![]() |
Steep Canyon Rangers, One Dime at a Time (Rebel, 2005) |
It never ceases to surprise me how bluegrass, a genre now six decades old, continues to replenish itself and to find interesting ways of, well, repeating itself. Yes, there is rote, exasperating bluegrass -- and no shortage of it -- and there's music played on bluegrass instruments that's spread the genre definition so thin as to have snapped it. (Not that there's anything wrong with that; it's just that it's cheating to call it bluegrass.) It's bands like the Steep Canyon Rangers, though, that keep the tradition on track while finding their own reserved seats on the bluegrass express.
The songlist is rounded out with some impressive covers, not the least of them the honkytonker title tune by Nashville writers Dottie Bruce and Jerry Chestnut, long ago a minor hit for 1960s country star Del Reeves and till now unrecorded bluegrass-style. Robbie Robertson's folk-rock ballad "Evangeline," a particularly imaginative choice (it's from the late-period Robertson-era Band), feels here as if it had been a bluegrass song since birth. Producer Mike Bub, who for years picked bass in the Del McCoury Band, takes care to provide sufficient aural space for a live, natural, organic sound. Both grizzled bluegrass fan and neophyte will be impressed. The Steep Canyon Rangers surely have a future to which they and we can look forward. by Jerome Clark |