John Campbell - One Believer (1991)
John Campbell - One Believer (1991)
01 Devil in My Closet 02 Angel of Sorrow 03 Wild Streak 04 Coulden't Do Nothin' 05 Tiny Coffin 06 World of Trouble 07 Voodoo Edge 08 Person to Person 09 Take Me Down 10 One Believer John Campbell (vocals, guitars), Gary Nicholson (guitar), Jimmy Pugh (keyboards), Jimmy Pettit, Antoine Sally, Richard Cousins (bass), Davis McLarty (drums), Lee Spath (drums, percussion). + Joe Sublett, Darrell Leonard, Ken Tussing (horns), Brad Dutz (percussion).
The Elektra debut by the late bluesman John Campbell is a curious affair in more than one respect-despite it's obvious excellence and original voice. The first is that he was signed at all. Clearly in 1990 when Campbell signed his deal, record company executives were still interested inn finding new and original talent and developing them over a period of time. One Believer was outside of virtually every trend on major labels and in pop at the time. Other than Chris Whitley's Living with the Law, it was the only roots record issued on a major label in 1991. The other thing is that One Believer is an oddity even for Campbell. It's a deeply atmospheric record full of subtle shimmering organs and warm guitar textures that accent the dreamy spooky side of the blues more than the crunchy stomp and roll that Campbell was known for in the clubs -- and displayed on his follow-up Howlin' Mercy. Tracks like "Angel of Sorrow," "World of Trouble," and "Wild Streak" offer shimmering ambient textures from which the blues emanate from the ether, tonally and melodically challenging all acceptable notions of what Texas blues should sound like -- but then, Mr. Campbell was living and working in New York and his music was certainly influenced by that late-night environment. These are beautiful songs, tempered in shadow and restraint while baring their teeth at all the right moments. Other places the roadhouse magic comes out of the closet as on "Couldn't Do Nothin'," "Devil In My Closet," and "Person to Person. On "Voodoo Edge," the slowhand blues meets a crisscross New Orleans second-line backbeat a la Dr. John and comes up with chunky honky-tonk piano and shakers to give the piece an "I Walk on Gilded Splinters feel, extending Campbell's sound over a deeper, darker shade of roots music. This in underlined by the album's last two tracks -- "Take Me Down" and the title track -- which are menacing in their conviction and creepy swampy in execution. This is a fine, fine debut that remains in print. --- Thom Jurek, allmusic.com
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Last Updated (Sunday, 07 March 2021 22:53)