Raising Sand
Raising Sand is the first collaborative studio album by rock singer Robert Plant and bluegrass-country singer Alison Krauss. It was released in October 2007 by Rounder Records. Raising Sand won Album of the Year at the 2008 Americana Music Honors & Awards and at the 2009 Grammy Awards.
Reception
The album met with critical acclaim, earning an average score of 87 from reviews compiled by Metacritic. It ranked at No. 24 on Rolling Stone's December 17, 2007 listing of the year's top 50 albums. Being There called it "one of the year’s very best". AllMusic hailed it "one of the most effortless-sounding pairings in modern popular music", but stated that some songs " like tossed off".JamBase called the album "subtle, focused and full of life" and said that it was "highly recommended". Village Voice described it as "powerfully evocative" and "utterly foreign, oddly familiar, and deeply gratifying."
The songs on Raising Sand were handpicked by producer T Bone Burnett. Entertainment Weekly described the selection as "eclectic", while Village Voice said, "Burnett flaunts his typical curatorial genius with a whole set of 'have we met before?' tunes."
The musical quality was also praised. The BBC described Krauss's fiddle as "coruscating" and "raw", while The Music Box said Krauss "exceeds all expectations". The BBC said the musicians "make this a stunning, dark, brooding collection, comparable in tone to Daniel Lanois's masterful job on Dylan's Time Out of Mind."
Critics praised Krauss and Plant's vocals; one critic saying that the "key to the magic is the delicious harmony vocals of the unlikely duo". Various critics described Krauss's vocals as "spellbinding", "honey-sweet", "weepy", "saccharine", and "haunting". Plant's vocals were described as "orgasmic" and "slithering".
"Gone, Gone, Gone " was released as a single and won the Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals at the 50th Grammy Awards and was nominated for the Americana Award for "Song of the Year". The song "Killing the Blues" was No. 51 on Rolling Stones list of the 100 Best Songs of 2007.
On February 8, 2009, the album won all five awards for which it was nominated at the 51st Grammy Awards: Album of the Year; Best Contemporary Folk/Americana Album; Record of the Year ; Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals ; and Best Country Collaboration with Vocals. Raising Sand was the second of four country albums to win Album of the Year, following Dixie Chicks's Taking the Long Way and preceding Taylor Swift's Fearless and Kacey Musgraves' Golden Hour.
The album was nominated for the 2008 Mercury Prize in the UK.
In December 2009, Rhapsody ranked the album No. 2 on its "Country’s Best Albums of the Decade" list. The online music service also called it one of their favorite cover albums of all time.
"Raising Sand is my album of the century," said singer Lily Allen. "I love the whole folky and bluegrass sound. There's one track called 'Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us', which sounds like an epic funeral march: it's haunting and spooky, and Alison Krauss's voice can just make you shiver. Then there's 'Please Read the Letter', which just has such an honest and open sentiment, it's disarming. I'd love to do an album like that."
Chart performance
The album debuted at number two on the Billboard 200, selling about 112,000 copies in its first week, the highest chart position for either artists' solo work, although Plant had previously reached No. 1 several times with Led Zeppelin. Raising Sand was certified platinum by the RIAA on March 4, 2008. After the album's success at the 2009 Grammy Awards, the album topped the Billboard Top Rock Albums chart and Top Internet Albums chart for the first time on the week of February 28, 2009. The album also hit the top of Canadian Top Country Albums, and also peaked at No. 2 in Billboard Top Country Albums, being stuck behind part of 35 weeks non-consecutive chart topping Fearless by country singer Taylor Swift. Selling 77,000 copies on a 715% increase, Raising Sand jumped 69–2 on the Billboard 200.The album entered the Top 5 on the UK Albums Chart, going on to reach No. 2 on January 2, 2008.
Follow-up album
According to Ken Irwin of Rounder Records, and producer Burnett, the duo started work on a second album in 2009."To be 61 and faced with the 'difficult second album' is quite a phenomenon…" Plant observed in 2009. "We'd finished everything in ten days in Nashville, and I rented a car and went down the Natchez Trace to Oxford, Mississippi, across to Clarksdale and down into Helena, Arkansas, looking for those ghosts… and thought to myself, 'How can this be? I've just been with complete strangers, recorded 12 amazing tracks, had a fantastic time, and now I'm headed for the Mississippi Delta.'"
In a 2010 interview, Plant indicated that the follow-up sessions were unsuccessful. However, Krauss and Plant eventually released a new album produced by Burnett, Raise the Roof, on November 19, 2021.
Personnel
- Alison Krauss – vocals, fiddle
- Robert Plant – vocals
- Patrick Warren – keyboards, pump organ, toy piano
- T Bone Burnett – electric guitars, acoustic guitars, 6-string guitar, 6-string bass
- Marc Ribot – electric guitars, banjo, acoustic guitars, dobro
- Norman Blake – acoustic guitars
- Greg Leisz – pedal steel guitar
- Riley Baugus – banjo
- Dennis Crouch – acoustic bass
- Jay Bellerose – drums
- Mike Seeger – autoharp
- T Bone Burnett – producer
- Mike Piersante – recording, mixing
- Stacy Parrish – additional engineer
- Jason Wormer – additional engineer, editing
- Kyle Ford – assistant engineer
- Emile Kelman – assistant engineer
- Vanessa Parr – assistant engineer
- Alex Pavlides – assistant engineer
- Gavin Lurssen – mastering at Lurssen Mastering
- Paul Ackling – guitar technician
- Curtis Laur – guitar technician
- Ivy Skoff – production manager
- Lisa Surber – production managing assistant
- Nicola Powell – project coordinator for Robert Plant
- Pamela Springsteen – photography
- Russ Harrington – band photography
- Steve Jurgensmeyer – art direction, design
Charts
Weekly charts
| Chart | Peak position |
| scope="row" | - |
Year-end charts
| Chart | Position |
| New Zealand Albums | 40 |
| Swedish Albums | 61 |
| UK Albums | 34 |
| US Billboard 200 | 39 |
| US Top Country Albums | 8 |
| US Top Rock Albums | 11 |