https://www.austinchronicle.com/music/1996-08-09/532381/
A Piece of Your Soul (Atlantic/Code Blue)
The blues is dead and all the Ian Moores, Chris Duartes, and Storyvilles in
the world won't change that. It died on a on a foggy mountainside with Stevie
Ray Vaughan, and it hasn't been seen since. SRV wasn't the first and he wasn't
the best, but he brought a purity and integrity to the form that hadn't been
seen on AOR radio -- and therefore the commercial arena -- since the heyday of
Allman, Clapton and Hendrix. He brought real blues to a format that
wasn't used to real blues; you'll hear SRV on FM rock stations, but you
won't hear Albert Collins or B.B. King. And once he was gone, you couldn't just
go back to Bad Company or the Firm. Eight years after his death, Kenny Wayne
Shepard is ruling the roost and House of Blues is an institution. So is A
Piece of Your Soul bad as all that? Fuck no. It's a damn fine album. You
will turn up "Good Day for the Blues," "Blindside," and the title cut
whenever they come on KLBJ. Better still, it's proves again that Texans
from Arc Angels to ZZ Top are the last word on the subject. But the blues is
still dead, so cancel my subscription to the resurrection.
*** -- Raoul Hernandez
Stereophonic Spanish Fly (Capricorn)
It's a bit unfair to classify this as a funk album, because it makes a much
better rock record. The endless jamming and instrumental tag-team matches that
are so much a part of the Ugly Americans' live shows aren't anywhere to be
found; in their place are catchy hooks, friendly rhythms, and happy thoughts
like "I like the way I feel when you're around." Admittedly, the songs that
work best are the ones that have some teeth, like "Big Wild World" and "Staring
Straight Into the Sun," not necessarily the Blues Traveler smilefests like "You
Turn Me On." Though none of the songs on Stereophonic Spanish Fly are as
consciousness-raising as the time I walked into Steamboat and was greeted by
these guys doing a version of "Sex Machine" that was one of the two or three
nastiest funk workouts I've ever heard, it's a fine album nevertheless.
*** -- Christopher Gray
White Trash Receptacle (One Ton)
White Trash Receptacle's own story -- recorded for A&M, released on
Denton's One Ton, and now set for reissue on Island -- proves that Jeff Lile
(aka cottonmouth, texas) has made the rare spoken word record with
shelf-life. That Lile brings along the other Dallasites like the Toadies, Earl
Harvin, and Broose for sound collages is a nice touch, but Lile's true gift is
his touching flow in and out of slacker detachment and the angry-young-man pose
-- with one steady voice revealing very different men each time he dives into
basketball, dating, cocaine, and epilepsy. And while the image of a deer family
with Ted Nugent's head on their wall on "Hunt Me" is the record's best Far
Side-ish laugh, "The Economy of Used CD's" may have a far more useful legacy,
"Coverdale/Page, that's three bucks..../now bands like Jackyl are buying me
lunch."
***1/2 -- Andy Langer
Highway of Life (Justice)
When Billy Joe Shaver came back from the dead with 1993's Tramp on Your
Street, I was so overjoyed just to hear him play again that I was willing
to overlook a flaw in his songwriting: He has a tendency to lapse into
clichés. The problem is a bit more pronounced now, on his debut for
Justice (which now, apparently, has all the "outlaws" sans Jerry Jeff under
contract). You write what you know, I guess, but Shaver has done the whole
"ramblin' down the road" thing before. Here, the title track merely gives us
more of the same, and "Yesterday Tomorrow Was Today" says about what you'd
expect. When he's writing past the clichés, however, one gets gems like
"You're as Young as the Woman You Feel," the seemingly lowbrow title of which
is betrayed by a funny homage to the legendary Harlan Howard: "Big Harlan likes
his women young/Says it helps him write good country songs/When they divorce
him he doesn't fight/He just keeps all those great copyrights." Of course, my
complaint is greatly offset by the strength of Shaver's performance. Shaver's
voice sounds like the blue denim workshirt he always wears, comfortable and
worn, and I'll go out on a limb here and say that Eddy Shaver is just about the
best white blues guitarist playing today. Throw in the sparkling new addition
of Brantley Kearns on a searing fiddle, and you have a band that could cover
Barry Manilow and still sound great. Hmm. A mediocre album (by his standards)
and it still sounds great... That says a lot about Billy Joe Shaver. (P.S. Look
for the hidden Soundboard track, "Mother Trucker," at the front of the album;
it also appears on the forthcoming Diesel Only's Tribute to the American
Trucker.)
*** -- Lee Nichols
Starlite Lounge (Warner Bros.)
According to the last song on Starlite Lounge, David Ball is just "The
Bottle That Pours the Wine." But what a fine wine it is. One of the two or
three figures in country music who aren't cogs in the industry machine or way
past their prime, Ball is living proof you can't ever write Nashville off. He
immediately established himself as having one of country's signature voices on
his debut, Thinkin' Problem, and that voice -- as well as his
songwriting -- is in fine form here on "Hangin' In and Hangin' On," "A Bad Day
For the Blues," "Circle of Friends," and "No More Lonely." Whatever Ball did to
crack the Nashville monolith without selling his soul, it worked. Here's hoping
he keeps doing it for a long, long time. (David Ball opens for Dwight Yoakam
at the Erwin Center Thursday, August 15)
***1/2 -- Christopher Gray
Terminally Trendy (Pingleblobber)
Emily Kaitz is onto something here with her deadly sense of satire and
penchant for punnery. In the opening track, "Small Medium at Large," a petite
clairvoyant goes on the lamb, and you immediately know you're in a strange, but
clever world. In the humorous folk genre, Austin's Kaitz sets the pace. Her
deft touch on lyrical cadence and folk/bluegrass instrumental arrangements
makes her quite the titillating listen. But it's the strength of her hilarious
tales that sparks this album. The big guns come out for human insecurity and
herd mentality. The title track is a meditation on the meaning of leather
jackets and tattoos with Kaitz taking a few offhand jabs at her own bourgeois
affinities. The sidesplitter here is "Suzie Rosen's Nose," a paean to wealthy
Jewish assimilation nightmares featuring backup by the Austin Klezmorim.
Kaitz's little girl narrator has a terrorized tremor in her voice: "Here today
gone tomorrow/is that the way it goes?/Mama, what happened to Suzie Rosen's
nose?" Goy or Yid, you're a schlepp if this album doesn't make you plotz.
**** -- Joe Mitchell
Fresco Fiasco (Freedom)
Loose Diamonds are in the perfect position to profit from this whole
alterna-twang thing -- if someone would just notice them. Not many other bands
have the potential to open for both Son Volt and Robert Earl Keen, but
Fresco Fiasco manages to squeeze in "Stone Walls and Steel Bars," the
best song Jay Farrar never wrote, right next to "One Kiss Won't Hurt," a Robert
Earl anthem waiting to happen. Toni Price, who knows a thing or two about how
to draw a crowd, shows up to duet on "You Keep Me Hangin' On," blurring the
lines between blues, country, and rock so much that people won't know what
section of the record store to put Fresco Fiasco in. Curse those labels.
In a perfect world, though, this one would fly off the shelves no matter where
you put it.
***1/2 -- Christopher Gray
Live Bait (Watermelon)
What hath Gingrich the Newt wrought? No, I don't mean the right-winger, I
mean the Lizards' song about him (the live version of which is included on this
six song in-concert disc). Y'see, the way I figure it, only the vast amount of
attention that the band's dissection of the Newt brought them could've resulted
in the lame new song spotlighted here, "Teenage Immigrant Welfare Mothers on
Drugs." The one joke is right there in the title: that the Righties think
T.I.W.M.O.D.s are the cause of all the world's problems. It's one of those "If
you're on `our' side, you'll laugh" numbers I'd hoped the Lizards would never
sink to. On the other hand, the three Eighties classics here ("Highway Cafe of
the Damned," "The Car Hank Died In," and "The Golden Triangle") sparkle plenty
in the live treatments given them. Let's hope that "T.I.W.M.O.D" is just a
fluke.
**1/2 -- Ken Lieck
Live From Austin (Cei Cymekob)
Some jazz purists turn a nose up to classical music. It's too stilted. Too
regimented. Where's the blowing? Where's the swing? Look closely, though --
say, through the Ellington ouevre -- and you'll find that many great jazz
composers and musicians actively used classical music as a jump-off point to
their own music; one might say that jazz is America's classical music. Austin
violist Will Taylor isn't necessarily out there doing Ellington suites (he does
cover "Caravan"), it's just that when he draws that bow across those strings,
it's hard not to evoke Bartök. Or is that Stephane Grappelli? Doesn't
matter, really, because Taylor has enough tone to go around, whether he's
sawing through the exquisite tango of Astor Piazzolla's "Deus Xango," making it
sound like something out of the Mikado, or riffing through a relative
warhorse like "Cherokee" and finding a whole new harmonic structure.
Throughout, Taylor gets excellent support from Austin mainstays Elias
Haslanger, Glenn Rexach, Steve Zirkel, and Chris Searles, and it's only in one
or two spots that you're reminded that this was recorded live. No overdubs, no
retakes, 72 minutes. Try doing that with classical music.
***1/2 -- Raoul Hernandez
Finest Hour (A&M)
These Dallasites are a bit disturbing at first, as are most from the Big D.
They can sound uncannily like Hootie and the Blowfish with a less shrill
singer. But JP have layers, whereas their competitors for the
frat-boy-cum-I'm-a-sensitive-guy-
really market are all skin and no guts.
There's a real fluidity here and that river flows in some rather compelling
places. There's an eerie, autumnal feel here as if the duo are flashing
brilliant colors before crashing into months of cold and darkness. Every word
seems to tremble with a foreboding anticipation, but the instruments sparkle
away, creating a deliciously deceptive aural dialectic that yields a big
landscape in flux. This fall is ripe with possibilities, but it's going to be a
very interesting winter in the land of Jackopierce.
*** -- Joe Mitchell
(Arista Latin)
Let's talk about Nydia Rojas' lower lip. It's as ripe as an island plantain
and full as the August moon. It's Mother Earth in all her bounty. It is for now
and all time. Wait. The top one's not too shabby, either. They look luscious
both in color, as on the striking, royal blue cover of Rojas' Arista Latin
debut, and in black and white, as on the inside of the CD booklet (actually
it's more of a blue and white). They beckon whether Rojas has the Mexican
Madonna come-hither look on the back cover of the CD booklet or the sardonic
mariachi smile on the back of the CD insert. And if flexi-discs came in
Vanity Fair, they'd probably sound like this album: bright, shiny,
happy, and fun. Only in English. But did you see those lips?Amazing! And
if it seems sexist to review an album on the merits of a lower lip, it's not.
Music isn't what's being sold here. It's Selena.
** -- Raoul Hernandez
(IMI)
Vallejo may eventually have to choose between Latin boogie, Southern-fried
funk, and Eighties wank metal, because there's some real tunes, tight grooves,
and slick production here, and yet no discernible identity. Which isn't to say
that this Austin band needs one just yet; half the fun here is in hearing them
work their way in and out of a stylistic jam, with the assist usually going to
the Omar Vallejo/Steve Ramos percussion team. But it's A.J. Vallejo's slinky
voice, smart phrasing, and fast guitar that most often carries Vallejo --
qualities, which on second thought, might just make them a good ol' fashioned
arena rock band anyway.
*** -- Andy Langer
Antone's 20th Anniversary (Antone's)
At two discs, 21 tracks, and 100 minutes, this compilation is still a chicken
scratching the iceberg of the Antone's legacy. At least it's an even job,
though, and every type of music the club represents, from triplet-driven
Louisiana swamp songs to old-style Chicago piano-plonkin' to fiery Texas
roadhouse guitar-slangin' is present and accounted for. Even though Antone's
pillar Derek O'Brien wasn't around for the recording (though he was out of the
joint to produce the record, thankfully) there's a seamless quality to this
record that, considering the sheer volume involved, is remarkable. All the
familiar Antone's names -- Sue Foley, Guy Forsyth, Doug Sahm, Lazy Lester, Kim
Wilson, Jimmy Rogers, Angela Strehli, Pinetop & Snooky, and so forth and so
on -- are here and in fine form. The anniversary compilation is great either
way -- as a culmination of 20 years of the Antone's sound or as a simple
introduction to the rich history of the blues.
***1/2 -- Christopher Gray
(IFA)
Somewhere between "Frank's Bicycle," a detailed narrative about Kozik the
poster guy and the Fuckemo who stole his bike, and "Barf Baby," about the
pleasures of throwing up, you begin to get the idea the Fuckemos aren't very
nice people. And when the last song is "White Sunshine," a paean to what has
become known as the date-rape drug, you're sure. So they're not the best
neighbors. "It's gettin' very hard to hold my feelings back," goes "Be Nice
Don't Be Mean." "I've taken many pills here and I want to kick your ass." But
if the Fuckemos are mean, their nasty blend of bloodbath riffage, death-metal
vocals, and bludgeoning drumming is even meaner. Like they say on "This Land
is Your Land" (that's right), "This land was made for you and me." Don't like
it? Too fuckin' bad.
*** -- Christopher Gray
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