Ricky Skaggs, Country Hits Bluegrass Style (Skaggs Family, 2011) Ricky Skaggs, guitarist and mandolinist, spent much of the 1970s as bluegrass' bright young hope. In the early 1980s he broke into the Nashville charts with a sound that was neither hard country nor country-pop but which brought refreshingly spare, ingenious arrangements into songs that weren't quite bluegrass either. Sometimes, in fact, Skaggs's melodic tenor and smart production were more noteworthy than the songs themselves, a few of which needed the Skaggs touch to render them interesting.
Those who were listening to country radio back then will recognize "Heartbroke" (Guy Clark), "Honey (Open That Door)" (Mel Tillis), "Highway 40 Blues" (Larry Cordle), "Don't Get Above Your Raising" (Flatt & Scruggs) and more. Personally, I wish he had included his understated reading of Stonewall Jackson's "Why I'm Walkin'," a neglected gem from a neglected hard-core honkytonker. The otherwise lighter-than-air "Country Boy" (which inexplicably required three writers) rises to guilty pleasure not because of its piffle-level sentiments but because of the lively jam that goes on around them. There is never any doubt that Skaggs is one exceptional musician with his own vision of how it should be done. So, if it matters to you, Country Hits Bluegrass Style is more the former than the latter. Meanwhile, the fusion that Skaggs put together decades ago seems even now pretty much sui generis. It may not be deep, but it's always sweet. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 27 August 2011 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |