl, about the things that make these two so diametrically opposed. There’s even a song about Frank and Jesse James (A Train Robbery). Some of the songs have a beat reminiscent of music from The Band; I heard shadows of “Ophelia” in one piece, and nuances of other songs, but it is clear here that this album is pure tradition, and that Mr Helm is very much enjoying himself in presenting to us the music he learned as a child.

After his successful fending off of a deadly disease that by all accounts should have robbed us of his characteristic howl, it is a wonder and a blessing that this album got to be made. The first notes of his singing literally sent shivers up my spine. I truly wish I lived anywhere close enough to Woodstock, New York; I would somehow contrive to be a regular at his Midnight Rambles, the shows he periodically puts on in a barn on his property, and at which quite a few excellent old friends of his pop in to share in the musical bounty. This is real entertainment; and I know “Dirt Farmer” is only a taste of what Levon Helm has stashed away from a lifetime devoted to music. Long may he continue his Rambles; long may he continue to bring us gems like this.

Odele August 22, 2009 at 8:37 am

5.0 out of 5 stars
roots country
love this way-down home sound. The zydico mixes with the
raw country sawing violin and harmonies. Foot tappin, hip slappin
hill music.

Rin August 22, 2009 at 10:17 am

5.0 out of 5 stars
Who Knew Bluegrass Could Rock?
I grew up in rural Missouri hating Bluegrass with a passion. Then, too many years later, driving home exhausted from the pain in my California Inner City counseling work I heard…

Anonymous August 22, 2009 at 12:34 pm

4.0 out of 5 stars
Not disappointed
I heard the title track and I loved Levon Helm’s voice. The CD is great, very enjoyable. I am very satisfied with my purchase.

Ethan August 22, 2009 at 2:53 pm

5.0 out of 5 stars
Back to his Roots
Levon Helm brings it home with this great new collection. Each song starts off as a seed and starts to grow and gets nurtured and before your very ears turns into a solid oak…

Orella August 22, 2009 at 5:16 pm

2.0 out of 5 stars
I think I missed something, but I wasn’t impressed
I wanted to like this CD and all the good hype made me look forward to it. BIG disappointment. The vocals lacked power and punch and the arrangements seemed contrived and…

Kylene August 22, 2009 at 7:59 pm

4.0 out of 5 stars
It took me a few plays
When this came out I listened to the short clips on Amazon and decided to pass. But I heard it at a friends, and it started to grow on me.

Anonymous August 22, 2009 at 8:56 pm

5.0 out of 5 stars
Dirty farmer
Like his style of music. Has a different beat.His voice is good. I have played this dvd many times and my husband enjoys it. Great work.

Edmund August 22, 2009 at 9:35 pm

5.0 out of 5 stars
This Country Rocks
Dirt Farmer is the best album I have heard in years! If you like country, folk, gospel and the blues, you will love this album.

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