Jimmy Thackery & the Drivers, True Stories (Telarc, 2003)
Guitarist Thackery, a former member of the now-defunct Nighthawks and in recent years leader of his own small and splendid band, doesn't waste a note. He can play as many as he wants to, but being a gentleman, he doesn't. The guitar serves the voice and the story, stinging, crying, sighing, chuckling, but never lapsing into bombast -- the occupational hazard of so many white, usually young electric bluesmen. Then again, Thackery, who is not a young man, knows better. If he doesn't have a great voice (though it's certainly not bad), he knows how to use it to maximum effect, for example in the moving soul ballad "I Think I Hear the Rain." "Rain" is one of nine satisfyingly written originals. Of the remaining two cuts, Buddy Johnson's "Crazy 'bout a Saxophone" gives Driver Jimmy Carpenter a chance to blow upfront and the rest of us a chance to grin contentedly. The disc concludes with a 9-1/2 minute instrumental, "The Messiah Will Come," a somber, almost mystical instrumental reflection composed by the late Roy Buchanan. Fittingly, an album that includes "Blues Man on Saturday Night" ends, as so many rowdy southern weekends do, in church. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 20 March 2004 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |