Luther Dickinson & the Sons of Mudboy, Onward & Upward (Memphis International, 2009) South Memphis String Band, Home Sweet Home (Memphis International, 2009) The arrangement to Home Sweet Home's opening cut, the famous outlaw ballad "Jesse James," owes an audible debt to Ry Cooder's, albeit sans the lyrics film director Walter Hill added. Nothing wrong or even unusual there; Cooder's 1980 re-creation (for Hill's The Long Riders) effectively defined the song for a generation. It does amount, though, to all but the sole evidence that the South Memphis String Band was not encountered on a Southern street corner a century ago.
A guitarist with the hard-rocking roots-blues band North Mississippi All Stars and the son of the late, much-loved Memphis musician/producer Jim Dickinson, Luther Dickinson has joined forces with roots maven Jimbo Mathus (Squirrel Nut Zippers) and songster Alvin Youngblood Hart. The result, the South Memphis String Band, is -- no mistake about it -- very traditional. In the hands of these three roots-music masters, that turns out to be something to shout from the rooftops. These guys aren't cloning anything. Even when they cover a Carter Family song ("Dixie Darling"), they don't sound like the Carter Family (or for that matter the New Lost City Ramblers covering the Carters). At the same time, they sound nothing like radical reinterpreters either. The old American musical traditions aren't like clothes they've donned for the occasion; they're more like the blood and bone beneath the skin beneath the clothes. Nothing dead is happening here. This music lives and breathes.
Mathus contributes "Worry 'Bout Your Own Backyard," a splendid piece in the spirit of jug-band hokum. Otherwise, the songs are authentic artifacts of a lost America: chain-gang choirs, black country bands, Appalachian singers, gospel chanters, deep country bluesmen and parlor balladeers. The title song, from the last category, was the work of John Howard Payne (lyrics) and Sir Henry Rowley Bishop (melody), who wrote it for their otherwise-forgotten opera Clari in 1823. The SMSB's skeletal reading is unlike any you've heard, at once richly emotional and artfully free of bathetic overload. If a broadly similar record, Luther Dickinson & the Sons of Mudboy's Onward & Upward is notably more somber in tone. Three days after Jim Dickinson, whose musical alter ego was "Mudboy," died in August 2009, Luther Dickinson called together some friends -- most prominently, relatively speaking, the longtime Memphis folk-blues cult figure Sid Selvidge -- to express their grief in song. The songs and performances are religiously themed, both familiar and less so, from hymn, gospel, and spiritual folk-music traditions. There is a marvelous version of "Angel Band" which, unlike most others I've heard, owes only a little to the classic Stanley Brothers rendition. As you can imagine, light heartedness is not part of the program. The music haunts, but it uplifts, too. Beyond that, it's a fitting companion to Home Sweet Home. ![]() ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET review by Jerome Clark 1 May 2010 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() Click on a cover image to make a selection. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |