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Krauss and Plant: Opposites Attract on a Sweet CD

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She is the belle of bluegrass. He is a veteran hard-rock hero. At first glance, Robert Plant, former lead singer for Led Zeppelin, and Alison Krauss, the Grammy-winning fiddler and vocalist, seem like an unlikely pair to record an album together.

But the odd couple's new CD, Raising Sand, has already won over many critics. One observed that "they share a keening, a longing in their voices that strips these rock and country songs right back to their haunted souls."

Krauss grew up steeped in traditional bluegrass, but has never been shy about her devotion to rock and pop. Plant has veered from Zeppelin's strong rock and blues roots, performing with nomadic Tuareg guitarists and drummers from North Africa.

Perhaps it's less of a surprise, after all, to find these two adventurous musicians, with their divergent backgrounds, now joined on yet another new path.

The man guiding them is Raising Sand's producer, T Bone Burnett, who said he wanted to push the two singers "outside their comfort zones."

"I didn't believe I could take these songs and give them a fair translation of their delicacy and the emotive elements of the writing," Plant says. "How do I bring that home because it's coming from another place?"

Burnett suggested that Krauss, not Plant, sing Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson, one of the most bluesy songs on the new CD. At first, Krauss says she felt squeamish and "too white." But Burnett encouraged her to sing it with as much soul as she puts into her bluegrass songs.

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Although Krauss and Plant sing together on most of Raising Sand, Plant doesn't like to refer to the songs as "duets."

"The term duet," Plant says, "intimates established singers who take songs and make them into some kind of sugar-coated moment. These are adventures, really."

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