Album Reviews
When famed Nashville label honcho Mike Curb presses the "I
Hear a Hit" button, only a fool doesn't sit up to pay
notice. And so when I received the slick advances press kit
for Plumb (real name =
Tiffany Arbuckle),
I promptly gave it a spin.
After a time, I came to like it. When
Plumb
settles down to a piano-based confessional sound on tracks
like "Nice Naive and Beautiful," she hits a grove, as she
does on the steady tang-and-techno of "Walk Away."
But too much of the album is overproduced, such as "Free"
and "Sink-N-Swim," the two opening tracks on the CD. There
is too much "New" Nashville, all pop and gloss and perfect
production.
As a side note of local interest, Plumb credits a 2000
concert appearance in Fresno as turning her career around.
(Plumb also has an upcoming date in Fresno.) Plumb is quick
to honor God as her source, and believes that an act of
intervention occurred when a fan slipped a note in her hand.
The note thanked Plumb for writing a song about coming to
grips with an act of child sexual molest.
According to the note, "Whatever you do, I just want you to
never forget that you have helped changed someone's life."
Says Plumb, "It hit me that this wasn't about me. I'd been
given a gift to communicate, to encourage and inspire...When
I finished the letter and opened the card, I saw that there
was a picture on the front of a cattail in a pond, with a
caption that read, 'The tender reed, bent to the force of
the wind, soon stood upright once the storm had passed.'"
Plumb
also has two indie CDs under her belt, including
candycoatedwaterdrops, which drew comparisons to
Sharleen Spiteri
from the band,
Texas.
Expect Plumb to get a major push from the label. Her voice
is talented, but the production has been layered as thick as
Aunt Jemima syrup.
~
Randy Kerbechek
“A few hours
before playing what she thought would be her last gig,
Plumb was handed a note that changed her life. She was
making an afternoon appearance at a local record store.
Fans were lining up for autographs, or to shove urgent
notes at the young singer with curly jet-black hair,
riveting stage presence, and spellbinding ways with a
song. Her first two albums each sold more than 100,000
copies with minimal promotion -- in fact, the second was
released only days before she broke her ties with the
label.
Despite all that, despite the pens and CDs waving in her
face and the familiar mantra that "you rock!" shouted in
her direction, Plumb stood at a crossroads. Even as she
smiled and signed, she was thinking that maybe she
couldn't do this anymore. Hassles with her label, the
grind of the artist's life, thoughts of hanging it up as
a performer and concentrating purely on songwriting and
production... doubts had been nagging at her for some
time, and that day in
Fresno
she was thinking that maybe this was the end of that
road.
As her mind drifted to these thoughts, Breanna stepped up
and introduced herself. "She said to me, 'I know you're
really busy, but I wanted to give you this note. A song
you wrote has meant a lot to me," Plumb recalls. "I
didn't read it until later, in the car ride back to sound
check for the show. It shook my world. I was drenched in
humility."
The letter was about "Damaged," a song Plumb had written
and recorded about a girl coping with being molested as a
child. The message from Breanna was simple: "Whatever you
do, I just want you to never forget that you have helped
change someone's life." "Sitting in the back seat, I felt
a knot in my throat," Plumb continues. "Here I am,
contemplating not even doing this anymore because of the
bitter taste in my mouth regarding the business. But it
hit me that this wasn't about me. I'd been given a gift
to communicate, to encourage and inspire. It wasn't up to
me to say, 'I don't want to do this anymore.'"
With that
moment tucked safely in her mind, a rejuvenated Plumb
presents her Curb debut, Beautiful Lumps of Coal.
Produced by Plumb and Jay Joyce (Patti Griffin, Atticus
Fault, Rubyhorse, Lisa Germano), it's a vivid, vibrant
explosion of music. The sound embraces raw, gutsy rock,
exuberant pop, sweeping string-blown ballads -- a rainbow
of styles, unified by Plumb's triple-barreled gifts as a
singer, songwriter and now producer.
First, the voice. It's... well, it's a wonder. No one in
music today tops her ability to draw listeners into an
intimate, whispering intro and then send them soaring
through a storm of escalating passion, as on "Boys Don't
Cry." Yeah, we know, that's saying a lot. But that's also
just the beginning. Listen to her caress the lyric on
"Go," a song of tender farewell, or announce her escape
from a more suffocating relationship in the resonant,
declamatory choruses of "Free." This is a voice to reckon
with, by anyone's measure.
It's also perfectly matched to the material. Messages
ride strong currents of melody on each track, some of
them urgently emotional ("Hold Me"), others shining like
beacons of hope for listeners who live in fear and
darkness. ("If you've been there, you know/if you're
still there, hang on," she urges on "Nice, Naive and
Beautiful.") Every one of these tracks has that
combination of musical and topical immediacy that
identifies those artists who have the pulse of their fans
beneath their fingers.
Plumb has been there. She responded, as a fan as well as
an artist, to Patti Griffin, Poe, Suzanne Vega, Alanis
Morissette...to name a few. To artists who nourished
their work through the bonds they built to their
audiences. Music as connection, set to the rhythms of
life's rewards and challenges -- this, from the
beginning, was a model for the young woman who would
become Plumb and step at last into the spotlight on her
own. She was born in
Indianapolis,
raised in
Atlanta.
From the start Plumb was drawn to music, but in those
early years she never dreamed she would follow this muse
all the way into business.
In fact, where the typical superstar biography describes
years of doggedly chasing success, Plumb's story is more
about receiving gifts -- gifts of talent and opportunity
that seemed to come unbidden toward her. Never once did
she pursue. After graduating from high school, while
planning to major in special education at college, Plumb
took a few gigs as a backup singer in
Atlanta.
