subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Sat, Nov 21 2009 

Published: May 30, 2007 09:39 pm    print this story   email this story  

B-Sides: From the Wabash Valley to the big stage

By Mark Bennett
The Tribune-Star

TERRE HAUTE Tim Carroll watched himself on national TV last Sunday, playing guitar alongside his wife, singer Elizabeth Cook.

He heard “CBS Sunday Morning” music critic Bill Flanagan describe Elizabeth’s new album as “a real breath of fresh air.” Flanagan compared her to Tammy Wynette and Dolly Parton, adding another glowing review to a list that includes Rolling Stone, The Tennessean and the New York Times.

Carroll also is receiving good marks for a pair of compositions and the guitar work he contributed to her CD. Not bad for a guy who literally heard his calling as a kid growing up in West Terre Haute. (He once rode horseback through the woods toward the source of a cool sound, a rehearsing garage band.)

“It’s kind of rewarding to see some results that are right in front of you,” Carroll said of their moment on CBS last Sunday.

Yes, you could see Tim and Elizabeth on “CBS Sunday Morning” or read about them in Nashville’s The Tennessean, but you’ll probably not hear mainstream country radio play Cook’s new single. The obstacle isn’t necessarily the name of the song, which is also the title of her album — “Sometimes It Takes Balls To Be A Woman” or just “Balls” for short, so to speak.

Actually, the problem is that Cook’s recordings sound more like Loretta Lynn than Carrie Underwood. Though her disc is one of the feel-good hits of this summer, it’s too country for country.

“It’s a shame that Elizabeth Cook, who’s a real country artist who’s played the Grand Ole Opry 250 times, can’t get played on country radio,” said Traci Thomas of 31 Tigers Records, the hard-working, independent Nashville label created solely to handle “Balls.”

The song has cracked the top 10 of the Americana charts, bouncing up from No. 11 to No. 8 this week. Americana radio is a home for outside-of-the-box country artists, and “Balls” — with sprinklings of Carroll’s Merle-Haggard-meets-The-Clash leanings — is a perfect example.

And though Cook’s blonde image, playful Southern alto and gifted song writing dominates this 11-song album, her husband’s influences are clearly present. Carroll brought a rock ’n’ roll spirit to Nashville, after moving from West Terre Haute to Bloomington (where he played in a punk band, the Gizmos, while attending Indiana University), to New York City (where he played with the alt-country Blue Chieftans, while working on Wall Street). He soon developed a reputation as a songwriter’s songwriter, a musician’s musician, and a club-goer’s favorite.

“Everybody who was anybody in Nashville knew who Tim Carroll was,” Cook recalled.

He and Elizabeth met at a recording session in the mid-1990s. “He says he thought I was ‘wife material,’ which I’m not sure how I feel about that,” she joked.

Since they’ve been together, Carroll has performed alongside Cook at the Grand Ole Opry, in Ryman Auditorium and around the world, while also maintaining a steady stream of gigs with his own punk-country trio. He’s recorded four albums of his own and continues to write, but also is a rock of support for Elizabeth’s career, setting up sound equipment, playing a wicked guitar and driving their car. On Tuesday, they drove from their home in Nashville to North Carolina, where Elizabeth began a tour that will swing from Alabama to Colorado.

“He’s so selfless and so generous,” she said by cell phone, while Tim navigated through interstate traffic. “With his talent, I know deep in my heart, without his contributions, things wouldn’t be sitting where they are today.”

Take the song off “Balls” that really has the critics buzzing, “Sunday Morning.” She delivers a captivating, laid-back rendition of this 1967 song by Rock ’n’ Roll Hall of Famers the Velvet Underground. Cook was born in 1972 in Wildwood, Fla., the daughter of a dad who learned to play bass while spending 11 years in prison for moonshining, and a mom who strummed banjos and mandolins in country bars.

Tim, 47, first exposed Elizabeth to Velvet Underground, pulling the band’s “Nico” album from a shoe box of cassettes in their basement. And after rehearsals for “Balls,” producer Rodney Crowell — a country artist who also produced CDs by Roseanne Cash and others — suggested including “Sunday Morning.”

“Tim has been a huge influence on me, and continues to be more and more so,” Elizabeth said.

Though Carroll says his own musical sensibilities are less “slick and clean” than Crowell’s, the veteran producer was eventually won over.

Crowell told the Nashville Scene, “I think Tim Carroll’s contributions were important. He brings a little punk to it, just a little sprinklin’ of punk attitude.”

