Critical reception
Blackgrass: From West Virginia to 125th St was met with generally favourable reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 85 based on five reviews. [1]
Avery Gregurich of PopMatters called the album "a timeless collection of American music that could only be created and delivered by the 81-year-old self-proclaimed 'original D-O-double G'". [3] Robert Christgau praised the album, stating: "on John Prine's label, with Margo Price, Jenny Lewis, and closet bluegrass adept/adaptor Vernon Reid contributing cameos, he revs up the songwriting. The Price feature "To The Other Woman" is a special standout, with "Your Best Friend" a made-to-order B side. And the racial charge of the "Murder Ballad" closer is more than a little eerie". [4] AllMusic's Mark Deming noted: "Blackgrass shows he can make a memorable bluegrass album as easily as he can craft a potent soul groove. The surroundings are unexpected, the quality is not". [2] Tom Hull resumed: "while he's always had a fair bit of country in him, he waited until he turned 80 to indulge it here". [6]
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