Grace Cummings: Ramona Album Review


Ramona, the third album from Melbourne belter Grace Cummings, feels at first like a possible masterpiece, a new apogee in the pantheon of tormented soul. Across its 11 allusion-rich character studies and screeds of lovelorn retribution, Cummings renders every moment with unmitigated emotional intensity, as though every feeling were the last one that would ever matter. Hear her grow, for instance, from long-faced tenderness at the start of “A Precious Thing” to an operatic mercenary howling about love. “But it’s nothing I care about,” she roars like Diamanda Galás on a Disney ride designed by Dante. Or witness the cracks in her voice as she surges beyond an Amy Winehouse coo during “Something Going ’Round,” testaments to the self-doubt ingrained in this opening love letter. Built by a band that has clearly studied the Wrecking Crew’s glories, and gilded with strings and harp, Ramona holds a singular and mighty voice in a spectacularly grand frame, not unlike Rufus Wainwright’s Want One or Weyes Blood’s Titanic Rising.

But you know that friend who you love seeing for an hour every once in a while, who shares everything new about their life in an exhilarating but exhausting torrent? That could be Ramona after repeated spins, when Cummings’ lack of restraint, combined with the band’s hidebound insistence on repeating sounds that are often 60 years old, becomes too taxing to take for very long. After self-producing her first two records, Cummings linked with Topanga Canyon vintage king and session ace Jonathan Wilson, who freed her to focus on not holding back. That is commendable, but it results in an album that has the dynamic range and limited application of a strong flashlight. You recognize its incredible power, but you’d do best not to stare into the source for very long.

Cummings is not shy about courting legendary company. After all, the protagonist of “Ramona,” a smoldering pseudo-goth number that ultimately flames into a full torch song, is borrowed from Bob Dylan. (She summons him again for the number’s finale, with sneering repetition that mirrors “Just Like a Woman.”) There’s a bit of Johnny Cash’s “Cry, Cry, Cry,” toward the end of “Everybody’s Somebody,” which borrows the sound of Memphis’ Stax rather than its Sun to impugn a wayward partner. She lifts from Townes Van Zandt during “Without You,” where she again flips Dylan lines twice. There are glimpses of Nick Cave and Nancy Sinatra and, in the album’s closing verse, Cummings quotes standards from Dylan, Neil Young, and George Harrison, like some thrift-store magpie. The band, led by Wilson and multi-instrumentalist Drew Erickson, responds in kind, stitching clear threads of Radiohead, Phil Spector, Hal Blaine, and Chris Isaak into these songs.



Source link