We’ve all heard about
the iconic vibe of Route 66, the neon lights on Broadway and the ocean air of
the Pacific Coast Highway. But there are untold stories emanating from
countless blue highways across the land – like Interstate 20, which cuts a
1500-mile swath from South Carolina to Texas, and cuts deep into the spirit of
those who’ve spent their lives traversing it.
Lucinda Williams is
one of those people, and with the expansive, enveloping The Ghosts of Highway
20, she brings those stories to life – and gives listeners a remarkably vivid
look at how the highway has been a literal and figurative backdrop throughout
her entire life. The intensely involving 14-song collection may be the most
deeply felt, deeply affecting work of Lucinda Williams’ illustrious
35-plus-year career, a career that has been established on a foundation of
remarkably personal songs.
“It is literally a map
of my life in a lot of ways,” says Lucinda. “We were driving between shows and
between cities, and I kept seeing things that brought me back to times and
places in my past. Like when we played in Macon, Georgia, a place I lived when
I was five or six years old, I got out of the bus and I was transported back to
when I saw this street singer, Blind Pearly Brown. It was like nothing had
changed. All these things started percolating in my brain, and the songs just
came.”
The thread of Highway
20 connects those songs, mirroring the winding route of the road itself, a
street that cleaves close to Williams’ childhood homes, the final resting place
of her mother, the sites where signposts of her formative years are forever
planted. The connection runs deep here, particularly on the dark and
moody tones of the album’s poignant title track, on which Lucinda ponders the
lives that were lived, the legacies that were left and the imprints that remain
on her own soul, conveying those vignettes with a palette that’s nuanced enough
to give the listener pause to ponder, but unvarnished enough that her message
is impossible to miss.