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Scott Idlet
The Last Diner
Self Released
By Al Kunz

They say you can't judge a book by its cover. Judging a CD by its case would seem to be the musical corollary. Sometimes I just can't help myself. Final judgment is reserved for my ears, but impressions of a performer can start forming before the shrink wrap has been penetrated. These first impressions are sometimes spot-on as with the Wes Freed art used as CD covers for his band the Shiners. I'll let you decide for yourself if Freed's work on The Drive-By Truckers Southern Rock Opera does the same.

The front of The Last Diner also sets the stage for what you'll hear inside. In the background is Swallow Hill which I'll attest is from my visit there is, as the sign says, "Denver's Home for Folk & Acoustic Music." In the foreground Idlet sits on the back of a Harley, guitar case slung over his back. Instead of David Carradine as Woody Guthrie hoping a freight train with guitar slung over his back in Bound for Glory, we've got the modern equivalent of the free-spirited, rambling, folksinger. Even without knowing that Idlet was an award winner at this year's Woody Guthrie Songwriting Competition (also a Kerrville Newfolk finalist) or hearing his take on this disc of Guthrie's "Union Maid" the Guthrie influence is apparent.

The music in The Last Diner continues the Guthrie mindset with a song praising the home state of the man from Okemah in "Fond of Oklahoma." This tune is one of six that Idlet produced himself, doing the recording at the Swallow Hill Music Association's Sawtelle Studio. With a nod to the displaced Okies of the dustbowl Idlet spurns the land of milk and honey (or is it flakes and nuts?) in favor of keeping your roots firmly planted.

People hanging around the Courthouse
Looks like a scene from "Grapes of Wrath";
Route 66 runs right by here, it's a well worn path.

Once carried Okies to the Promised Land,
Out west to Cal-i-forn-i-a;
I hear that homes there costs a million, so I think
I'll stay.

In a second set of sessions cousin Ezra Idlet of Grammy nominee Trout Fishing in America produced the remaining 5 tracks (also providing instrumental backup with Trout Fishing partner Keith Grimwood) at TFIA's home base, The Trouthouse, in Prairie Grove, Arkansas. Intermixed with tunes from the Denver sessions it takes several spins of The Last Diner before the distinct differences between these two sets becomes apparent.

While in Denver Idlet gave free rein to the influence of Woody Guthrie, at times putting himself back in Guthrie's time as in "Beneath That Tree," the story of a father who left his family "in July of '42" to hop a freight train in search of work in the California shipyards. "Sweat of Generations" tips the hat to Woody Guthrie or, to follow the thread back even farther, Joe Hill. It isn't a stretch imagining this story of a plant closure and, ultimately, about the strength of the human spirit and resilance of the common man, in a modern day edition of the Wobblies Little Red Book.

The blood and sweat of generations,
They helped build that company;
It withstood the Great Depression,
And the flood in '53.

Eighty years of good production,
Eighty years of peoples dreams;
All thrown away to cut expenses,
The rich they rule the world it seems.

In Arkansas Idlet pulled out his more personal songs. Songs of love lost ("Without You Here" and "Small Town Broken Heart") and "The Hardest Thing to Say," a song that drives home the repercussions of love gone bad a bit too well.

Kiss my son upon his cheek,
He's Daddy's biggest fan;
I'll see you in a couple weeks,
My special little man.

Daddy loves you bunches,
Much bigger than the sky
The hardest thing to say is goodbye.

It's tempting to throw out a few clichés here. Something like "love makes the world go round" or "nine out of ten songs are love songs." Both are clichés because they're approximately 99.9% true. Idlet builds on a song title, "The Game of Love," that's become cliché after the twenty-plus like-named songs recorded by everyone from Nat King Cole to Katrina and the Waves (perhaps the best known the Wayne Fontanta and the Mindbenders hit) and (I'm going for a record number of clichés in one paragraph here) hits it out of the ballpark, explaining why he and the rest of us keep playing the game.

So I stumble on, true to form,
Searching for my port in storm,
Optimistic love will come my way.

Lonesome losers sometimes win,
The courage comes to try again,
Like a classic William Shakespeare play.

My winning team has been one elusive dream,
Still I play the game of love
Still I play the game of love.

While "The Last Diner" appears to be a eulogy for the last of the old diners to close, Idlet packs these lyrics with enough specifics that he may have had a particular diner in mind. The denizens of Idlet's diner spanned the full range of humanity ("misfits and hippies and ladies with clients were all a great part of that diner's alliance"). Rich and poor are all displaced in the name of progress. More condos, just what every town needs. Combining the more personal, largely contemporary setting of songs from the Arkansas sessions with the Guthriesque songs of the proletariat from the Denver sessions, the title track bridges the prevailing attitudes of the two sessions nicely.

www.countrysongwriters.com is Scott Idlet's internet home. Visit www.cdbaby.com to purchase or hear song samples of The Last Diner.

Contact Al Kunz at kunz-at-rockzilla.net

 

 
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