The word immigrant and emigrant will always pose contrasting
images, reactions, feelings and experiences. While forever being a theme of a changing
world, they will often be the staple of song writing activity. Irish born
Nashville based singer-songwriter Ben Glover has extracted his personal experience
of the latter to spearhead a project drawing on a set of themed songs from a
range of sources.
In line with his two most recent excursions into the recording world – the solo album ATLANTIC and the collaborative effort THE ORPHAN BRIGADE – Ben once again submerges his whole creative being into a collection of songs wringing in the depth of emotive soul. The backdrop does veer away from his adopted home and the overall Celtic feel resonates with an outlook to peer into the distance. Through a journey of solo/co-writes, covers and traditional arrangements, THE EMIGRANT hooks in the listener and refuses to relinquish their attention until the task of extolling an imaginative experience is complete.
In line with his two most recent excursions into the recording world – the solo album ATLANTIC and the collaborative effort THE ORPHAN BRIGADE – Ben once again submerges his whole creative being into a collection of songs wringing in the depth of emotive soul. The backdrop does veer away from his adopted home and the overall Celtic feel resonates with an outlook to peer into the distance. Through a journey of solo/co-writes, covers and traditional arrangements, THE EMIGRANT hooks in the listener and refuses to relinquish their attention until the task of extolling an imaginative experience is complete.
While the order of the ten tracks appears in a strain of
randomness, analysis is best served by breaking the sources down and
acknowledging their value to a process of forming an outstanding record. Three
songs of traditional origin make the cut with the first thoughts of hearing Ben
sing ‘The Parting Glass’ is to
contrast his vocals with a version recorded by the Wailin Jennys. Great songs
are malleable in their interpretation and this comparison is unedited proof. ‘Moonshiner’ and ‘The Green Glens of Antrim’ are the other two of unnamed origin with
the latter a superb fit for closer position complete with a tearful piano
accompaniment.

Finally onto the remainder of the album, and a celebration
of other writers leading off with Ralph McTell’s ‘From Clare to Here’. This much covered ballad of Irish emigration
is a suitable fit for the album and fully deserves its core position. ‘The Auld Triangle’ is another
established Irish standard and brings back memories of the Punch Brothers
covering it at Southern Fried Festival last year. The set is completed with an
antipodean emigration song albeit one with a moving complete story packed with
many stark messages and morals. Every second of the 7:49 version of ‘And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda’ is
a million miles from being wasted and paints a painful picture of life’s cruelties
from an emigrant’s perspective.
You should be now getting the message that THE EMIGRANT is
full of substantial artistic merit and a conceptual piece of multi-song writing
excellence. If you like your music brimming with history, context, emotion and perception,
Ben Glover will deliver.