Using classic country arrangements hinged more on fiddles than top-40 guitar fuzz. Cook, Carroll, Crowell and an assortment of Nashville musicians completed the album in three days. Despite that relatively brisk pace, the CD — Cook’s fourth — “might be getting closer and closer to her best work,” Tim said, taking his turn on the cell phone once they arrived in North Carolina.

The collection closes, fittingly, with a song they co-wrote, “Gonna Be,” followed by Elizabeth’s version of a hopeful tune Tim wrote and recorded in 2002 called “Always Tomorrow.” In “Gonna Be,” they write, “I’m not a has-been; I’m still a gonna-be. You just wait and see. You just wait and see. Keep looking out for me.”

In real life, Tim and Elizabeth have a schedule full of gigs ahead of them, “and we want more,” he said.

Two years ago, their travels brought them through Terre Haute, which Elizabeth called “a nostalgic experience” for Tim, whose family moved to Oregon after he’d graduated from West Vigo High School in 1977. Their tour detours also have taken them to Wildwood, Fla., a town her family — which included 11 children — left long ago, too. The struggles of life in the Deep South, as well as those in the years that followed, are fully expressed in “Sometimes It Takes Balls To Be A Woman.”

The latest dose of critical success sweetens their journey.

“It’s so great to have a partner in a marriage and to be able to share all of this with him,” Elizabeth said.



Mark Bennett can be reached at mark.bennett@tribstar.com or (812) 231-4377.

print this story   email this story  



Terre Haute Progress Retail health medical manufacturing education

Terre Haute



autoconx
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Terre Haute

Terre Haute News Morning Headlines

Terre Haute ClickLocal

Terre Haute Tribune-Star Newspaper Dial-A-Pro

Terre Haute Tribune-Star Newspaper Live in the Clubs

Terre Haute News on Twitter

Hot Jobs

HEALTHCARE ADMINISTRATOR
Healthcare
Administrator
Seeking a quality care oriented leader for long long-term care facility in Illinois
...>MORE

SKYLINE CENTER
Skyline Home Health
FULL TIME
REGISTERED NURSE
Our Home Health Department is looking for a FULL Time Re
...>MORE

SECURITAS
Security Officers
SECURITAS Security Services USA, Inc. is currently seeking dependable
Security Professionals
...>MORE

ALLIED WASTE
ALLIED WASTE
Dispatcher/
Customer Service
Allied Waste of Clinton is currently hiring for a dispatch / cu
...>MORE

WICK BUILDINGS
Want a Paycheck by Friday?
Like to Travel and Work Outdoors? This is the job you have been looking for...
Wic
...>MORE

CLINTON COUNY COMMUNICATIONS
911 Telecommunicator
Clinton County/City Law Enforcement Center
Clinton, Iowa
Full-time position, fast-pa
...>MORE

SUPER 8
Hotel General Manager
Super 8—Clinton
1711 Lincoln Way
Seeking hotel manager for professional
leader
...>MORE

BRAD DEERY
Sales. Unlimited Opportunity. Immediate Opening. Brad Deery Automotive
Group, Iowa’s largest automobile retailer,...>MORE

OTR DRIVERS
OTR DRIVERS
*Home weekends
*Run the Midwest
Region
*No Hazmat, No Touch
*Class A CDL, Clean...>MORE

CITY OF BETTENDORF
CITY OF BETTENDORF
City of Bettendorf is looking for qualified applicants for the
Sanitation position in PW De
...>MORE

See all ads

Hot Autos

Advertise Here! Call 563-242-7101!
...>MORE

See all ads

Today's Featured Jobs

Currier Driver
Currier DRIVER
No Exp. Needed,
Flexible hours,
Excellent pay,
1-888-208-4336
...>MORE

2nd Shift Supervisor
Warehouse

A major facilities
company has an im-
mediate opening for a
2nd shift supervisor....>MORE

See all ads

Today's Featured Autos

98 S10
98 S10 4cyl, auto,
custom paint $2000,
(812)235-7718
...>MORE

94 LeSabre
94 Buick LeSabre,
91K mi., good
shape, $2250-obo.
299-0711, 208-1988
...>MORE

See all ads

Today's Featured Homes

Shady Oak Village
SHADY OAK
VILLAGE
For Seniors 55 or
older or Disabled.
Now Leasing 1
Bdrm $510 2
b
...>MORE

1 Bdrm
now available
1 bdrm apts.
Call (812)466-5665
...>MORE

See all ads

Today's Cool Stuff

CKC pug puppies
ckc pug puppies M-
F, fawns & blacks
$250. Leave mes-
sage (812)241-3359

...>MORE

Rolltop desk
oak rolltop desk,
$300 obo
243-0157

...>MORE

See all ads


 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2009. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index