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West Chester Daily Local
Sean Hickey
At time poignant, at times melancholic, always tender and introspective, Caroline Herring's beautifully realized Lantana is an album-length meditation on the metaphysics of self-realization and the real world of parenting, growing, and growing up. It's a record that burrows into the soul and knocks around in there, demanding more than easy answers to big questions about survival.
With a distinctly southern tinge in the gentle, largely acoustic folk-country arrangements, Lantana boldly identifies the artist in the ethereal, blues-tinged album opener, "Stone Cold World," as a "selfish girl in a selfish world" who can't accept what might be transforming love, even mocking her suitor's aspirations: "Pioneers must be big boys / Especially you…" But as the album progresses, something happens, as Herring exults in the spiritually exalted experience of being "a mother and a lover / And a sister and a daughter" in the lilting hymn that is "Lay My Burden Down," and later offers a blessing to a suddenly grown daughter in "Lover Girl," beseeching the youngster to "put your
little hands together / and pray for your mama."
Everyone's on shaky ground in the end, none more so than the tortured Susan Smith, infamous for having impassively drowned her children in a car. In aclassically styled murder ballad, "Paper Gown," though, Herring finds some light, just a little, in examining the arc of Smith's life ("Long ago I used to be / A little girl on my daddy's knee"), neither condemning nor excusing but seeking to understand the destructive demons driving Smith, which Herring recognizes as being so close to the surface, hers and ours. And therein lies a tale.
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