iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn't open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Johnstown by Oh Susanna, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

Johnstown

Oh Susanna

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

Upon an initial look, Oh Susanna (the musical persona of American-born, Canadian-bred Suzie Ungerleider) appears to be just another Lilith Fair folky, but looks often are deceiving. The opening notes of her first song — the disc's forceful title track, "Johnstown" — reveal that she is no pastoral wallflower. Set around the Johnstown flood, the murder ballad "Johnstown" paints a gritty portrait of a soulless prostitute killer. Oh Susanna stocks her first full-length disc with similarly dark and harrowing tales. Songs like "The Bridge" and "You'll Always Be," for example, chronicle women trapped in troubled marriages. Even her happier tunes are tinged with trouble. In "Walking," the female protagonist might be a survivor, but she must live like a man to succeed. Love songs, such as "Home Soon (The Cherry Song)" and "Tangled & Wild," are bathed in sadness, although the latter tune — the disc's closing cut — does offer slivers of hope. Like Gillian Welch, Oh Susanna is inspired by traditional songs, but her interests dwell with country blues rather than Welch's bluegrass predilections. She sings in a fierce, bluesy style that only enhances her songs' sense of heartbreak. In "You'll Always Be," her voice reaches near-keening levels to convey the turmoil that the woman in the song is experiencing. Likewise, her determination is palpable when she sings, "I will find you/I will find you" in "Old Kate," a tale of lost love. Produced by Peter Moore(who also produced the Cowboy Junkies), the disc has a raw and noir-ish country blues sound that fits Oh Susanna's mournful but moving songs. While the arrangements generally are spare, there are moments when a dissonant piano or Hawaiian hollow-neck guitar get used to accentuate a song's turbulent emotional state. With one foot in the past and the other in the present, Oh Susanna makes Johnstown a powerfully stirring effort.

Customer Reviews

Worth it...

for "Tangled and Wild" alone. Lord what a beautiful song -- I've listened to it non-stop all weekend. The yearning, the sheer keening want in her voice when she pleads "Run away with me, won't you" ... if you've ever felt that, you'll respond viscerally. Reminiscent of Allison Krauss or Kathleen Edwards, with harder bite. The lyrics, a torturous mixture of desire and loathing, the story of a relationship gone wrong, will send you reeling. She seethes her way through “Walking,” a Biblical allegory of a woman whose mother tells her to cut her hair and get a husband to keep her safe from harm. In “You’ll Always Be,” we see how well that works out. The lyrics are a bit muddy because she’s wailing with such a well-spring of hatred. Beginning with “the first time I saw heaven,” a lazily sarcastic loop, she’s absolutely spitting by the time she tells of the six seasons she’s “weathered” with a husband coming home “stinking of liquor.” Though the tales are sad, she never once dissolves into soft sentimentality. This is an album of survival -- tooth and nail, biting, clawing survival.

beautiful and haunting...and a sweet girl, too!

i saw oh susanna at the winnipeg folk festival many years ago and was entranced by her beautiful, stunning vocals. i bought this cd and listened to it all the time. and, acting like a slightly creepy and obsessed fan, i found her website and sent her an email. not only did she write a (fairly lengthy) reply, she sent me another cd! my faves on johnstown are: alabaster, pueblo, back dirt road, home soon and tangled and wild.

One of my favorites- not really folk, though!

The first song I heard from the band was "Ted's so Wasted" from Sleepy Little Sailor. I bought the album without having heard any other song- expecting to be disappointed as usual. I liked the rest of the album so much that I bought Johnstown and then the self titled album last. The self titled album is probably the one I like the best, but every one of them is a good listen. They seem to have the perfect balance of down-home blue grassy country and ballads- with some rock thrown in for good measure. The stories in the songs are ones everyone can relate to, and I think they work best if you listen to the whole album instead of cherry-pick the favorites. probably Alabaster is my fav song on this album, but the last 2 are a close second. If you like some of the songs on the album, you really should check out the other two!

Biography

Born: October 25, 1969 in Northampton, MA

Genre: Singer/Songwriter

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Oh Susanna is the stage name of singer/songwriter Suzie Ungerleider, a Canadian alt-country performer with a taste for stark, haunting balladry that's earned her comparisons to the likes of Gillian Welch. Born in the U.S., Ungerleider moved with her family to Vancouver as a child, and grew up listening to all kinds of music (she was especially fond of the Rolling Stones). She studied history and hosted a radio show at Concordia University, which helped intensify her already burgeoning interest in...
Full Bio

Become a fan of the iTunes and App Store pages on Facebook for exclusive offers, the inside scoop on new apps and more.