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Mary Chapin Carpenter: The Age of Miracles

By Jesse Kornbluth
Published: Apr 25, 2010
Category: Country

“We’ve got two lives, one we’re given, the other one we make,” Mary Chapin Carpenter sang on Come On Come On, her 1992 breakthrough album. For her, that estimate was too conservative — three years ago, a pulmonary embolism nearly killed her. Seasons of doctors followed, and medicine and rest. Now she’s released The Age of Miracles, and it’s not overstatement to suggest that it’s a rebirth — a third life for her.

Small complication: In each of her lives, there have been two Mary Chapin Carpenters, one a significant writer, one a singer who can deliver hits. Sometimes the brainiac Brown grad and the Nashville hit maker don’t seem to meet. She writes from the intersection of emotion and reason; she can sing like she’s fronting a bar band. It’s those raucous, bawdy songs that get the most air play — and will, forever. Mary Chapin Carpenter feels lucky. She’ll take her chances. And you should see her at the Twist & Shout. Etc….

I’m fond of that Mary Chapin Carpenter, but I value the writer more. And as a writer, she’s anything but Nashville. Carpenter is a master of the line that slips under the radar and pierces your heart, the thought you believed only you had, the painful truth that loses some of its pain for being shared. We have a mutual friend in Don Schlitz, who wrote “The Gambler” and a sheaf of other songs  that will be played as long as there is music. Though they collaborated fifteen years ago, the memory is still sweet. “To think, I had the opportunity to sit across the table and make up a few songs with her,” he says. “You can only imagine what a lifetime experience that was.”

 

It may take a professional to appreciate just how special Mary Chapin Carpenter is: The singer-songwriters who can combine actual poetry in a framework that’s not entirely foreign to Nashville make for a very short list. No wonder that town’s most accomplished musicians line up to record with her — especially now, when her always personal writing and singing have new dimensions. And then there’s her fresh resolve. As she sings in “The Way I Feel,” the last song on the CD, “When I’m out alone on the midnight highway/ There’s nothing like both hands on the wheel/ Radio playing ‘I Won’t Back Down’/ Baby, that’s about the way I feel.”