Due April 7th via Anti-, the set finds Elliott, 77, working with producer Joe Henry to interpret Depression-era blues songs. Parks contributes piano and vibraphone, while Hidago offers acoustic guitar and accordion.
The record company selected about 15 old blues songs that I might choose to learn, and I was listening to that CD about four or five times a day for three months," Elliott says of the origin of the project. I got a good feel for some of the songs, but I didn't memorize them. So I was a bit nervous, because I hadn't memorized a single song. But I tried to give a good reading, despite all that half-assed preparation."
The album was recorded in just four days, a pace Elliott attributes to the backing band. They followed me; they were good listeners, good followers and gave a really great back up," he says. It was so thrilling; I just dug into it."
Grateful Dead fans will recognize Death Don't Have No Mercy," a staple in the seminal band's early sets. Other standouts include the Son House classic Grinnin' in Your Face" and a marching, dark version of Blind Willie Johnson's Soul of a Man."
The material here reflects the current economic crisis, a fact that's not lost on Elliott. I think they're trying to deter people from getting too scared," he says. The word 'recession' is just a polite way trying to make it sound nicer. When I was born, it was the worst year of the depression -- 1931. But I was too young to notice anything."
Here is the track list for A Stranger Here":
Rising High Water Blues"
Death Don't Have No Mercy"
Rambler's Blues"
Soul of a Man"
Richland Women Blues"
Grinnin' in Your Face"
The New Strangers Blues"
Falling Down Blues"
How Long Blues"
Please Remember Me"
For more information contact All About Jazz.