November 19th, 2008
Critical Juncture | Point Juncture, WA is ready for the big time—but it’s not really a priority.0 comments
November 19th, 2008
What I love about Willie Nelson | Casey Neill is a Portland-based singer-songwriter who will perform at the Wonder Ballroom’s Willie Nelson Tribute this Friday night.0 comments
November 19th, 2008
Metal 101 | This high-school club’s got one rule: “Respect thy metal.”2 comments
November 19th, 2008
Little Sue Saturday, Nov. 22 | Susannah “Little Sue” Weaver talks cross-alt-country journeying.0 comments
November 12th, 2008
Blue Horns | Blue Horns’ attention span is short; its rock ’n’ roll songs are even shorter.0 comments
November 12th, 2008
Lickity | Lickity’s electro-party-punk was kind of an accident. No one’s complaining.0 comments
November 12th, 2008
One Mic | Longtime Portland MC Mic Censhaw finally makes a solo stand.0 comments
November 5th, 2008
Reviews: Oh Captain My Captain and Pink Widower0 comments
November 5th, 2008
An Anne For All Seasons | Grey Anne’s debut sparkles, whether or not she’s around to defend it.0 comments
October 29th, 2008
The Estranged. Friday, Oct. 31 | A post-punk life fits these ex-crust rockers just fine.0 comments
![]() UNUSUAL SUSPECT: Short breathes life into old sounds. IMAGE: Laurent Orseau |
[April 9th, 2008]
[TIME-CAPSULE COUNTRY] There’s a small contingent of singer-songwriters who are quietly saving country music, and Shelley Short is one of them. It’s not just thanks to her subtly twangy voice or string-laden music. Rather than waxing naively cute, à la Jenny Lewis, or idiotic (most modern country), Short encapsulates much of what makes old-school Nashville country great: a showman’s charisma (think Dolly), credible melancholy (think Patsy) and close geographical ties (think Hush Records).
Which is not to pigeonhole Short’s intimate third full-length, Water for the Day. The Portland chanteuse employs unpredictable vocal melodies and complex arrangements, as well as plenty of downhome charm. On “How Grand,” Short’s light croon mimics a fluttering hummingbird, pairing coos with tricky rhythms and scale-spanning runs. Later, when bells chime throughout song’s end, you can almost feel cherry blossoms drifting to the ground like snow. “Single Minded Hero” employs a like playfulness, where such proclamations as “My, what a beautiful sunset” and “Words, they cannot hurt me” straddle the line between tongue-in-cheek and straightforward. The song’s quirky question-and-answer refrain, “Are you getting lost on purpose? No, no, no, no, no,” paints an image of Short aimlessly wandering—a broad smile across her face.
It’s these histrionics that—despite lazy accordion, ghostly saw and softly picked guitar and banjo—give Water singular flair. But Short’s not all winking odes to figurative ponies (“4 Legs & Light”) and lighthearted, half-yodeled music-box waltzes (“The Getalong”)—both of which make grand use of Hush labelmate Rachel Blumberg’s light, skilled hand on the drums. When she sings “I don’t know a goddamn thing/ Thank God” on “Godamn Thing,” her sprightly demeanor is quickly weighed down by a solemn, communication-breakdown admission—“I didn’t say anything/ I didn’t say anything at all”—an ominous chorus and low, bowed strings.
advertisement
Opener “Silver & Gold” and “May Song” bookend Water (which comes in a neat, cutout case designed by Stumptown Printers) with similarly sober ruminations on mortality and loss, respectively. And both give you the feeling Short’s earned her bittersweet humor. The latter’s somber harmonica and childlike backing vocals drive Short’s effortless wisdom home as she plainly observes, “You didn’t miss your water/ Till your well was gone.” For her part, Short declares, “I know what I’ve got when I’ve got it/ I know what I’ve got before it’s gone.” I, for one, am convinced.
RECENT COMMENTS ON “Shelley Short, Water for the Day (Hush)”









