James Hyland, Western (independent, 2020) James Hyland was just a name to me till Western showed up one day in the mail. The first thing that caught my attention was its length: 80 minutes. That's as much content as you can squeeze onto a compact disc. Ordinarily, that'll get you a retrospective anthology of decades-old hillbilly, blues, ethnic or jazz recordings, all public domain so that no royalties need be expended.
I don't know if Hyland is astonishingly prolific or if he's been saving these up over time for a single album. His website informs me that he is a particularly active musician, not only a solo act but a member of a bluegrass band and a jug band. Again, I learn that my conviction that I know of everyone of consequence on the roots scene is delusional. Western is largely as advertised, not quite a themed album or song cycle but close enough. The bulk of it is focused on Texas, especially -- albeit not exclusively -- on its 19th-century frontier. That's the subject of "First Westbound Train," "Texas Ranger," "Top Floor," the above-mentioned "Comancheria," "You've Come to the Right Place" and others. The songs draw in good part on folk-ballad traditions, spiced with elements of rock and country; in other words, here and there they encourage thoughts of Steve Earle. Not a complaint, just shorthand for a way of fusing older and newer musical ideas. Typically, Hyland conjures up characters who tell their stories in the first person. One, on "Top Floor," is a piano player who sings "Oh Susannah!" and "Pretty Peggy-O" in a cowboy bar and whorehouse. Another, set in our time, is a small-time crook and all-around pest, the star of "The Ballad of Eddie Mullet," which is a very funny meditation on crime, family and hair. "Today's a Good Day to Die" is from the point of view of a Sioux warrior busily slaughtering Custer's troops in 1876 Montana. Placed in Tennessee in 1881 to an oldtime stringband setting, "Ramblin' Man" affectingly imagines the thoughts of a doomed fugitive. I sometimes hear recordings by well-meaning performers who have tried but failed to make this sort of historical approach work. Hyland is not among them. Western is the surprisingly successful statement of an exceptionally talented -- and one might add intelligent -- artist. I hope he will be more than an Austin secret the next time I write about him. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 27 June 2020 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |