Duke Robillard Band, Ear Worms (Stony Plain, 2019) Arlen Roth, TeleMasters (Aquinnah, 2019) Peter Ward, Train to Key Biscayne (Gandy Dancer, 2019)
He handles lead vocals on two cuts while farming out others to Nicholas, Norcia, Johnson and Michelle Willson. The songs, all Ward originals, are written out of an immersion in a tradition going back to the foundational sounds of mid-century Chicago. In a past incarnation Ward performed with the Legendary Blues Band, fronted by alumni of Muddy Waters's band. There's even a song, "The Luther Johnson Thing," that Ward wrote to celebrate Johnson (whose early performing career was in the Chicago clubs); Johnson himself sings it. I suppose this could be a little weird, but it isn't. Like so much else on this disc, it just feels good-natured and sincere. Even so, the blues-rock "I Saw Your Home" (sung by Willson) is somewhere between depressing and disturbing, an epic ballad of poverty, conflict and cruelty. Most blues-rock arrives in my ears prejudged as a failed effort to insert authenticity into tired guitar-rock riffs. "Home" on the other hand is a surprisingly affecting story-song with a strong, memorable melody. It's one of the standouts on Train, which will linger in your mental jukebox even when you're not playing it.
Robillard's notion of ear worms is more elevated, so I can assure you that none of the dozen cuts will ruin your day. Neither, though, are they likely to overstay their welcome. When I first heard Ear Worms, I expected a succession of cheesy, guilty-pleasure fluff. That shameless hope, alas, was destined to be dashed. Instead, with a certain ambivalence shading my relief, I heard a bunch of respectable blues, rock, r&b, folk, country and pop songs. None has followed me outside earshot, but they have given me pleasure when I hear them rolling out of the speakers.
On TeleMasters the respected musician Arlen Roth assembles artists from a range of genres to celebrate the mighty sound of the Telecaster guitar. Happily, these aren't pointless jams in which stylistically incompatible pickers play against each other in an attempt to achieve world dominance. Instead, it's the supremely adaptable Roth working individually with country, rock, blues and all-purpose artists to cover familiar and obscure material to whose character the Telecaster has given definition. It's a generous hour and 15 minutes of unfailingly inspired songs and tunes, more the latter than the former. Everybody is on his or her best behavior, which means (for me anyway) that Nashville's Steve Wariner and Brad Paisley are acting more as musicians than as showboats. Roth and Cindy Cashdollar deliver up an eerie, ramped-up instrumental reading of "Ghost Riders in the Sky," a song that has excited me ever since my first exposure when I was a little kid. The Chuck Berry number "Promised Land" (sung by Jerry Donahue) is something akin to outright thrilling. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 11 May 2019 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() Click on a cover image to make a selection. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |