ND #18 :: Nov-Dec 1998

Soul Searchin’

VIC CHESNUTT
The Salesman And Bernadette
Capricorn

by Bill Friskics-Warren

"I just want to be Aaron Neville," deadpanned Vic Chesnutt, the consummate wag, on "Sad Peter Pan", a song from his 1995 album Is The Actor Happy? Here, one suspected, was Chesnutt – a quirky cracker whose creaky warble is but a chirp compared to Neville’s numinous tenor – having fun at his own expense. So when eight lines later he vowed, "a transformation I sware [sic] it will occur," how were we to know he meant it? And yet as unlikely as it might seem, the Athens, Georgia, singer-songwriter achieves just such a metamorphosis, albeit one born more of Memphis than New Orleans, on his new album, The Salesman And Bernadette.

Chesnutt still has croaky pipes – it’s not as if he’s sworn off the bong or anything. Singing in a falsetto here, a gentle murmur there, he nevertheless has made a latter-day soul record. It’s a subtle shift in focus. And just to make sure we get it, Chesnutt makes his intentions clear from the start. The disc’s first track, "Duty Free", opens with a doleful horn choir akin to that of Otis Redding’s "Try A Little Tenderness"; the song ends, as does Redding’s "Dock Of The Bay", with a wistful a cappella whistle.

Musically, a good two-thirds of Salesman plumbs the lighter side of Stax/Volt – that, and the Muscle Shoals sound of such countrified soulsters as Joe Simon, Joe Tex, and James & Bobby Purify. "Maiden", with its swelling horns, tinkling vibes, and wide, roiling groove, even evokes the Purifys’ "I’m Your Puppet", the theme of which surfaces in "Arthur Murray". "Emasculate me with your biology," croons Chesnutt, his wisp of a tenor awash in the song’s undulating rhythms. "Bend me, break me, I’m worthless."

Chesnutt gets help throughout from Nashville’s #1 puppet, Lambchop, an expansive ensemble that’s been digging the tangled roots of hillbilly music and R&B for some time now. Unlike Widespread Panic, the glorified frat-rockers from Athens who abetted Chesnutt on 1995’s Nine High A Pallet (released under the band name Brute), Lambchop never sounds like a band for hire. The ‘Chop, who’ve toured extensively with Chesnutt, know that the key to the singer’s music is his phrasing. Without slipping into retro-glide – witness the groovy dissonance of "Prick" – their booting horns, smoky organ fills and chicken-scratch guitars would have you believe they’ve been punctuating Chesnutt’s sentences forever.

It’s tempting to chalk Chesnutt’s emergence as a soul man up to production and arrangements. Compare "Prick", for instance, with "Sleeping Man", a track from his third album, Drunk. Structurally, both songs resemble Wire’s "Strange" – "Sleeping Man" even evinces the Brits’ brittle textures. Greased as it is with fatback rhythms, "Prick", on the other hand, puts you in mind of Redding’s "I’m Sick Y’all". And were it not for the Lambchop horns and guitarists, who help transform "Mysterious Tunnel" into a dreamy variant of Santo & Johnny’s "Sleepwalk" (elsewhere, the guit-pickers channel Steve Cropper and Hank Garland), the song would doubtless sound like "Gravity Of The Situation Revisited".

That said, it could just be that Chesnutt’s been a soul man all along – if not formally, then at least in spirit. To belabor the Redding comparison further, Chesnutt’s tortured romanticism, including his at times excruciating displays of vulnerability, recalls nothing so much as the anguished ballads – "Pain In My Heart", "Mr. Pitiful", "These Arms Of Mine" – of his fellow Georgian.

Of course, Chesnutt always tenders his tropes with self-deprecating wit and purges them of self-pity. "She knows where she stands/On the heart of a broken man," he mourns, lovelorn and bemused, on "Maiden". Elsewhere, resigned to play the cuckold, he sighs, "She’s so fashionable, she’s a Nazi when she’s shopping/Wholly democratic, you should see who she’s been bopping."

Chesnutt’s nakedness can just as easily be sexy. "Cotton breathes between her cheeks/Spin me, weave me, I’m willing," he swoons on the languorous "Arthur Murray". "Replenished" finds him savoring the thought of getting it up in the morning: "Sitting in the breakfast nook, flipping through a saucy book, browsing for a bit a titillation," he drools, spurred on by the lascivious Lambchop Singers.

All the album’s songs are of a piece, except for "Woodrow Wilson" – an inscrutable ramble on which Chesnutt enlists Spygirl Emmylou Harris – and its last two songs, which serve as a harrowing coda to a gorgeous and often quixotic record. Spare, feedback-drenched, and unrelentingly dark, these tracks find Chesnutt facing his demons.

"Why do I insist on drinking myself to the grave?" he agonizes on "Old Hotel", the album’s closer. "Why do I dream of a cozy coffin? I had all these plans of great things to accomplish, but I end up totally pathetic more than often." Oddly bereft of soulfulness, this is the dark night of the soul.

CREEK DIPPERS
Pacific Coast Rambler
self-released

Still recording at home in the California desert and selling out of their Post Office Box in Joshua Tree, the Original Harmony Ridge Creek Dippers haven’t changed much since their self-titled debut of last year.

On Pacific Coast Rambler, husband-and-wife Mark Olson and Victoria Williams (the latter listed as Mabel Allbright in the credits) are joined once again by fiddler and multi-instrumentalist Mike "Razz" Russell, and this time also by former Black Crowes guitarist Marc Ford. The songs and sounds remain remarkably innocent and simple, with an artistic spirit as free and independent as the DIY business route they’ve taken to circumvent the music industry.

The leadoff track, "Give My Heart To You", is the closest thing to a hit single the Creek Dippers might ever record, an instantly catchy number highlighted by the effortless harmonizing of Olson and Williams. Things take a decidedly different turn on the second song, "Kai’s Bristlecone Waltz", a fiddle-driven instrumental with an Irish-folk feel to it. Yet another mood swing materializes on the next song, the album’s title track, a movingly melancholy number that captures the lonely heart of its main character.

Things proceed in much the same manner throughout the disc, though the most memorable material seems stacked toward the front. "Owens Valley Day" is almost as catchy as the opening song; Williams (er, Allbright) takes lead on "Prayer Of The Changing Leaf"; "Elijah" bounces along like an old-timey folk chant. As with their first record, Pacific Coast Rambler is only about 30 minutes long, which some folks might consider a bit short; but such brevity ultimately fits the unambitious nature of this beast.

– PETER BLACKSTOCK

(Box 342, Joshua Tree, CA 92252; creekdipper@thegrid.net)

VINCE GILL
The Key
MCA

For better or worse – and it’s better, honest – this is as good an album as Music Row is capable of making. Vince Gill has a smooth voice to go with his smooth looks; he also has a background in bluegrass to match a stint with a late incarnation of Pure Prairie League.

Singing songs he mostly wrote with nobody looking over his shoulder, Gill is supported by some of the finest singers (Sara Evans, Lee Ann Womack, Shelby Lynne, Patty Loveless, Alison Krauss, Faith Hill) and players in Nashville. Even producer Tony Brown, who is busy and professional enough to phone in a competent job, stays unobtrusively focused.

If country really is to be the new pop music format, and the voice of the suburbs, Gill at least manages to connect that present to its past, and with more than a little emotion and elegance. The emotion is a bit of a surprise, for he has such naturally easy tone and phrasing one doesn’t quite expect the songs to cry when they should. Ah, but they do, notably on "Kindly Keep It Country" and the homage to his late father, "The Key To Life". Even the obligatory chorus-heavy "Let Her In" – in which a father asks his daughter to make room for a new girlfriend in his life – fairly ripples with unexpected honesty.

And that, pun unintended, is the key. Despite his gifts and his success (and, yes, it seems odd that those two words should be linked to the implication of compromise, but they are), this has the feel of an honest record, and one suspects the all-star supporting cast truly enjoyed their days in the studio this time.

– GRANT ALDEN