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Artist: Johnny Dowd
Label: Koch Records Category: Music Average customer rating: Media: Audio CD Number Of Discs: 1 UPC: 099923822622 EAN: 0099923822622 ASIN: B00005BJ13 Release Date: 2001-05-22 |
Wrong Side of Memphis
Tracks:
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Customer Reviews:
"THE" place to start!.......2003-12-25
A damnably impressive debut.......2003-01-21
It's certainly difficult to imagine what Dark Side of Memphis would have sounded like had Dowd recorded it twenty-five years ago. Age and experience are indelibly etched into this music, and for that it is all the more exciting. This is very, very barebones stuff--Dowd's gravelly singing, a little gee-tar, a few keyboards, and occasional unobtrusive backing vocals from the incomparable Kim Sherwood-Caso, and that's about all--but it works out brilliantly. Not every song here is a classic--'Ballad of Frank and Jesse James' never really goes anywhere, and 'John Deere Yeller,' though amusing in its own way, is really just a little too hard to swallow. But the ones that are good--which is most of them--are very good indeed. The menacing growl of 'Papa Oh Papa' is perhaps the great Nick Cave song that never was; 'Wages of Sin' is the archetypal blues 'lead a bad life, going to hell now' song done as well as it's ever been; and the uneasy closer, 'Welcome Jesus,' seems all too apropos for 2003. "Welcome, Jesus, to this dismal swamp," Dowd drawls. "Were you hoping for something a little better?"
Perhaps wisely, Dowd would expand his musical horizons dramatically for subsequent albums, but his debut remains an impressive testament. It doesn't really sound like Tom Waits, but I have no doubt that Waits fans will dig it anyway. And in any case, you can at least profit from the hip cachet that comes from listening to independent music. You can't lose. Pick it up for sure.
What a sick man; I love it!.......2002-08-13
Songs about Murder.......2001-06-20
Johnny Dowd's voice creeps out like a snake in the gravel: part Tom Waits, part Jim White, and wavery like a wet dixie cup in the wind. The songs, filled with murder, betrayal and loneliness, are expertly crafted and show a life overflowing with experience. Stand out tracks like "Average Guy" (in which Dowd explores a psyche that's anything BUT average) and "Welcome Jesus" have a fairly stripped down sound that really showcases Johnny Dowd's vocal stylings while providing a stark contrast to the strange subject matter of his lyrics.
Fans of Tom Waits, Nick Cave, Leonard Cohen and Patti Smith should relish in the oddity that is Johnny Dowd.
Music Album:
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