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"...Black River Swamp..."
Even as a veteran of secondhand record shops
and a rarities buyer for nearly 20 years at the fab Reckless Records in London
– I'm kind of shocked at the sheer undiscovered classiness of this Link Wray
music. Truthfully I never gave it the time of day back in the day. In fact I
can recall seeing British copies of 1971's "Link Wray" turn up in our
busy Berwick Street shop in its American die-cut gatefold sleeve with his side
profile face – and we’d all sigh. The same would apply to the other album
culled from these sessions - the single sleeve UK issue of MORDICAI JONES by
Mordicai Jones (a gatefold in the USA with different artwork). We knew from
previous experience that these obscure LPs would sit in our racks for months on
end - until eventually reduced to a nominal amount - someone would buy them as
a curio rather than a sought-out deliberate purchase. How times have changed...
For this superb UK 2CD reissue the simplest
comparison musically is The Band and Folk-Rock Americana. Most fans who worship
the ground that The Band's "Music From Big Pink" (1968) and "The
Band" (1969) walks on – they would never in their wildest dreams look at
the Rock 'n' Roll guitar 'rumble' of Carolina Shawnee Indian LINK WRAY and
think 'Americana' – the beginnings of Tony Joe White, J.J. Cale, Townes Van
Zandt and then onwards into the Indi Folk-Rock of Ryan Adams, The Jayhawks, Bon
Iver, Sufjan Stevens and The Fleet Foxes. But that's what this rather brilliant
little reissue contains. Simple but original Country, Folk, Blues and Roots
tunes recorded live on guitars and upright piano in a converted Chicken Shack
in Accokeek in the State of Maryland on his brother's farm (Doug Wray) with no
overdubs and barely enough electricity. If they had no drums – they simply
stomped feet hard and rattled those loose nails. If the song was quiet - it's
said you can hear bullfrogs croaking and dogs howling outside the miked-up
windows. Throw in Wray's strangely expressive Paul Siebel/Mickey Newbury
twanging-voice and the results are earthy, real, simple and wonderfully
melodic. Like classic J.J. Cale albums from the 70s – each guitar-chug and
clever string-bend eats its way into your heart – each tune is simple and
direct and warm and full of local stories ("Rise And Fall Of Jimmy
Stokes"). I can even hear traces of a hopeful Rodriguez in his vocal style
and lyrics - his commentaries on urban life and people trying to find their way
in a mixed up world – elegant and truthful ("Fallin' Rain" and
"Ice People"). There's a lot to get through so once more unto the
backwater shed and that Ampex 3-track...
UK released August 2015 (September 2015 in the
USA) – "3-Track Shack" by LINK WRAY on Ace Records CDCH2 1451
(Barcode 029667073820) offers up 3LPs from 1971 and 1973 onto 2CDs with one
British 7" single edit as a bonus track. It plays out as follows:
Disc 1 (63:36 minutes):
1. La De Da
2. Take Me Home Jesus
3. Juke Box Mama
4. Rise And Fall Of Jimmy Stokes
5. Fallin' Rain
6. Fire And Brimstone [Side 2]
7. Ice People
8. God Out West
9. Crowbar
10. Black Rover Stomp
11. Tail Dragger
Tracks 1 to 11 are the album "Link
Wray" – released June 1971 in the USA on Polydor 24-4064 and September
1971 in the UK on Polydor Super 2425 029
12. Walkin' In Arizona
13. Scorpio Woman
14. The Coco Cola Sign Blinds My Eyes
15. All I Want To Say
16. All Because Of A Woman
Tracks 12 to 16 are Side 1 of the album
"Mordicai Jones" by MORDICAI JONES (featuring Link and Doug Wray) –
released November 1971 in the USA on Polydor PD 5010 and March 1972 in the UK
on Polydor Super 2391 010. The American hard-card artwork was a gatefold sleeve
– its front, rear and inner is reproduced in full on Pages 16 to 18 of the
booklet. The single matt sleeve issued in the UK has the photo of 'Wray's Shack
3 Tracks' (on the inner American gatefold) as the cover of the British LP.
Disc 2 (72:24 minutes):
1. On The Run
2. Son Of A Simple Man
3. Precious Jewel
4. Days Before Custer
5. Gandy Dancer
Tracks 1 to 5 are Side of "Mordicai
Jones" as per tracks 12 to 16 on Disc 1
6. Beans And Fatback
7. I'm So Glad, I'm So Proud
8. Shawnee Tribe
9. Hobo Man
10. Georgia Pines
11. Alabama Electric Circus
12. Water Boy [Side 2]
13. From Tulsa To North Carolina
14. Right Or Wrong (You Lose)
15. In The Pines
16. Take My Hand (Precious Lord)
Tracks 6 to 16 are the album "Beans And
Fatback" – released September 1973 in the UK on Virgin Records V 2006 (no
US issue)
BONUS TRACK:
17. I'm So Glad, I'm So Proud (UK 45 Edit) –
issued as UK 7" single in September 1973 on Virgin Records VS 103. Its
non-edited B-side is the album track "Shawnee Tribe".
You can't argue that the chunky 28-page booklet
scrimps it on details or photos – recounting his career from Fifties and
Sixties 'rumble' style guitar Rock 'n' Roll into these three albums - a 70's
change of gear into Americana where the loud guitars of old are replaced with
downhome acoustic tunes. The fantastic DAVE BURKE and ALLAN TAYLOR liner notes
(co-editors of the "Pipeline" Fanzine on Rock Instrumentals) also do
a lot to unravel the mysterious 'Mordicai Jones' project issued only months after
the failed "Link Wray" album of June 1971. It turns out that the
stunning Terry Reid-type vocals by the fictional Mordicai Jones character are
in fact by Gene Johnson and not the keyboardist in Wray’s band Bobby Howard (as
had been presumed). But the big news for fans (apart from the availability of
this music after decades in the wilderness) is the amazingly clear remasters by
long-time Engineer NICK ROBBINS – a name that has graced hundreds of quality
British reissues. There is nothing lo-fi about these transfers despite how the
original recordings were laid down. The "Beans And Fatback" album
from 1973 is notoriously known as no more than 'live outtakes' done at the
Shack sessions and were considered by Wray to be inferior. They were then sold
without Wray’s knowledge or permission to Virgin – but as luck would have it -
the album was met with affection by fans (the rockier side of the recordings)
and is revered to this day as a highlight in his career. A world away from his
previous style of instrumental Rock 'n' Roll guitar – the two more Folksy
albums were not well received at the time. "Link Wray" barely scraped
into No. 186 on the American album charts in July 1971 (lasting only 4 weeks) -
while the pseudonym "Mordicai Jones" project advertised in early June
1971 but not released until November simply confused people and most ignored
it. Let's get to the music...
The openers "La De Da" and "Take
Me Home Jesus" set the tone for the "Link Wray" album – The Band
recording Americana with two-fingers held up to 24-track mixing consoles.
There's Washboard melodrama to the catchy "Juke Box Mama" which
Polydor USA put on the flipside of the 45 for the beautiful "Fallin'
Rain" (Polydor PD 14096). We get a little Elvin Bishop and J.J. Cale with
the very cool chugger "Rise And Fall Of Jimmy Stokes" which
chronicles a boy with a shirt on his back trying to make it in the big city.
It's amazing to think now that something as obviously lovely and topical as
"Fallin' Rain" with lyrics like "...where kids lay bleeding on
the ground...there's no place where peace can be found..." didn’t make an
impression on the radios of the day – very Mickey Newbury and Eric Andersen.
The hugely likeable "Fire And Brimstone" opens Side 2 in style – Jug
Band music with a Mungo Jerry commerciality. "Ice People" bemoans the
Red Man’s fate on the Reservation and again Link's vocals remind you of Levon
Helm at his touching best. The ragged electric lead guitar in "God Out
West" is the nearest nod to his loud 'rumbling' style of old (that guitar
sound would turn up on the outtakes album "Beans And Fatback" in
1973). The acoustic-slide Blues of "Crowbar" reminds me of James
Taylor's "Steamroller" on "Sweet Baby James" where Link
tells his girl "...I'm a crowbar baby and I’m sure gonna ply you loose..."
(how very gentlemanly of him). The opening flickering mandolin strums of
"Black River Swamp" suit an impossibly laconic melody that’s full of
Southern Soul (voices and guitars recorded for pure feel). Wray means it as he
sings "...I can hear them bullfrogs croaking...calling me back to my
childhood...down here in Black River Swamp..." The album ends on the only
cover version – a fantastic Bo Diddley guitar chug at "Tail Dragger"
(written by Willie Dixon for Howlin' Wolf). I'm a sucker for slide bottleneck
guitar and this baby has guitars going on everywhere as Link does his best
Chester Burnett vocal growl.
One of the Backing Vocalists credited simply as
'Gene' on the "Link Wray" albums turns out to be GENE JOHNSON – the
principal vocalist for the Mordicai Jones album and project (not Bobby Howard
as was long thought). The moniker of Mordicai Jones might have been Polydor's
way of dealing with the fan backlash/indifference to "Link Wray"
(hide him behind some other band). The booklet also reproduces in full the
gatefold artwork of the American LP (the shack pictured in the woods nestled in
a canopy of trees). The inside photo on the inner gatefold was used by British
copies on their front covers and reduced to a single matt sleeve. The inner
right side of the gatefold was used as the artwork for the rear of the British
LP and the album didn’t show until early 1972 (about March) where it was met
with as much non-interest as it had been in 1971 USA.
The Mordicai Jones album opens with
"Walkin' In The Arizona Sun" which sounds like George Harrison circa
"All Things Must Pass" doing a Countryish cover of Dylan's "If
Not For You". But its darker subject matter turns out to be about black
men walking in the chain gang – each step another closer to Hell. But its the
funky Blues of "Scorpio Woman" that unleashes Gene Johnson's
fantastic voice – his straining roars sounding more like Terry Reid fronting
Grand Funk Railroad or The Guess Who doing "American Woman" than the
Americana of Robbie Robertson of The Band. Polydor USA tried "Scorpio
Woman" as a 45 Demo on Polydor PD-14112 but it seems DJs remained unmoved.
They also worked the opener "Walkin' In The Arizona Sun" on Polydor
PD-14105 - but again no interest. The acoustic slide blues of "The Coco
Cola Sign Blinds My Eyes" again lets Johnson's voice rip for 6:21 minutes
sounding not unlike a drunk Robert Plant doing a "Physical Graffiti"
number unplugged. It's impressive and a wonder Rock guys haven't zeroed in on
its great James Dewar/Terry Reid Rock feel. There's traces of Big Star vocals
in "All I Want To Say" and yet more Acoustic slide ends Side 1 with
"All Because Of A Woman" where his woman done up and run off and left
him with one can of warm beer (enough of those bullfrogs I think).
Side 2 opens like Countrified Allman Brothers
with "On The Run" – all slide acoustic guitars, Dickey Betts electric
guitar licks and harmonica moans. Things become Elton John piano contemplative
with "Son Of A Simple Man" where Link sings the praise of his earthy
father who loved hard work, his family and his friends. We get a bit Dobro
ramshackle on "Precious Jewel" where Gene Johnson thinks about a girl
"...way back in the hills..." who has since gone to the angels. After
the rocking "Days Before Custer" the album ends on the mandolin and
acoustic guitars of "Gandy Dancer" where Link's group of musicians
feel like The Ozark Mountain Daredevils in the making.
Mixed by Simon Heyworth at The Manor in the UK
after the American tapes were delivered - the "Beans And Fatback"
album feels like the boys goofing around in the shed - but heavier than before.
Each ramshackle song is usually a mandolin/electric guitar romp with one snare
drum and the occasional Jews Harp thrown in – bashing out whatever Country air
took their fancy. The 6:23 grunge minutes of "I'm So Glad, I'm So
Proud" sounds like the spirit of Rock 'n' Roll has possessed the shed.
Suddenly Link Wray 'rocks' – a huge guitar riff is quickly followed by wild
soloing - as the band chugs along to the almost indecipherable mumbled lyrics.
This is Neil Young circa 1972 unleashed with his guitar and he doesn’t care –
just rock that sucker out baby. It's fantastic stuff. Wray moans for the whole
duration of "Shawnee Tribe” like an Indian brave contemplating too much
history. "Hobo Man" is a simple "silver dollar” Mandolin melody
that chronicles a life spent on hot cotton fields just before the train whistle
blows and calls a restless soul away. I love the instrumental "Alabama
Electric Circus" – again just the band enjoying an electric guitar romp –
Wray creating a boogie out of nothing.
Side 2 opens with the stunning 6:15 minutes of
"Water Boy" – a song that starts out like a chain-gang thump as they
rhythmically smash the hammers down. Then the slide acoustic guitars give way
to a Muddy Waters "Mannish Boy" electric guitar which keeps building.
Wray is given the room to shine by the counting-time beat - and off he goes –
attacking Guitar growling in the echo chamber of the shed. He eventually
arrives at that huge 'rumble' as the tune fades out – wowser! Of the remainder - the acoustic-backed
"Right Or Wrong (You Lose)" again features some wild and loud guitar
juts when you don’t expect it - while "In The Pines" is almost Foghat
in its Bluesy Rock. It ends on the echoed and eerie "Take My Hand
(Precious Lord)" where Neil Young's Crazy Horse has gone Guitar Gospel
crazy by way of Phil Spector (if you can imagine such a thing).
So why did it all fail – why don’t you know
about these albums? I suppose you could say that all three records lacked an
overall impact to make them classics of the day – but in hindsight - these
Countrified Americana albums by Link Wray make for a fabulous listen - offering
up music that gets to you after repeated listens – music you want to champion
and rave about.
A stunning release then from Ace Records of the
UK and a reminder that there’s so much great music out there to still find and
cherish. Properly impressed I am...
This review and hundreds like it are available in my SOUNDS GOOD Music Books Series - see CLASSIC 1970s ROCK on Amazon for a download - click the following link...
This review and hundreds like it are available in my SOUNDS GOOD Music Books Series - see CLASSIC 1970s ROCK on Amazon for a download - click the following link...