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What the Flood Leaves Behind

What the Flood Leaves Behind in Chattanooga, TN

Current price: $9.99
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What the Flood Leaves Behind

Barnes and Noble

What the Flood Leaves Behind in Chattanooga, TN

Current price: $9.99
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Size: CD

What the Flood Leaves Behind
is singer/songwriter
Amy Helm
's third solo album. She recorded it at Levon Helm Studios (aka The Barn) in Woodstock, New York, where she cut 2015's
Didn't It Rain
.
Helm
grew up in and around the wooden studio, singing in countless Midnight Ramble Sessions that she helped produce. After time spent living in New York City and Los Angeles, she now lives near The Barn, a place of solace, shelter, and creativity that she calls a "temple of music." In these wild, dangerous times, who doesn't need such a place?
Josh Kaufman
produced the record, and he contributed piano, guitar, and mandolin.
Kaufman
surrounds her with a sympathetic cast of players, while
plays mandolin, piano, and drums. Opener "Verse 23" was written for her by
Hiss Golden Messenger
's
M.C. Taylor
. It emerges from a simply strummed mandolin, guitars, and a bass drum.
's voice unfurls slowly but is full-throated, like a soul singer. She entwines gospel, folk, and country in her delivery: "You can have some of mine/for as long as it takes/What the flood leaves behind/Is what we've got to make." The guitars buoy her vocal and she rolls over and through that lyric. "Breathing," co-written with
JT Nero
, employs a choogling organ and horns playing strolling, bluesy R&B, as she offers empathy and support to a shattered beloved. "Cotton and the Cane," co-written with
Mary Gauthier
, is an unflinchingly honest midtempo ballad fueled by a graceful B-3. In the lyric,
offers love and eternal respect to family and ancestors, living and dead, despite shortcomings and addictions; she sings with unwavering devotion -- even the line "Heroin, I'm locked out again" is offered as a circumstantial fact rather than a judgment. She follows it immediately with
Daniel Norgren
's soaring "Are We Running Out of Love?" framed by mandolins, drums, and guitars. Its ache and reflection are merely building blocks in her plea for healing and tolerance. The shambolic Southern garage rocker "Sweet Mama" sounds like
backed by
Neil Young & Crazy Horse
. "Calling Home" digs back into the country-soul bag, as guitars, organ, drums, and horns shuffle around
, who calls for her dad's hand to guide her home in the middle of a long, lonesome dark night of the soul. "Carry It Alone" is a gentle, fingerpicked lament offered after a broken relationship.
digs into each line, openly revealing her protagonist's doubt, pain, and longing. Closer "Renegade Heart," co-written with
Taylor
and
Elizabeth Ziman
, leans her vocal into a gospel piano to anchor the song's poetic lyric. She offers "You're someone worth loving/You beautiful heart" before ethereal horns flow in from the margins underscoring the truth and conviction in her words as she repeats the last phrase and carries out the record.
is free of artifice; its rootsy, warm sound buoys this intimate homecoming by presenting the full scope of
's prodigious gifts as a singer, songwriter, interpreter, collaborator, and artist, making it a timeless Americana masterpiece. ~ Thom Jurek
What the Flood Leaves Behind
is singer/songwriter
Amy Helm
's third solo album. She recorded it at Levon Helm Studios (aka The Barn) in Woodstock, New York, where she cut 2015's
Didn't It Rain
.
Helm
grew up in and around the wooden studio, singing in countless Midnight Ramble Sessions that she helped produce. After time spent living in New York City and Los Angeles, she now lives near The Barn, a place of solace, shelter, and creativity that she calls a "temple of music." In these wild, dangerous times, who doesn't need such a place?
Josh Kaufman
produced the record, and he contributed piano, guitar, and mandolin.
Kaufman
surrounds her with a sympathetic cast of players, while
plays mandolin, piano, and drums. Opener "Verse 23" was written for her by
Hiss Golden Messenger
's
M.C. Taylor
. It emerges from a simply strummed mandolin, guitars, and a bass drum.
's voice unfurls slowly but is full-throated, like a soul singer. She entwines gospel, folk, and country in her delivery: "You can have some of mine/for as long as it takes/What the flood leaves behind/Is what we've got to make." The guitars buoy her vocal and she rolls over and through that lyric. "Breathing," co-written with
JT Nero
, employs a choogling organ and horns playing strolling, bluesy R&B, as she offers empathy and support to a shattered beloved. "Cotton and the Cane," co-written with
Mary Gauthier
, is an unflinchingly honest midtempo ballad fueled by a graceful B-3. In the lyric,
offers love and eternal respect to family and ancestors, living and dead, despite shortcomings and addictions; she sings with unwavering devotion -- even the line "Heroin, I'm locked out again" is offered as a circumstantial fact rather than a judgment. She follows it immediately with
Daniel Norgren
's soaring "Are We Running Out of Love?" framed by mandolins, drums, and guitars. Its ache and reflection are merely building blocks in her plea for healing and tolerance. The shambolic Southern garage rocker "Sweet Mama" sounds like
backed by
Neil Young & Crazy Horse
. "Calling Home" digs back into the country-soul bag, as guitars, organ, drums, and horns shuffle around
, who calls for her dad's hand to guide her home in the middle of a long, lonesome dark night of the soul. "Carry It Alone" is a gentle, fingerpicked lament offered after a broken relationship.
digs into each line, openly revealing her protagonist's doubt, pain, and longing. Closer "Renegade Heart," co-written with
Taylor
and
Elizabeth Ziman
, leans her vocal into a gospel piano to anchor the song's poetic lyric. She offers "You're someone worth loving/You beautiful heart" before ethereal horns flow in from the margins underscoring the truth and conviction in her words as she repeats the last phrase and carries out the record.
is free of artifice; its rootsy, warm sound buoys this intimate homecoming by presenting the full scope of
's prodigious gifts as a singer, songwriter, interpreter, collaborator, and artist, making it a timeless Americana masterpiece. ~ Thom Jurek

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