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Mellowicious!

Marshall Chapman

Mellowicious!

Genres: Rock / Alternative
Price: $14.99
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Other CDs By Marshall Chapman

Songs and Samples

Have A Little Faith
Island Song II
Railroad Track
Call The Lamas!
I'm Just Pitiful That Way
Downhill Slide
I Fell In Love Again This Morning
Now The Rain Is Falling
Bright Red Sunset
I Love Everybody (I Love Everything)
Trouble With A Capital T


Some Nice Things People Have Said

Damned if Marshall Chapman don't sound and write as good as she looks.
- Rodney Crowell

Another great record by one of the best there is.
- Todd Snider

When I hear Marshall Chapman, I feel panthers of grace rising around me; and this new record of hers is a new magic breeze for those panthers and me.
- Nick Tosches


About Marshall Chapman

Marshall Chapman was born and raised in Spartanburg, South Carolina. To date she has released eight critically acclaimed albums and her songs have been recorded by a variety of artists including Emmylou Harris, John Hiatt, Wynonna, Joe Cocker, Irma Thomas, Jimmy Buffett, Dion, Tanya Tucker, Russ Taff, Olivia Newton-John, Sawyer Brown, Mindy McCready, Greg "Fingers" Taylor, Jessi Colter, Ronnie Milsap, and The Uppity Blues Women.

She has toured extensively on her own and opened shows for everybody from John Prine and Jimmy Buffett to Jerry Lee Lewis and The Ramones.

Of her three rockin' albums for Epic, the Al Kooper-produced Jaded Virgin was voted Record of the Year (1978) by Stereo Review. Following 1982's Take It On Home (Rounder) Marshall released two albums on her own Tall Girl label: 1987's Dirty Linen (A- in Christgau Consumer Guide, released in Europe on Line Records) and 1991's Inside Job, voted Album of the Month in the April 1992 Stereo Review.

In 1994, Marshall recorded a live concert at the Tennessee State Prison for Women. The result was It's About Time...— her first live album and first release for Margaritaville / Island Records in May 1995. The CD drew rave reviews from Time, USA Today and The Village Voice.

Love Slave. According to Marshall, being a "love slave" is a way of life. "We're all slaves to something," she says, "....might as well be love!"

In 1998, Marshall began exploring new outlets for her creativity. One was theater. She and songwriting pal Matraca Berg contributed fourteen songs to Good Ol' Girls, a country musical based on the stories of Lee Smith and Jill McCorkle. The New York Times called it a "feminist literary country music review."

In fall 2003, Good Ol' Girls played theaters throughout the South. Marshall's first book, Goodbye, Little Rock and Roller (St. Martin's Press), was published in September 2003. Simultaneously, a companion CD was released. The book was a 2004 SEBA Book Award finalist, and one of three finalists for the Southern Book Critics Circle Award. A softcover edition was released in September 2004.

In the past year, Marshall has performed from San Francisco to New York, from Blytheville, Arkansas, to Loachapoka, Alabama, developing a one-woman show called "The Triumph of Rock and Roll over Good Breeding."

She is currently writing commentaries for The Bob Edwards Show (XM Satellite Radio), and recently released Mellowcious!, her first studio album in nine years.


News and Reviews

Her stirring new Mellowicious! is her first studio CD in nine years.
- Philadelphia Inquirer

. . . a welcome return . . .
- No Depression

Mellowicious! proves that Chapman still has it in spades.
- Vintage Guitar Magazine

Don't be fooled by the title. She is, thankfully, as ornery as ever. As one track says: 'Trouble with a Capital T'
- L.A. Daily News

Plan9Music
Review by Ames Arnold

Long, lean Nashville songwriter Chapman is always unpredictable and completely true to her own sense of artistry and this project is no different. That's not to say her vision is always 100 percent spot on but you can count on her to tell it like she sees it. She�s toned her personal act down a bit from her raucous early days but she still kicks up a fuss musically and "MELLOWICIOUS!" is full of rockin' and thoughtful tunes about trust in oneself and hearing your little personal voice in a world of noise.

