Last of My Kind may be the first ever soundtrack to a book. Nashville musician
Paul Burch wrote the gritty
folk tunes on the album as an accompaniment to his friend Tony Earley's Depression-era coming-of-age novel, -Jim the Boy. Like Earley's universal Mark Twain-esque story,
Burch's songs come right from Americans' subconscious, from the collective myth of
americana crystallized in Huck Finn, Tom Joad, and Jay Gatsby. With a similar flair to the
Coen brothers' barn-raising O Brother Where Art Thou? soundtrack, Last of My Kind fits well with the raspy narratives, creepy ballads, and back-porch stomps of
Harry Smith's brilliant Anthology of American Folk Music.
Burch's songs have their own stories to tell, whether he's singing of the game of life in a pure, clear voice on "Up on the Mountain"
("Where the honeysuckle grows/The world below laid out plain for me to see like a board of Monopoly") or recounting the story of a murderous farmer in the spooky shuffle "Harvey Hartsell's Farm."
Burch's brilliance lies in the fact that he has created a period album pulled out of the past but imbued with a contemporary relevance and resonance that make it just as poignant as a novel of the same sort. As he sings in the title track, "Today I came to realize that I am the last of my kind." ~ Charles Spano, All Music Guide