David Olney, When the Deal Goes Down (Deadbeet, 2014) If When the Deal Goes Down is any indication of the quality of David Olney's work, I can only shake my head and wonder how I managed to miss this exceptional singer-songwriter all these years. (His first solo album appeared in 1986.) If nothing else, I learn again that my complacent assumption that at any given moment I know, or at least know of, all worthwhile roots-based music is nothing short of delusional. I have been aware of Olney -- his name was certainly not unfamiliar to me -- but till now I had heard few of his songs.
It's amazing, or frustrating, how many singer-songwriters seem constitutionally (or intellectually) unable to write anything but relationship songs. Olney has a few of those, too -- "Why So Blue?" is in the style of a jazzy 1920s pop tune of the kind revived latterly by Leon Redbone -- but their manifest smartness and sophistication place them in a category of their own, taking worn themes and applying a new shine to them. He does the same with the vaguely countryish "Sad Saturday Night." The really striking stuff, though, is the likes of "Scarecrow Man," a genuinely scary narrative inspired by the likes of the more gothic Child ballads ("The Wife of Usher's Well" comes to mind) and "Soldier of Misfortune," which Olney reports he wrote just as the Vietnam War was winding down. Yet it speaks movingly to the universal experience of senseless conflict and its unfathomable human toll. Like Guy Clark's, Olney's voice is wry, worn and intimately conversational. Still, he's stretching it a bit on "Roll This Stone," which (I take it) is intended to satirize the early Rolling Stones. It's certainly not a bad song, but it's just as surely the least necessary; who even thinks about the Stones anymore? Apparently not even the Stones, judging from the quality of their output in recent decades. Maybe their business manager still cares. The rest of us have no such obligation. Oh well. Here's what's important: When the Deal Goes Down (along with Jeff Black's Folklore, which I reviewed in this space on 14 June 2014) sets the bar for this year in rooted songwriting. Be warned, all would-be competitors: it's a dauntingly high one. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 26 July 2014 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |