Knoxville News Sentinel
Alison Krauss
Can’t Believe She’s Touring with Tony Rice
Shock & Awe
May 11, 2007
By Wayne Bledsoe
It's
been a long time since Alison Krauss hopped the fence from prodigy to adult
star, but the emotional connection she has to the music she fell in love with as
a child has never been stronger.
"It's
worse," says Krauss. "I feel like when I get out the records that I
listened to as a younger person I go, 'Oh my gosh!' Before, you just like it and
you don't know why. Now I just can't even deal with it!"
Krauss
says that's why she's having a tough time coming to terms with going on tour
with acoustic music star Tony Rice. The tour will celebrate Rice's career in
music, with Rice and Alison Krauss & Union Station performing together. She
first heard Rice when she was 12 years old. She remembers the moment clearly:
She and bassist/songwriter John Pennell were on the way to play music, and
Pennell put a tape of Rice's music on. "We stopped at Burger King, getting
bacon double cheeseburgers, and he played me 'John Hardy.' And I never even knew
there were words to that song at that point. I'd only heard it as a banjo
tune." Krauss fell in love with Rice's music. "In an ideal world, I
would've been there when he recorded (the album) 'Cold on the Shoulder,' "
she says. Rice was already a legend in the flatpick guitar world when Krauss
heard him in 1982 or '83. He and Ricky Skaggs had performed with J.D. Crowe and
the New South, and Rice had become a star of both hard-core bluegrass music and
progressive acoustic music. A few years later, Krauss was herself becoming
legendary as both a fiddler and a vocalist. She released her first album,
"Too Late to Cry," at the age of 16. Eight years later, "Now That
I've Found You: A Collection," a sort of combination of retrospective, rare
tracks and new songs, turned Krauss into an international star.
"It's
so funny; we put that together and I thought, 'Nobody will want this!' "
says Krauss.
Spurred
on by the country hit "When You Say Nothing at All," and with adult
contemporary radio embracing the title cut, the disc sold more than 2 million
copies.
Krauss
also took her share of jabs from bluegrass purists during the time. Many were
none too happy to see their new queen explore other styles of music. However she
and her band Union Station have little attention to musical barriers.
"Really,
my duty is to follow what grabs me," she says. "Music is an emotional
experience, and if we don't follow what moves us, the music will not have the
integrity that it's supposed to have."
Krauss'
latest disc, "A Hundred Miles or More: A Collection," is a similar
project to "Now That I've Found You," but Krauss thinks, overall, a
better one. It includes duets with John Waite (a Krauss favorite from the
1980s).
That
follows her producing the al bum "Like Red on a Rose" for Alan Jackson
artists whom
she admired as a child has been "unbelievable."
"It
has just been the most amazing journey playing music, and I am so grateful and
blown away for the opportunities that have come my way. And this thing with
Tony, if I even talked about it or thought about it for very long, I was just a
mess. And his records and who I have imagined him to be through what he chooses
to sing for so many years - it's so much who I am as a person, besides
musically. It's so connected to who I was as a young girl and who I am now; it's
so much a part of my existence that I cannot believe that we get to spend this
time together."