Woody Pines, Rabbits Motel (independent, 2013)
All I can attest is that Woody Pines -- that can't be his real name, can it? -- has the wit to join up on the present recording with a small band possessing an instrumental lineup ordinarily associated with rockabilly practitioners. Full-blown rockabilly, though, erupts only twice, on "Who Told Ya" and "Addicted to Blood," the latter concerning the not unduly alarming travails of a vampire. Ten cuts and a half hour comprise the totality of Rabbits Motel (which comes, incidentally, with a charming cover drawing of ramblin' jack rabbits). Pines himself plays a variety of guitars and drums. At least in my hearing, nothing is "much harder." To the contrary, "understated" comes to mind. Two cuts -- the traditional "Train That Carried My Gal from Town" (which borrows from Doc Watson's arrangement) and Lead Belly's "Keep Your Hands Off Her" (turned into a jug-band tune owing little to the original) -- are covers of decades-old material. They testify to Pines's immersion in real American folk music, not the effusions of other singer-songwriters. The laconic original ballad "Hobo & His Bride" drops in sly allusions to "Wreck of the Ol' 97," "Long Journey Home" and, unexpectedly, the Civil War-era "Two Soldiers." "I Love the Way My Baby" is barely rewritten from an old Muddy Waters number. (Relax; Dylan's done the same.) Felix Hatfield's enchanting "Railroad Vine" -- not, as one might anticipate, "Railroad Line" -- feels less like a hobo song than a revery on the idea of a hobo song. Not quite like anything I've heard before, and quite lovely. Woody Pines manages to pull the listener in with a sound both familiar and idiosyncratic. His is a perfectly pitched 21st-century folk music, steeped at once in past and present. It's a whole lot more ambitious than the always sure-footed Pines makes it seem. I just wish that Rabbits Motel were more than 30 minutes of it. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 18 May 2013 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |