Superlatives are rare in album titles, and for good reason: unless you're a living legend or a legend-in-the-making like the Man in Black (1958's The Fabulous Johnny Cash) or the Queen of Soul (1962's The Electrifying Aretha Franklin), you're all but begging for a crash course in humility. So if you're going to stick a word like "phenomenal" in front of your name on a record cover, you damn well better have the goods to back it up.
Foster admits to initially having "quite a few reservations" about calling her fifth album "
The Phenomenal Ruthie Foster," crediting both her producer, noted Austin-based "swamp music" guitarist Malcolm "Papa Mali" Welbourne, and her label, Houston's Blue Corn Records, for making that particular gutsy call. As for how they came up with it, well..just give it a listen, and you'll understand. Calling this particular record by this particular woman at this particular time in her life and career anything but "phenomenal" would be akin to false advertising.
If you haven't yet been introduced to the music of this prodigiously gifted singer and songwriter from Texas, you're in for a major epiphany. And if you've been following Foster's career ever since her self-released, 1997 debut, Full Circle, or even since her 2002 breakthrough,
Runaway Soul, you're in for an even bigger surprise, because you really haven't ever heard Foster until you hear her now.
Simply put, mama's gotta brand new bag.