Wailin' never sounded so good live

Blending is the key element for the Canadian folk/roots band The Wailin' Jennys. If you aren't already familiar with the group, up front they are Nicky Mehta, Ruth Moody and Heather Masse. Blending is the key element for the Canadian folk/roots band The Wailin' Jennys. If you aren't already familiar with the group, up front they are Nicky Mehta, Ruth Moody and Heather Masse. Part of the blending is the obviously gorgeous harmonies. Yet just as important is the blending of the different musical backgrounds and interests that serve as a cornerstone to the music just as much if not more than the vocals.

The evidence of the qualities in the blend can be found on the new Red House release Live at the Mauch Chunk Opera House. The songs were recorded nearly a year ago in a venue that has been kind to folk, roots and country acts, all genres the group visits from time to time over these 14 songs. Fans who have snapped up their previous releases need not worry about too much duplication as eight of these songs aren't available on any Jennys recording.

Virtually every song here is a masterpiece without a shred of filler. I especially enjoyed their take on Jane Siberry's Calling All Angels and Emmylous Harris' Deeper Well. Motherless Child and Driving are also both very strong offerings.

Hearing this live disc makes me yearn for two things. The first is that I wish I heard the disc Firecracker. The second is that the group wasn't going to wait until 2010 to tour in support of the album. But the disc demonstrates that the wait will very likely be worth it. I just hope central Indiana doesn't get left out of the tour plans.

Review used with permission of Country Standard Time http://www.countrystandardtime.com.

Live at the Mauch Chunk Opera House

I’m sure it’s a revered and wonderful building, but how does the name of an opera house end up with the word chunk in it? I’m sure it’s a revered and wonderful building, but how does the name of an opera house end up with the word chunk in it? Anyway, this new live recording is actually the first to feature their new line up with Heather Masse on board. Over the course of seventeen tracks they revisit some old songs, however a majority of the selections have not previously appeared on their recordings. Those include the much sought after cover of Jane Siberry’s “Calling All Angels.” They take an ages old tradition of harmony singing and earthy tunes and give them what they need to survive for subsequent generations.

Live at the Mauch Chunk Opera House

This disc offers an aural snapshot of the growth of the Winnipeg roots trio just before they went into hibernation at the end of last summer. This disc offers an aural snapshot of the growth of the Winnipeg roots trio just before they went into hibernation at the end of last summer.

Nine of the 14 tracks, recorded in concert in small-town Pennsylvania, have not appeared on either of the Jennys' two previous studio albums. Most notable are the muscular arrangement of the traditional Celtic tune Bold Riley, with Ruth Moody's wistful soprano as the lead vocal, and mezzo Nicky Mehta's haunting interpretation of the Jane Siberry tune Calling All Angels.

New member, Brooklyn-based Heather Masse (who replaced Annabelle Chvostek in 2007), is represented with two self-penned tunes and applies her confident alto to the lead in a couple of others.

The Jennys give their angelic harmonies full flight on covers of Emmylou Harris's Deeper Well, Gillian Welch's One More Dollar, even Gershwin's Summertime and the old spiritual Motherless Child. Former Winnipegger Jeremy Penner's fiddle and mandolin accompaniment adds depth and richness throughout.

If there's a weakness, it's the sense of preciousness and over-calculation the Jennys have always displayed, but this will not bother their devoted fan base. They are expected to be back in the saddle in early 2010, possibly with Mehta's newest production, twin boys, in tow.

4 out of 5 stars

Live at The Mauch Chunk Opera House Release Date

The Wailin' Jennys Live at the Mauch Chunk Opera House available in Canada on July 28! Available in the U.S. on August 11!

Mark your calendars! We will be releasing our brand new live album in Canada, on the Outside Music label, on July 28. It comes out in the United States on Red House Records, on August 11. It will also be available in Australia and New Zealand in early Augustthrough Shock Records.

We're excited! This is the first album that features Heather Masse in the Jennys line-up and it also includes eight previously unreleased tracks. (For a complete list of songs, see below.) We hope you like it. It certainly makes us happy to be able to give you a live Jennys experience while we are on sabbatical.