At first, this seemed just like something fun to do until
real life would intervene. But when she was invited to
start singing backup full time with various acts, she
found herself on the road for a few years. This led to
session work, and that prompted her to finally set her
college plans aside and move up to
Nashville.
Once again opportunity presented itself, when Plumb was
offered a record deal solely based on someone hearing her
backup singing. She was all of twenty years old. "This
was certainly not something I planned out," she laughs.
"I was happy just doing other people's stuff, so I didn't
really have a style of my own. And as a backup singer I
would gladly stand behind the star, go ooh and ah, and do
the little arm wave. All of a sudden I'm wanted up front,
and responsible for communicating everything. Very
excited...and very scared at the same time."
They also wanted her to write original material --
something she had never imagined doing. "I was frustrated
that the label didn't just find a bunch of amazing songs
for me," she says. "I thought to myself, do they think I
have potential, or do they want off the hook in finding
songs for me? Whichever it was, it doesn't matter now,
because I'm grateful that they forced me to write --
because I grow as a songwriter every day. They encouraged
a gift to immerge, one I was unaware that existed."
Working with Matt Bronleewe, her neighbor, friend and a
fledgling producer, she recorded her first album, Plumb,
in 1997, then left for an extended tour. The album built
an underground following with its modern rock sound and
upbeat lyrics. The momentum built with her sophomore
release, candycoatedwaterdrops, in 1999. On disc and in
concert, Plumb's performances bore fruit: As one reviewer
noted, "If you enjoyed the Cranberries, No Doubt, or
Texas,
then you will love Plumb to bits."
With Beautiful Lumps of Coal the creative fire burns
brighter, and the light of Plumb casts further into the
world than ever. Much of this has to do with the freedom
she's earned following her break from her previous label.
A number of majors chased her, but Curb won her
affiliation from the get-go. "I said to each interested
label, 'If I sign again, I want the moon,'" she says.
"But the first draft of the contract that Curb sent was
more than I had considered asking for. Another
opportunity had fallen into my lap... so, again, here I
am."
And where is here? On Beautiful Lumps of Coal it's closer
to her own heart than she's ever been. "On my first two
records I was getting pretty good at writing about things
I knew about or people I knew," she says. "But I wasn't
on an intimate level with myself. It wasn't that I was
afraid of being vulnerable; it was just an avenue I
hadn't explored. I just didn't know how to write about
me. Now I've grown not only as a writer, but as a person
as well."
In fact, Plumb insists that the songs on Beautiful Lumps
tell a single story of change -- of her own recent
transformations, from being alone to being married, from
one label to another, from older relationships to the
realization that her needs for friendship have evolved in
unexpected ways. "These changes are all amazingly
positive. But change of any kind involves loss," she says
"And any kind of loss involves grief. Even when I got
married, for four days after I was home from my
honeymoon, I was a little depressed -- not because I
wasn't crazy in love with my husband, but because all of
a sudden we were living in the same house, brushing our
teeth at the same time. I was ecstatic about being
married, but even then there was a bit of grieving
because I had lost something too. My old life."
"And through these changes and hardships, I've grown. I'm
in a better place now, with my label, with better
management, a great marriage, stronger friendships, and
an unexpected education all at the same time. Those
hardships, those 'lumps of coal' I was dealt, I was able
to see turn into beautiful diamonds. Something I can
inspire others to do with their bitter wedges." This
inspiration breathes life into this remarkable album. And
while Plumb is quick to honor God as her source, it must
also be said that some of that intervention was passed to
her through the note that a fan slipped into her hand
some two years ago in
Fresno.
But there was more than the note in that gift from
Breanna. "She had put her letter inside a card," Plumb
remembers. "When I finished the letter and closed the
card, I saw that there was a picture on the front of a
cattail in a pond, with a caption that read, 'The tender
reed, bent to the force of the wind, soon stood upright
once the storm had passed.'"
With Beautiful Lumps of Coal Plumb stands unbowed, her
music resonant and alive. No storm can take her down; she
is here to stay.”
(From
http://www.plumbinfo.com/
under the bio section)
The CD
This CD is
the fourth major offering from Tiffany Arbuckle otherwise
known as Plumb. Tiffany went from Forefront to a major
mainstream record label in Curb Records which has artists
such as LeAnn Rimes, Tim McGraw, Natalie Grant, and
Michael English. The high quality of this latest
offering along with the marketing dollars of her new
record label should make this CD a success on both
Christian radio and mainstream radio. Arbuckle brings a
full CD of good songs and the possibility of at least 5-6
radio songs. The sound and lyrics of Plumb have went the
way of being more on the fence as compared to being
distinctly Christian as the following words from her hit
song Sink-n-Swim show:
‘We
will sink and
We will swim
Til' the ocean turns to sand
We will laugh
We will cry
Til' there's no more breath inside
Cause we will sink
But we will swim’
Listen to
Sink-n-Swim
The rest of
the CD brings high quality songs with a definite
spiritual emphasis that has been the Plumb of the past.
This CD definitely has some songs that will be hits on
Christian radio such as Sink-n-Swim and
Free. The CD also has some songs that may
appeal to the mainstream radio more such as Real,
Boys Don’t Cry, and Love’em & Kiss’em.
Listen to
Real
Final
Recommendation
Overall, I feel this CD is
a quality CD from start to finish and by far the best
Plumb has brought to the table in her short career so
far. The vocals are amazing as Arbuckle has a
God-given talent in which she can captivate you with her
voice. I would not classify this as a secular CD by any
means, but the CD does lack a little bit of the all-out
Christian lyrics that we had seen from Plumb in the
past. I would still recommend this CD for all ages and
to anyone who loves good female alternative rock music in
the same sound of Jewel, and Alanis Morissette in the
mainstream world. Overall, add this CD to your
collection as there is not a bad song on the CD.
~
NateDog
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