Joy Williams and John Paul White are made for each other or at least, their voices are. On their debut album, the Nashville songwriters meld their vocals together in songs that are mostly about how terrifying love can be or how difficult it is to escape one's past to create bold harmonies that are so attention grabbing, you don't even initially notice that their only accompaniment is an acoustic guitar (or sometimes a piano). References to burning coal, preachers and winding roads, combined with the songwriters' penchant for dropping their gs at the end of words, create idealized, dreamy visions of a rural South that you intuitively recognize, even if you've never been there. Barton Hollow is just the first act in what promises to be a long and fruitful career.