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JESSE WINCHESTER

Anthology

(Castle ESM CD 690)

Despite a near mythical self-titled debut produced by Robbie Robertson and aided by Albert Grossman (Dylan’s A-team) Jesse Winchester has generally speaking faded into the background more times than the snow falling on his adopted home of Montreal. His inability to re-enter the United States for many years due to his lack of enthusiasm for Vietnam no doubt hampered his profile but his own diffidence to the trappings of fame also meant his light got stuck way under a bushel. Sporadic attempts to promote him left the majority of his six Bearsville recordings at the back of the rack. This anthology collects together the majority of his best tracks from the years 1971-78 in a user-friendly digital package. Whether it will raise his profile remains to be seen. This set of great songs should put him at the top table of U.S. singer-songwriters alongside Newbury, Hardin et al. All the requisite credentials are there. Covers from artists as diverse as The Everly Brothers, Peter Case, Barrence Whitfield and Emmylou Harris who also sang backing vocals on one LP. Perhaps because of the popularity of his songs as material for others his own recordings fell away until now with a new release on Sugar Hill imminent. After 1978’s ‘A Touch on the Rainy Side’ the total recorded output consisted of the 1981 'Talk Memphis' and 1988’s ‘Humour Me’ plus some backing vocals and a live track on a Mountain Stage compilation. He still resides in Montreal despite a U.S. pardon and shows no sign of residing any nearer the Nashville that provides the main destination for his songs. That great debut has never really been bettered although each album contains hidden gems. Perhaps this anthology is the best Winchester record released since that debut. Highlights include the Todd Rundgren produced ‘Midnight Bus’ that sparkles with the guitar of Amos Garret and ‘Mississippi on my Mind’ which deserves classic status as an exile’s lament. The overall strength of this set suggests that he may well deserve a better showing on the shelves of Americana fans. In a rare U.K. interview he was described as ‘one of the very best song-writers you’ll ever have the privilege of hearing’ - that sentiment from 1976 still rings true all these years later.

S.D.B.

 

 

 

KENNY ROBY

Mercury’s blues

(Glitterhouse GRCD 449)

Whiskeytown rose above self-destructive tendencies as the other Raleigh. N.C. band Six-String Drag ‘s house collapsed all around lead singer Roby leaving him alone on the porch with two solid releases in his hand. Not wasting time he has launched himself as a solo artist before the cymbals had stopped ringing. This perhaps explains the short length of this CD which though padded out as it is with a Parts I and II still clocks in at under 40 minutes. Live solo he comes across as confident, amusing and talented and although this record isn’t a masterpiece it suggests a lot more to come. His song-writing has a genuine depth ranging through influences as diverse as Randy Newman, the obvious Elvis Costello and a knowledge of the country back-catalogue that encompasses pre-war folk and blues as well as stalwarts like Tubb, Acuff and Owens. Six String Drag were known to mix ‘The Great Speckled Bird’ into a more power-pop orientated set and the rural folk-blues line gains ground here.

The sometimes too obvious Elvis Costello vocal style aside he turns in an entertaining if somewhat premature disc that points to a sound future. Best moments include opener ‘Mercury’s Blues’, the swamp-rocking ‘Book of Time’, ‘In a Dress’ where Elvis C. holidays in the Appalachian mountains and the wonderfully Newman-esque ‘In this Town’. The amusing live take on ‘Jesus Tambourine’ seemed to have more bounce than the recorded version but hats off to Roby for not falling into the gothic alt-country doldrums and mixing light and shade. Closer ‘Ace, My Radio & Baseball’ mixes strong lyrics with hints of the power of the old band’s performances. A great, if somewhat clipped, signpost to a future career which if it doesn’t raise the roof will certainly be built on some solid foundations.

S.D.B.