Trudy Lynn, I'll Sing the Blues for You (Connor Ray, 2016) Mighty Sam McClain, Time & Change (City Hall, 2016)
Much of the album conveys an autumnal air, a looking backward at things -- this being soul, romantic relationships -- vanished and irretrievable. The title song, written with Pat Herlehy, is the stand-out, in good part because the love-lost theme is only the surface narrative. Beneath it is the larger truth that faces all who make it to their later years: that your life has not gone as you would have wished or predicted and that you survived (and survive) by accepting as much and moving at fate's direction. A strong vocalist, McClain yet knew how to keep his voice in check in order to tell the story, not to draw attention to himself. The result is 11 compelling performances of well-crafted tunes, mostly co-writes with Herlehy. In its heyday in the 1960s, soul, which fused the once-incompatible genres of blues and gospel, was music for teenagers. McClain's music, however, addresses the challenges of adults. The narrators are persons who are far from new to the misfortunes that have befallen them even as they confront the reality that heartbreak hurts at whatever age it strikes. McClain's performances are never less than riveting and resonant. Those of us who had the chance to hear him, and those who will hear him for the first time on this disc, will miss him.
Along with her superior singing she is well-read in the deep blues catalogue and able to draw from it in full command of the material. Here are fairly obscure numbers from Big Mama Thornton, Memphis Minnie and Lowell Fulson, among others. Actually, Minnie songs show up twice. One is her late-career "Kissin' in the Dark," a celebration of ... well, you can figure it out for yourself; a worldly listener will decode the metaphor without undue strain. More important, it happens to be a very fine song, and because it's seldom covered, Lynn's choice is all the more welcome. She even fashions a bluesy reading of the hard-core country "Honky Tonk Song," a Mel Tillis composition associated with George Jones. Call me cranky, but in my blues listening I prefer the real deal, not the tiresome drivel pounded out by rock-guitar knuckleheads who act as if they're creating some updated variant of the genuine article. Lynn wouldn't recognize artifice if she saw it. If blues is truth, she's as honest a living blues singer as they come. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 14 January 2017 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() Click on a cover image to make a selection. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |