Music Reviews: Steve Forbert, Andy Hedges, Dwight + Nicole, a Rockabilly Anthology, and George Usher

Steve Forbert--The Things That I See

Steve Forbert, The Things That I See. Steve Forbertโ€™s 2015 album, Compromised, has recently been remastered and reissued with a new title, a new mix, a new bonus track, and a few musical embellishments. The set features strong material and complementary backup from a talented quartet that includes NRBQ co-founder Joey Spampinato (bass) and Spampinatoโ€™s wife, singer/songwriter Kami Lyle (piano, trumpet).

Forbert was about 60 when he made this record, and he spends some of it looking back. Thereโ€™s a nostalgic song about the Beatles titled โ€œYouโ€™d See the Things That I See (The Day John Met Paul)โ€ and one called โ€œWelcome the Rolling Stonesโ€ in which a fan of that group excitedly anticipates attending its 1969 concert at Altamont Speedway, not knowing that the event would turn out to be a disaster. Other numbers include โ€œDevil (Here She Come Now),โ€ which references โ€œDevil with a Blue Dress On,โ€ the Mitch Ryder hit; the sweet โ€œRolling Home to Someone You Loveโ€; and Stephen Sondheimโ€™s โ€œSend in the Clowns,โ€ the albumโ€™s sole cover, which Forbert transforms into surprisingly amiable folk rock.

The set also incorporates several tunes that hint at personal struggles, but typical of Forbert, those tracks tend to feature vaguely worded lyrics, and the music remains light and rhythmic even when the verse turn a bit dark. As the singer acknowledged to me in a 2022 interview, even his relatively melancholy numbers tend to be lilting and at least midtempo. โ€œI try to make records that youโ€™ll want to play again and again, [records] that Iโ€™m gonna play live and have fun playing,โ€ he said.

The album is available on vinyl here and on CD here.

Andy Hedges--The Westerner

Andy Hedges, The Westerner. Like the great Tom Russell, with whom he has collaborated, Texas native Andy Hedges is fascinated by the music and stories of the Old West and the lifestyles of its inhabitants. His discography includes albums called Roll On, Cowboys and Shadow of a Cowboy and, while his latest effort doesnโ€™t use that last word in its title, it does feature songs such as Bill Stainesโ€™s โ€œA Cowboyโ€™s Hard Times,โ€ Linda Hasselstromโ€™s โ€œDeath of the Last Cowhand,โ€ and Don Edwardsโ€™s โ€œCow Trail Blues.โ€ Also here, in a duet with 94-year-old Ramblinโ€™ Jack Elliott, is โ€œDriftinโ€™ Cowboy,โ€ Slim Critchlowโ€™s cowpoke adaptation of Woody Guthrieโ€™s โ€œSo Long, Itโ€™s Been Good to Know Ya.โ€

Hedges, whose baritone is a good match for his evocative material, favors spare, acoustic instrumentationโ€”sometimes just guitar and mandolin or fiddle, though youโ€™ll also hear some bass, cello, dobro, accordion, and banjo. Close your eyes while listening to many of these songs and you can imagine youโ€™re sitting by a campfire in Texas in the mid-1800s.

The album is available here.

Dwight+Nicole--Day or Night

Dwight + Nicole, Day or Night. Day or Night is the rhythmic, lushly produced latest offering fromDwight + Nicole, a band founded and led by Burlington, Vermontโ€“based Dwight Ritscher and Nicole Nelson. Though a few of the love songs on the groupโ€™s latest album sound too MOR for this listener, the bulk of the synth-spiced set offers arresting dream pop that benefits from addictive melodies, Ritscherโ€™s compelling tenor, and Nelsonโ€™s glorious four-octave vocals.

Standouts that help make this the bandโ€™s best album to date include Ritscherโ€™s โ€œIn the Middleโ€ and โ€œWasting All My Time,โ€ Nelsonโ€™s โ€œOn Top of the World,โ€ the co-written title cut, a version of Jenny Lewisโ€™s โ€œMelt Your Heart,โ€ and a cover of Yazโ€™s โ€œOnly Youโ€ that outshines the original.

The album is available for download here.

That'll Flat...Git It! Vol. 53

Various artists, That’ll Flatโ€ฆGit It! Vol. 53 – Rockabilly & Rock ‘n’ Roll from the Vaults of Challenge & Jackpot Records. The Bear Family labelโ€™s seemingly endless rockabilly and early rock series continues with Volume 53. Like Volume 51, this disc focuses on tracks from Gene Autryโ€™s Los Angelesโ€“based Challenge label and its Jackpot subsidiary. More than half the material dates from 1958, though the set also includes one track from 1957 and a handful from 1959 and the early 1960s.

Featuring excellent sound quality and a 36-page booklet loaded with discographic information, the compendium delivers high-octane rockers whose quality belies their obscurity. Among the selections: โ€œAnna from Louisiana,โ€ by Texas native Jerry Fuller, who later wrote hits for Rick Nelson and Gary Puckett; โ€œGo Champs Goโ€ and โ€œMidnighterโ€ from the Champs, who are better known for the chart-topping โ€œTequilaโ€; โ€œLovey Dovey Baby,โ€ from Champs leader Dave Burgess; and โ€œCome Onโ€ and โ€œShe Tears Me Up,โ€ a pair of rockabilly standouts from Wynn Stewart, whose work helped give birth to country musicโ€™s Bakersfield sub-genre.

The album is available here.

George Usher-Stevensonville

George Usher, Stevensonville. George Usher, an under-appreciated fixture on New Yorkโ€™s indie pop scene since the 1970s, has played with bands such as Beat Rodeo, the Schramms, and his own House of Usher. His latest project, which he began developing three decades ago, is a song cycle about the troubled, struggling residents of the fictional town of Stevensonville. Produced by the Patti Smith Groupโ€™s Tony Shanahan, the music profits from backup by performers such as multi-instrumentalist David Mansfield, a veteran of Bob Dylanโ€™s Rolling Thunder Revue.

Usher, whose apparent influences include the Byrdsโ€™ Roger McGuinn, delivers a varied menu of melodic, lyrically intriguing folk rock. Themes recur, and some of the songs reference others. For example, one number is a rant called โ€œJudge John Baileyโ€ while, in โ€œMitch Kunkel,โ€ Usher sings, โ€œHey, Judge Bailey, have you talked to your daughter? Did she tell you what I did by the riverside?โ€

Available only on vinyl in an edition limited to 200 copies, the album comes with an LP-sized booklet that features the lyrics as well as striking, colorful illustrations for each track by New York City artist Laurie Webber.

The album is available here.


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