https://youtu.be/kF95H097l60?si=tFnWhL6KSVfCwg_-Much has changed for singer-songwriter Alice Peacock since her last solo studio album, 2009âs Love Remains. Sheâs had three kids, moved to Cincinnati and ⌠gotten 10 years older. âFeel the weight of the world on my shoulders/ Am I wiser or am I just older?â she sings on âDry Spell,â from her new collection, Minnesota. The record suggests that despite her âwondering what all is yet to be,â she has indeed attained a measure of wisdom.She uses the word âmidlifeâ but does not follow it by âcrisis.â She views her current outlook more as an awareness of lifeâs fragility and an appreciation of its sweetness. âBeing a parent, I donât know that I could love any more than I do right now,â she says, âso Iâve also never been more vulnerable. I have everything to lose.âFurther evidence of this contemplative spirit can be heard on album closer âGod Be Near Me,â about which Peacock says, âI wrote a hymn out of nowhere! I was sitting at the piano one day going, âAm I completely screwing this all up?â And I found myself thinking, âHelp me to stay focused on love.ââ The lyrics ask, âHelp me to surrender/ And love the world the way you do/ Now and ever after/ And live in love the way you do.âOn Minnesota, Peacock explores an understanding of love, in particular, that transcends hearts and flowers, Sturm und Drang. âResting in the Quietâ acknowledges âa glimpse of the divineâ in unspoken eloquence: âWe donât have to talk about it/ We donât have to say a word/ We can wrap ourselves in silence/ Cause Iâve already heard/ Everything your eyes are saying.âA departure from romantic love, âFree and Wildâ is a lullaby sung from the point of view of someone âwith a love so fierceâ it hurts. Peacock likens parenthood to âgoing through life with your heart outside your body.âThe albumâs title track is a love song to her home state, where her family spends their summers. âIâve lived in Illinois and Tennessee and now Ohio and I love them all, but thereâs something about home ⌠As soon as I get back to Minnesota and hear the birds and smell the air, I feel, âThis is mine; this is me.ââ In the song she recalls sitting in âsacred silence,â watching âthe electric light show playing wide across the sky.âThe song âMinnesotaâ was written in 2018, but some of the album Minnesota was written in 2015, the year Peacock took the third annual Real Women Real Songs challenge â which meant writing 52 songs in 52 weeks. Among them were âResting in the Quiet,â âFree and Wild,â âIn Your Own Backyardâ and âParanoid.â Their appearance on the new record reflects the songwriterâs love of â and commitment to â songwriting itself.She says of that period in her life: âI was momming full time. The twins were about three, my first-born had just started school, and it was busy. Before they came along, inspiration would strike and Iâd go with it. I used to write in the middle of the night. But now ⌠I need my sleep! I canât pursue the muse whenever she decides to arrive. I have to just show up and say, âOK, here I am. Time to write!â Itâs less romantic but still satisfying.âThe writing of Minnesota thus progressed at its own pace, but recording an album was another matter. She was able to collaborate on âDry Spellâ with Wayne Kirkpatrick (author of Eric Claptonâs Grammy Song of the Year âChange the Worldâ), on âIsnât That Me and Youâ with Minnesotan Jon Vezner (cowriter of Kathy Matteaâs Grammy Best Country Song âWhereâve You Beenâ), and on âYour Own Backyardâ with Dirk Freymuth (Kottonmouth Kings, John Gorka, Peter Ostroushko). Getting in a room with musicians and a producer, however, was a heavier lift. The timing had to work.She credits Grammy Award-winning producer/keyboardist Phil Madeira, guitarist Will Kimbrough, bassist Chris Donahue and drummer Bryan Owings â aka Emmylou Harrisâ Red Dirt Boys â for helping the stars align: âI got a call. They said, âHey, weâre in town if you want to do some recording.â And I said, âWhy, yes, I do.ââThe town was Nashville, where Peacock and the Boys cut the basic tracks for Minnesota in four days. âTheyâve played together so much,â she says, âthat they have this easy musical conversation, so the process was effortless. We didnât do more than two takes. I didnât even overdub any lead vocals, which was a little terrifying. Sometimes Iâd listen to my vocal and say, âI might have been able to sing that a little better,â and Phil would say, âNo, actually, that was a pretty great performance.â Or one of the guys would say of his own part, âThat take didnât make me mad.â We just went for it.âPeacock, Kirkpatrick and James Hollihan (Bill Gaither, Mighty Clouds of Joy) played acoustic guitar on the record, though John Mark Painter (Brandi Carlile, Kings of Leon, Ben Folds) played the lionâs share of acoustic and also played horns, notably on âParanoid,â which finds Peacock in a New Orleans musical setting, ever the storyteller, channeling Tom Waits on one of the albumâs not-so-autobiographical outings.Minnesota was recorded at the Butcher Shoppe with engineer Sean Sullivan (Beck, Sturgill Simpson). Derri Daugherty, lead singer and guitarist for the Choir, mixed the disc and sang harmonies with Peacock on several songs, including the title cut, which she calls âan almost-duet.âPeacock had not been in the studio since recording 2011âs Myrick Peacock, her duo project with fellow âpreacherâs kidâ Danny Myrick. (2014âs Live From Space was recorded live at Space, the intimate Evanston, Ill., venue Peacock played regularly in her Chicago days.)But now that sheâs done having babies, she intends to return to the studio at regular intervals, having already started writing songs for a follow-up to Minnesota. âWhen all the focus was on me, on my music, Iâd think, âIâm looking forward to putting the focus on something else; Iâm really tired of thinking about myself.â These days, as much as it possibly can be, the focus is back on my work.âDuring her tenure as full-time mom, Peacock did manage to âkeep a toe in the waterâ with one-off shows. âNot just for me, not just for my fans,â she says. âItâs good for the kids to see me connecting with audiences, to see the passion I have for music.â With the release of Minnesota, she plans to jump back in with both feet, hitting cities on tour she hasnât visited in years.She acknowledges how lucky she is to have a co-parent holding down the home front, her husband of 21 years. âWeâre staying together for the math homework,â she insists. âIt takes both of us to figure it out.â Like many couples with young children, she admits they donât have much time alone together. They fall into bed exhausted. But she also relates: âWe ran into each other recently. He was driving his car; I was driving mine. He pulls around and rolls down the window, and he somehow caught me off-guard. I just looked at him smiling at me and thought, âDid I really win this prize?ââThat recognition recalls a line from âYour Own Backyardâ: âBefore your life goes slipping by you/ Open up your eyes.ââThings feel very sacred to me at this time in my life,â Peacock confides. âYou reach an age where you begin to lose people. The beautiful moments we have, like being out in nature up in Minnesota â âthe moon waxing over the water, the loon calling to her loverâ â I keep telling myself, âTake it in because this is it.ââhttps://www.alicepeacock.com/
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