Jono
Manson 's "Under the Stone"
reviewed in "No Depression Magazine"

Jono
Manson
Under the Stone
Club de Musique
A native New Yorker who
now divides his time between Tesuque, New Mexico,and Italy, Jono Manson has long
been a master of the high art of low-rent song craft. But never has he cut as
close to the bone as on Under The Stone, the title track from his
latest self-produced CD. As high and lonesome as anything off the O Brother, Where
Art Thou? Soundtrack, it kicks off with a pitch-perfect invocation World
of trouble/ World of worry/ Carry on / carry on and proceeds to home
in on death with unblinking eyes.
Recounting a hardscrabble life in which
a hundred prayers/ A thousand needles/ Wont stop the pain, Manson
returns repeatedly to a mantra that makes the ultimate case for cremation: The
spirit wont visit the bones/ Under the stone. The song is even more
potent in the stripped-down acoustic version included as a bonus track.
Though Under The Stone is the albums crown jewel, it is studded
with other gems as well. Walking Down Your Street is a back-porch
picker that tucks a hard-luck tale inside a happy go-lucky shuffle. Gunhill
Road celebrates two late, great bass players: Loup Garous Jim Gregory,
who co-wrote the shit-kickin rocker with Neil Thomas; and Blues Travelers
Bobby Sheehan, who plays on the track and toured with Manson for many years in
High Plains Drifter. Both date back to the old New York bar-band scene, invoked
as a raucous last-call anthem in The Night Before The Morning After.
CREE McCREE
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