Atlantic Unbound

MARCH 1997
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT PREVIEW
Popular Music and Jazz
By Bob Blumenthal and Charles M. Young

Devotion + Doubt
Richard Buckner

"Pull"
AU (234k)
Real Audio 28.8 (45k)

"Lil Wallet Picture"
AU (221k)
Real Audio 28.8 (41k)

Copyright 1996
MCA Records, Inc.


BUCKING THE TREND


Hopelessly devoted to his psyche
Photo: Tim Stedman

Most singer-songwriters go about a third as far as they need to for a thorough exploration of their unconscious depths. As a group they've thus developed a reputation for irritating earnestness. From Fresno and a bunch of other places Richard Buckner transcends his peers with a true plunge to the realm where archetypes mix with individual desire, on Devotion + Doubt (MCA). In terms of sound it falls somewhere among folk, progressive country, and rock. The accompaniment is so understated that sometimes it seems to be stating not at all, thus contributing to a mood of pensive mourning over old girlfriends, the wrong choices, and the general overwhelmingness of life for someone who is both intelligent and honest. Buckner's singing has a breathy, exhausted quality that just saps the earnestness right out of you. He's not trying to be sensitive--he is sensitive, and any cuteness of imagery he might have picked up in college has been beaten out of him. This guy's a born poet with a talent for appropriately simple arrangements--in the tradition of Neil Young on his quiet side but with a lower register--so you won't be washing the kitchen floor along with this one. You'll want to listen actively, late at night, and gradually your autobiography will interweave with Buckner's. --C.M.Y.

| March 1997 Cover Page | Film | Dance and Theater |


The Best of Fat Possum

"Georgia Woman," R. L. Burnside
AU (221k)
Real Audio 28.8 (41k)

"My Baby Got Drunk," Paul "Wine" Jones
AU (216k)
Real Audio 28.8 (41k)

"Cedell's Boogie," Cedell Davis
AU (221k)
Real Audio 28.8 (41k)

Copyright 1997
Fat Possum/ Capricorn Records


DELTA FORCE

Since the rise of the British blues scene and the cult of the guitar hero, the most popular blues artists have emphasized virtuosity, the high point of their songs usually being the instrumental sections that take the minor pentatonic scale to truly dizzying heights. But as the blues has spread all over the world, it has never left where it started: the depths of the Mississippi Delta, where it remains folk music played by people who work by day and seek to entertain themselves at night.

Started by Matthew Johnson and powered by the work of the blues archivist and author Robert Palmer, Fat Possum Records has done a fine job of scouting a roster of mostly middle-aged and older artists who have had little or no exposure outside local juke joints. Theirs is a blues that emphasizes groove over virtuosity, and when the musicians find a groove they like, they just keep hammering the same three or four notes until they're satisfied.

If that sounds satisfying to you, a good place to start your own groove would be The Best of Fat Possum (Fat Possum/Capricorn), an anthology that truly stands out among the zillions of anthologies now cluttering the genre. All six artists on the album have a supreme talent for inducing a trance state in the listener, their crudeness of approach and muddiness of sound somehow contributing to the sense of relaxation. You'll want to close your eyes and undulate to most of this "deep" blues. R. L. Burnside and Paul "Wine" Jones in particular sound like direct descendants of Howlin' Wolf, rasping and snarling their eerie and sometimes hilarious lyrics. Having recorded with the New York club fixture the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Burnside is even enjoying a taste of fashionability these days. Fashionable or not, he's got the goods. --C.M.Y.

| March 1997 Cover Page | Film | Dance and Theater |



BLONDIE HAS MORE FUN


Harry and Costello get twisted
Photo: Page Simon

There is a venerable tradition of humor in jazz, stretching back to Louis Armstrong, Fats Waller, and Louis Jordan. The Jazz Passengers, a sextet founded ten years ago by the saxophonist Roy Nathanson and the trombonist Curtis Fowlkes, have taken the jazz-humor marriage into the postmodern era. For much of their first decade the Passengers delivered punch lines in musical puns and stage banter. Adding guest vocalists on their previous album, Jazz Passengers in Love (High Street), was a major step forward. On Individually Twisted (32 Records) the former Blondie chanteuse Deborah Harry handles most of the singing and proves jazz-ready for both ballads and burlesques.

Harry (who frequently tours with the Passengers) has been acting of late, and it shows in the conviction she brings to these well-crafted originals and lyrical standards. Whether serving putdowns to Nathanson on "Porkchop," deadpanning her way through "Maybe I'm Lost," or warping her old hit "The Tide Is High," Harry knows that timing is the key to both humor and jazz vocals. Equally effective when delivering "Imitation of a Kiss" and the standard "Angel Eyes" straight, she displays the range that this material demands.

The Jazz Passengers have always emphasized this kind of flexibility--unfettered one moment, extremely focused the next. This program underscores their feeling for such traditional material as "Don'cha Go Away Mad," for which Harry is joined by Elvis Costello. In person, with Fowlkes handling the male crooning and the soloists stretching out, the Passengers are one of the few jazz bands that take risks and still remain highly entertaining. The band's infectiously skewed world view is well captured on Individually Twisted.--B.B.

| March 1997 Cover Page | Film | Dance and Theater |

Bob Blumenthal is a jazz critic for The Boston Globe.
Charles M. Young reviews popular music for Playboy, Musician, and other publications.

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