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Artist: Knoxville Girls
Label: In the Red Records Category: Music Average customer rating: Media: Audio CD Number Of Discs: 1 UPC: 759718506228 EAN: 0759718506228 ASIN: B00000K3HU Release Date: 1999-09-14 |
Knoxville Girls
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KNOXVILLE GIRLS !.......2000-06-02
About half covers and half originally penned numbers, The Knoxville Girls ride out of the West in revved-up epic wonder, and eventually collapse in a storm of white-lit feedback 14 songs further East. The opener "65 Days Ago" is a bold, dusty, romantic cowboy instro, with a galloping rythm section and flashes of mournful slide guitar whizzin' by. The spirit of Jeffery Lee Pierce channeled from the Great Beyond to collaborate on a Spaghetti Western filmscore with Ennio Morricone. From there, a trot through the lonesome praries of solid country honk (a whooping cover of the Kenny Rogers-penned "I Feel Better All Over") and weepy country sorrow (a take of Charlie Feather's lement, "Have You Ever?") On these tracks, Jerry Teel's 'Bama drawl lends authencitiy to the work, while the triple guitar threat of Congo, Martin, and Teel is restrained by the "less is more" wisdom of veteran musicians. Our steed then picks up speed, racing through the Stonesy gutter rock of "Two Time Girl", with Barry Landon adding junky farfisa fills to give the entire piece a faint Sam the Sham/ Mysterians flavour.
Although the least famous and seasoned of the group, Landon is a gem throughout the LP, alternately doing ? and the Mysterians-derived organ fills and coming off like Billy Preston the very next. "Kung Pow Chicken Scratch" is Barry's showcase- a nightmarish Booker T and the MG's inspired piece that floats over a cloud of static No Wave guitar noise. The LP's shining moment is the Girls' sizzling remake of Bobby Henderson's "Warm and Tender Love," with the most stylishly nasty Lou Reed-inspired guitar dueling in recent memory. The Girls also manage the best faux Dylan song since Mouse and the Traps' "Public Execution" - "NYC Briefcase Blues" is a tune with an unmistakable Blonde On Blonde heritage and a witty anti-yuppification temperament:
"New York City, things got rough- briefcases everywhere, I think I had enough..."
Side two opens with a gothic blues version of Ray Charles' "I Had A Dream" that sways heavily into the direction of Congo's former work in the Bad Seeds (complete with Kid's barrotone backing vocals). Next, a haunting run through George Jones' bittersweet "He Stopped Loving Her Today", which has to be one of THE saddest songs ever penned. The original "Armadillo Roadkill Blues" has a field-recording vibe, as if it was captured in some decrepid East Texas shotgun shack and not in NYC's famed Funhouse Studios. Things wrap up with the hungry Mr.Teel trying to satisfy several appetites at once on "Low Cut Apron". A chugging "talking-blues" piece with slowly accelerating rythm and harmonica squalk that dissolves when the other Girls suddenly lunge full force into a droning, fuzzed out nod to the Velvets known as "Sugar Fix"- finally managing to drive the crazed horse right off the edge into the abyss.
The Knoxville Girls have created a masterpiece by distorting their common outside influences and by copping from the best of their own past artistic triumphs. This record journeys through the American musical folk psyche - a No Wave concoction of country western, r&b, soul, and garage rock'n'roll. On some songs, The Girls twist together the thin lines that divide these styles, on others, they keep things musically kosher. Most importantly, unlike a lot of contemporaries toying with C&W, the Girls never betray Hank W. and George J. by giving the material an ironic treatment.
Music Album:
Music CD
The Tree of Life ~ Cecil Taylor
Dedicated to You But You Weren't Listening ~ Keith Tippett
Dancing in the Sun ~ Richard %22Groove%22 Holmes
En Public Au Travers ~ Charles (Trio) Loos
Gestos de Amor ~ Mercedes Sosa
Homenaje a Carlos Gardel ~ Carlos Gardel