Things kick off in a great groove with the positive "Have a Little Faith." "Island Song II" sends out her notions of the need for interpersonal connections and, while it's a little too close musically to Jimmy Buffet's island groove for me, Chapman guides the song with her usual good nature. Things get a little goofy with "Call the Lamas!" but it�s a grocery store shopping story she swears is true and, like all of her stuff, it's well written and it lopes along in a winning way. "I Fell in Love Again This Morning" is a pretty love song written with Danny Flowers. Marshall sings it with the perfect rough-edged but tender vocal. Her "I'm Just Pitiful That Way" and "Downhill Slide" admit her frailties with upbeat honesty and with a genuine joy for life, shortcomings and all.

On the critical side, I don't usually like songs that call up too many modern technology touchstones that Marshall likes to use such as computers and cell phones and she�s often wordy. But, damn, her lyrics and approach to her topics are always unique and clever as hell despite these nit-picking quibbles. Fans of Chapman will dig this project and those unfamiliar with her who are looking for some musical reason to smile might check into this intriguing songwriter. She can be a hoot.

Pop Matters
by Steve Horowitz

Marshall Chapman Loves Everybody and Everything

Marshall Chapman writes and performs witty, down-home tunes about life, love, and death without being preachy or weird about it. She possesses a cosmic consciousness that smiles at the absurdity of existence, the irrationality of human connections, the silliness of the search for meaning, and the joy of finding it in everyday, ordinary stuff.

This self-proclaimed tall girl looks to the heavens for inspiration and sees the stars and finds the details of reality more magnificent than any supernatural entity. And she has a musician�s heart. Chapman knows how to put her thoughts and feelings into a song and make it sound as natural as if she's just talking to a friend.

Perhaps this is because Chapman's not afraid to be intimate, not in a sexual sense but in the more personal and confidential manner of exchanging secrets. She speaks her mind candidly at the risk of being unpopular. Who else would bring up the words of preacher Billy Graham, a television talk show, and g-d's love for Islamic terrorists at a bar during South by Southwest? While in the midst of her gig at BD Riley's, Chapman told the audience that she saw Graham on Larry King�s show the other night. King asked the preacher if Jesus loved the people that crashed the plane into the World Trade Center as much as he loved Graham. The preacher answered yes without hesitating, according to Chapman, who then launched into her good-time feeling song, "I Love Everybody." She obviously meant the words to the song as literally as Graham thought Jesus did, if not more so, as she continued her verse with "I love everything." She�s not naive. Chapman knows that all she has to do is turn on her TV to see war and disaster. However, she chooses to embrace the positive rather than to dwell on the negative side of things.

That doesn't mean Chapman tolerates fools. At the SXSW gig she berated the people at the far end of the bar who talked while she performed, for their lack of respect for the listeners. Her songs reveal her openness, but she's not shy and she�s no Pollyanna.

Chapman sings about the finality of death on "Now the Rain is Falling," without any mention of an afterlife or positive redemption. This doesn't mean she lacks faith. In fact she proclaims the opposite on the disc's opening track, "Have a Little Faith." But the belief she advocates is to have trust in oneself, those whom you love, and the physical reality that exists around us. Chapman uses the example of the Big Dipper as a metaphor for the realization that there is guidance for those who seek it. Just as the old song said, if one follows the Drinking Gourd one will head in the right direction for freedom. That was true then, and the stars in the sky still indicate that there is something greater than ourselves which can steer us now.

Nor is Chapman necessarily a Christian, despite her reference to Graham in Austin. Her spirituality seems much more universal. The finest song on the album is the quirky "Call the Lamas!," whose title refers to Buddhist monks. In the song Chapman announces that she has discovered the Buddha. She spotted him sitting in the child�s seat of a grocery cart at the register at the local supermarket. Chapman witnessed the miracle of his beatitude and the glory his �transcendental smile� bestowed on three small girls who were out shopping with their mother. Chapman treads the line between seriousness and humor to suggest that there are wonders all around us every day if we only take notice. The song succeeds because of the purposeful ambiguity, and because it has such a catchy melody.

Chapman does believe in romantic love. On one song she tells her mate that she falls in love with him again every day. On another she says straight out that she�s a pitiful fool who would be lost without him. Chapman�s not afraid to admit her vulnerability. That may not be hip or smart, but she�s more concerned about being honest. This integrity makes the tall girl big in the best sense of the word.