The album was recorded in Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania, at the Mauch Chunk Opera House on August 30, 2008, by Kent Heckman. It was produced and mixed by David Travers-Smith.

It will be available in stores, online, from the Outside Music and Red House Records websites, and pretty much anywhere. We’ll put up the links to buy online very soon.

More updates to come about our new studio album (to be recorded during the fall), new tour dates (starting in February 2010) and what we're all up to individually.

Love from The Jennys

Complete track listing:

Deeper Well
Summertime
Driving
Bold Riley
Glory Bound
Arlington
Bring Me Lil' Water Silvy
One More Dollar
Racing With The Sun
Paint A Picture
Begin
Motherless child
Calling All Angels
One Voice

Live at the Mauch Chunk Opera House

Sometimes to define a musical vision it can all come down to a live performance. For Canada's roots/folk trio The Wailin' Jennys, any doubt that they have what it takes to deliver a stunning concert set is forever erased with their third album Live at the Mauch Chunk Opera House, due August 11 via Red House. Sometimes to define a musical vision it can all come down to a live performance. For Canada's roots/folk trio The Wailin' Jennys, any doubt that they have what it takes to deliver a stunning concert set is forever erased with their third album Live at the Mauch Chunk Opera House, due August 11 via Red House. Co-founders, vocalists and multi-instrumentalists Ruth Moody and Nicky Mehta have joined with newcomer Heather Masse for an album of glorious three-part harmonies, virtuoso playing (with fiddler Jeremy Penner) and an impressive collection of 14 songs, eight of which have not appeared on the group's two excellent studio albums. Originally formed in 2003, The Jenny's quickly learned that their sum was greater than the solo parts. "The group sort of just happened to us," says Mehta. "The idea was to present our individual visions in a larger collective, but before we knew it things had taken on a life of their own...What's great is that nothing has been premeditated and we keep being surprised in the most creative, interesting ways." This new live set, recording last year at a favorite Pennsylvania concert hall, confirms that special mix of traditional and modern songwriting. Uncluttered live versions of songs such as "Glory Bound", "One Voice" and "Begin", from their 2006 disc "Firecracker" and 2004's "40 Days", mingle with new tracks and covers, most notably a brilliant reworking of Jane Siberry's modern standard "Calling All Angels." It's not often that something can be described as both "loose" and "tight" simultaneously, but a performance from the amazin' Wailin' Jennys is just that. It's also one of the best things we've heard this year. Highly recommended.

The Cake Eaters and Solo Performances

Since The Jennys have a page on their website dedicated entirely to food, having a song featured in a movie called The Cake Eaters seems entirely appropriate. You can hear "Begin," off Firecracker, in the new movie directed by award-winning actress Mary Stuart Masterson and starring Twilight's Kristen Stewart. The movie also stars Oscar-nominated actress Melissa Leo, who recently appeared in Frozen River (which featured music by our good friend Keri Latimer of nathan). Nicky also notes that she was a huge John Hughes fan in the '80s and therefore a huge Mary Stuart Masterson fan, so having a song in her new movie is pretty exciting. She has also hinted that Masterson's performance in Some Kind of Wonderful may have inspired her to take up the drums... We haven't seen the film yet so we're not sure where the song pops up, although we think it might be in a scene with a bridge. If you've seen the film, let us know! You can find out more about The Cake Eaters, which opened to limited release in mid-March, at www.thecakeeaters.com.In other news, you can hear Ruth play in her home-town of Winnipeg at the Times Change(d) High and Lonesome Club on April 17. She will be playing a set of brand new songs before going into the studio in May. For those of you on the West Coast, you can hear Ruth on May 1, in Chemainus, BC (Vancouver Island). For show details, click here.Heather has been a regular guest on A Prairie Home Companion during the Jennys sabbatical, and you can hear her again on April 18, live from Town Hall in NYC. She also hits the road on April 22 for a short tour of Oregon and Washington with one of the Jennys' favourite singers, Aoife O'Donovan ( Crooked Still). Don't miss seeing Heather and Aoife together! For tour dates, click here.Lastly, The Jennys have been hard at work planning the release of Live at the Mauch Chunk Opera House, tentatively scheduled for July. Stay tuned!