Americana queen Lucinda Williams released her loudest album ever in April. "Good Souls Better Angels" sounds even louder in August, resonating anew with roaring guitars, rattling rhythms and cut-to-the-bone lyrics.
"This is the kind of record I've been wanting to do for a while, just that real edgy, grungy, garage-rock sound," said the three-time Grammy winner, who on Thursday kicks off the Star Tribune State Fair's virtual grandstand, a 12-day online concert series.
Williams' 13th studio album has been dubbed a protest record, an angry shout that reverberates during a time of viral pandemic, racial unrest and political divisiveness.
"I don't think of it so much as protest songs; it's more songs about humanity and connecting with people," said the singer-songwriter known for her trenchant, poetic expressions of heartbreak. "I've touched on these kinds of subjects before like [2011's] 'Soldier's Song'— that's my version of an antiwar song.
"There's always something to be frustrated about in this country. It's a little bit more challenging to write about that stuff; you don't want it to sound too corny. It's much easier to write a song about unrequited love."
Williams fires away on the opening track, Memphis Minnie's "You Can't Rule Me," gets down and dirty on "Bad News Blues," tackles depression in the metaphorical "Big Black Train," and roasts with "Man Without a Soul."
All the songs are framed by Stuart Mathis' guitar that scolds, seethes and scorches.
"He just felt it," Williams said. "It was a pretty organic process. The frustration level and anxiety has been so high with all the stuff that has been going on and is still going on with the government, or the lack thereof."