Lindi Ortega – Liberty (2018) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

Lindi Ortega – Liberty (2018)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 46:34 minutes | 518 MB | Genre: Country
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Shadowbox Music Inc.

Lindi Ortega “has always been the sonic embodiment of the red cowboy boots she’s often seen wearing: a fiery and dramatic take on modern country that’s impossible to ignore” (Rolling Stone Country), and her fifth studio record ‘Liberty’ is no exception.

Ortega wrote roughly half of the twelve tracks solo, and enlisted co-writers Aaron Raitiere, Bruce Wallace and John Paul White (The Civil Wars) for the rest. The result is a three-part concept album reflecting loss, séance, resurrection and freedom.

Recorded at Battle Tapes studio in East Nashville, Ortega and Skylar Wilson (Justin Townes Earle, Rayland Baxter) scaled back the boot-stomping, throwback country approach that she’s known for, instead polishing a set of music that reflects her Mexican lineage.

Ortega and Wilson – who first bonded over their shared passion for Quentin Tarantino movies – then enhanced the sonic landscape with the help of Country Music Hall of Fame member Charlie McCoy’s signature harmonica and Nashville-based band Steelism, drawing on the epic work of Oscar-winning composer Ennio Morricone, who became one of Ortega’s musical obsessions during the writing and recording of ‘Liberty.’

“Country’s crystalline-voiced goth-rock version of Dolly Parton” (MAGNET)

“The pipes of Patsy Cline with the visual flair of Amy Winehouse” (The Washington Post)
“Genre-defying in both her music and her personal style” (NPR’s All Things Considered)

“In the early 2010s, Canadian born alt-country singer/songwriter Lindi Ortega had had enough. Discouraged with not being able to make a living despite having charting records, Juno and Grammy nominations, critical acclaim, and endless touring, she chucked everything: Nashville, her label, her agent, and her manager, and moved to Calgary. She got married and, inspired by her husband and new manager, tried again, resulting in 2017’s acclaimed Til the Goin’ Gets Gone EP.

Liberty, her cinematic seventh album, is the story of that journey. It’s a concept record about a journey through darkness to light. Its songs are thematically linked as stages in transition. Inspired by the spaghetti western scores of Ennio Morricone, Bruno Nicolai, and Nico Fidenco, and the unruly movies of Quentin Tarantino, she returned to Nashville to work with producer Skylar Wilson – the two bonded over Tarantino’s films – and wrote or co-wrote songs with him, John Paul White, Bruce Wallace, and Aaron Raitiere. She also enlisted Steelism (Spencer Cullum, Jr. on pedal steel and slide, and guitarist Jeremy Fetzer), a Nashville duo whose predominantly instrumental work gravitates toward a widescreen western style of country. The three sections of the uncharacteristically ballad-heavy Liberty are held together by Steelism’s windswept desert theme “Through the Dust.” “Afraid of the Dark,” co-written with White, offers fingerpicked nylon string and electric slide guitars, upright bass, and tom-toms; the grain in Ortega’s voice offers a tale of possession by darkness through self-loathing and depression. A whining steel guitar frames her reverbed singing in a spacious Western, desert-tinged soundscape with the baritone and soprano Liberty Choir chorus adding to the atmosphere. The traces of her rockabilly style pop up in “You Ain’t Foolin’ Me,” which addresses two-faced acquaintances masquerading as friends amid rumbling drums, B-3 organ, and distorted guitars, as well as a lovely mariachi interlude. The other White co-write is “Nothing’s Impossible,” a lilting, deeply sad honky tonk ballad that could have been produced by a young Owen Bradley. First single “The Comeback Kid (written with Wilson) draws on Marty Robbins, Leon Payne, and Charlie Feathers in a yarn about a character who gets shot but doesn’t die, and who’s now ready to haunt her would-be assassins: “…You took my life and wrecked it/But I’ve been resurrected….” (Think Uma Thurman in Kill Bill.) “Forever Blue” is the first song on the journey to the light. Transcendence and transformation are hinted at first in the ethereal “In the Clear,” co-written with Raitiere, and episodes of romantic love in “Pablo” and Lovers in Love” offer confirmation that our protagonist is on the right track. Her transition is completed in the languid title track and underscored by the album’s lone cover, “Gracias a la Vida,” by Chilean composer Violeta Parra; it’s a bolero-cum-mariachi that simply and powerfully expresses gratitude for surviving the darkness and for life and its wonders. While Liberty is more often than not gentler in tone than Ortega’s preceding albums, it is by far her most innovative and powerful, and stands as her masterwork thus far.” (Thom Jurek, AMG)

Tracklist:
1-01. Lindi Ortega – Through the Dust, Pt. 1 (01:27)
1-02. Lindi Ortega – Afraid of the Dark (04:03)
1-03. Lindi Ortega – You Ain’t Foolin’ Me (04:34)
1-04. Lindi Ortega – Til My Dyin’ Day (03:01)
1-05. Lindi Ortega – Nothing is Impossible (02:43)
1-06. Lindi Ortega – Through the Dust, Pt. 2 (01:07)
1-07. Lindi Ortega – The Comeback Kid (03:01)
1-08. Lindi Ortega – Darkness Be Gone (03:52)
1-09. Lindi Ortega – Forever Blue (03:44)
1-10. Lindi Ortega – In the Clear (04:02)
1-11. Lindi Ortega – Pablo (04:21)
1-12. Lindi Ortega – Lovers in Love (03:08)
1-13. Lindi Ortega – Through the Dust, Pt. 3 (01:08)
1-14. Lindi Ortega – Liberty (03:09)
1-15. Lindi Ortega – Gracias a La Vida (03:06)

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