James Armstrong, Blues Been Good to Me (Catfood, 2017) Johnny Rawls, Waiting for the Train (Catfood, 2017)
Rawls and Armstrong co-produce the latter's Blues Been Good to Me, with the Grammy-award winning Jim Gaines (billed as associate producer on Armstrong's album) overseeing Rawls's Waiting for the Train, the latter backed by the Catfood house band, the Rays, in Texas. Blues Been Good was recorded mostly in a St. Louis studio. In short, all is in good hands, and if you favor stripped-down, no-nonsense soul, you will be hard-pressed not to like these albums. That established, these observations:
The title in the title song nods to a well-known American folk song, "Waiting for a Train," usually associated with Jimmie Rodgers, except here the train stands in for the range of human longings: escape, wanderlust, even death and its aftermath. Trains as metaphors for life and death go back at least to Nathaniel Hawthorne's 1843 short story "The Celestial Rail-road," and of course they figure in black and white spirituals such as "This Train is Bound for Glory" and "Life's Railway to Heaven." Rawls/Trenchard's contribution stands tall in this noble song tradition. I had always thought Bob Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" to be a cry of anguish from the confines of a psychic prison, but Rawls's masterly, pointed reading makes that a literal prison. He also turns in stirring takes of songs associated with soul heroes Wilson Pickett, Tyrone Davis and Syl Johnson. Besides his smooth-textured, listener-friendly singing voice, Armstrong is a fluid electric guitarist, each note clean and uncluttered. His playing always serves the song and never draws attention to itself, though it is eminently worth paying attention to. He seems more influenced by the Motown strain of mid-century soul than Rawls, who is shaped by the Deep Southern school represented by, notably, Stax. Armstrong has fun with "How Sweet It Is to be Loved by You," the Holland/Dozier/Holland tune that charted in Marvin Gaye's version and later James Taylor's. I am not particularly enamored of Motown (so kill me), but the speeded-up arrangement here is a lot of fun. On the more serious original "Early Grave" Robert Johnson's murder by a jealous husband serves as a portent of Armstrong's likely end. I doubt that this is more than a plot device for what otherwise is a song about romantic turmoil, but at least it's an original one. The title number touts Armstrong's success as a blues entertainer with an international following, while another original, "Second Time Around," opens amusingly with the instantly recognizable chords from the old Johnny Rivers hit "Secret Agent Man." Possibly because it's the fall, my own favorite is Armstrong's soul ballad "Change in the Weather." You'll find your own. Armstrong and Rawls give you much to choose from. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 28 October 2017 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() Click on a cover image to make a selection. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |