With her band Nickel Creek on "indefinite hiatus," singer and fiddle player Sara Watkins makes her solo debut with a recording that gives a good sense of her hybrid musical heritage, combining traditional country elements with singer/songwriter pop. It's a mixture conceived in Los Angeles, specifically at the nightclub Largo, which helps explain the presence of Jon Brion's song "Same Mistakes." Of course, Watkins is first and foremost a bluegrass player, and she lapses back into the Nickel Creek format on the instrumentals "Freiderick" and "Jefferson." But as a singer, with her breathy, untrained voice, she sounds like she's spent at least as much time listening to Edie Brickell and Aimee Mann as Dolly Parton and Loretta Lynn. And she delights in juxtapositions of hill country music and downtown L.A. singer/songwriter styles, pointedly sequencing "Same Mistakes" right after "Freiderick," and sticking David Graza's pop/rock tune "Too Much" in between the down-from-the-mountain "Bygones" and the old-timey "Will We Go." She pays tribute to such crossover country stars as Jimmie Rodgers ("Any Old Time") and John Hartford ("Long Hot Summer Days"), as if to suggest that she is in their tradition of performers with impeccable traditional roots who nevertheless play beyond the borders of the Confederacy, which is, perhaps, only appropriate for a country performer born in Santa Monica, CA. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
Sara Watkins
04/07/2009 | Nonesuch
All Music Guide Review
Sara Watkins Track Listing
Sara Watkins Notes
Sara Watkins' self-titled, eagerly anticipated by the significant fan base she's built after nearly two decades as fiddle player and vocalist for Grammy Award-winning trio Nickel Creek, boasts an easygoing virtuosity. The youthful Watkins, who joined Nickel Creek when she was barely in her teens, displays formidable skill as a multi-instrumentalist, playing the guitar and ukelele as well as the fiddle, and is just as versatile, and breathtakingly mature, as a singer. Watkins incorporates folk, country, gospel and pop into her 14-song set. She's joined by a wide range of old friends and longtime heroes, including alt-country duo Gillian Welch and Dave Rawlings, Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers keyboardist Benmont Tench, and Elvis Costello drummer Pete Thomas; colleagues from the bluegrass world like Tim O'Brien, Punch Brothers' Chris Eldridge, Ronnie McCoury, and Ryan Gellert; and Nickel Creen band-mates Chris Thile and Sean Watkins.
Credits of Sara Watkins
- Billy Cardine
- Dobro
- Jenny Anne Mannan
- Harmony Vocals
- Ronnie McCoury
- Mandolin
- Tim O'Brien
- Harmony Vocals
- Mark Schatz
- Bass
- Dave Sinko
- Engineer, Mixing
- Sebastian Steinberg
- Bass
- Pete Thomas
- Drums
- Gillian Welch
- Drums, Harmony Vocals, Guitar (Electric)
- Chris Thile
- Mandola
- David Rawlings
- Drums, Guitar (Electric), Harmony Vocals
- Jeremy Cowart
- Photography
- Eric Conn
- Mastering
- Sara Watkins
- Guitar (Acoustic), Vocals, Ukulele, Fiddle
- Sean Watkins
- Guitar, Harmony Vocals
- Wendy Stamberger
- Design
- Michael Witcher
- Dobro
- Aoife O'Donovan
- Harmony Vocals
- Rayna Gellert
- Fiddle
- John Peets
- Photography
- Chris Eldridge
- Guitar, Harmony Vocals
- John Paul Jones
- Organ, Bass, Mandolin, Piano, Piano (Electric), Producer, Harmony Vocals
- Claire Lynch
- Harmony Vocals
- Benmont Tench
- Piano
- Jon Brion
- Guitar, Guitar (Electric)
- Luke Bulla
- Harmony Vocals
- Byron House
- Bass
- Greg Leisz
- Pedal Steel












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