Ritt Deitz (CD release)
Mother Fool's Coffeehouse 1101 Williamson St., Madison, Wisconsin 53703
press release:
Small Blue Green Letters, Ritt Deitz’ latest recording and his fifth on the Uvulittle label, marks Deitz’s return to stringed instruments and voices and recalls his first full-length release, Hillbilly (Bentback 1999, anthologized on the 2006 Uvulittle release Collected 1999-2000), exchanging Steve Burke’s mandolin for Deitz’s banjo and with the harmonies of backing vocalist Lindsey Hinkel Craig Totten’s dobro work.
The small-town feel one often hears in Deitz’s songs shines through. A native of Florence, Kentucky, Deitz lives in a tightly-knit block on the Near East Side of Madison, which a musician neighbor (who grew up a block from where Deitz lived as a child) has called “Mayberry.” You can hear both of these on the opening track, “Here Comes the Band.” “A float goes by, the FFA / has filled that thing all up with hay / it must have taken them the whole darn day / but I ain’t sure I care / Where’s the band?”
The songs move from lighter and melodic (“Here Comes the Band,” “Bike”) to heady ballad-like tunes (“Chicago” or the album’s only cover, a very acoustic version of Yazoo’s 1980s synth hit, “Only You”) and back again. The only percussion on this record, as was the case on Hillbilly, comes from Joe Meisel’s thumping bass (or regular collaborator Dave Foss’s hammered dulcimer, which, as Foss regularly reminds Meisel, is also a percussion instrument).