the new record, the instrumentation is almost entirely acoustic, the ensembles are smaller and the emphasis is on harmony singing with the simplest possible accompaniment. It's no coincidence that three of the ten tunes are Protestant hymns and two others inspirational in content, since the purest country music, like the purest black music, started in church.
Throughout the LP, the vocalistsHarris, Ricky Skaggs (who sings several duets with the star), Tony Rice, the Whites, and guests Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt and Johnny Cash sound like a bona fide community as appealing as Kate and Anna McGarrigle's Canadian counterpart. The material is also well chosen. Emmylou Harris continues to unearth fantastic Louvin Brothers numbers ("You're Learning"), A.P. Carter's "Gold Watch & Chain" is a special delight and the trio of Harris, Parton and Skaggs performing the traditional "Green Pastures" gives me pleasant chills. Though the bluegrass rendition of Paul Simon's "The Boxer" is inspired in theory, it's reprehensibly careless in execution: the song's hero should remember every "glove" that knocked him down, not every "bloke," as Harris strangely sings.
Nonetheless, Roses in the Snow is a success, thanks largely to Brian Ahern's amazingly breezy, flesh-and-blood production (to be fair, he did a good job on Rodney Crowell's debut album, too) and to Emmylou Harris' staunchly renewed convictions. (RS 321)
DON SHEWEY