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Graybeards recall
first-hand a time when country music was a thing of purity and
pain. Young'ns at the knees of the old-timers hear tales of
the genre's legends, and the occasional scratchy recording on
an old piece of vinyl. As the CD era came and grew and spawned
those nifty high-tech DVDs, tributes and re-mastered collections
of originals became the rage. Merle Haggard had himself a better
idea. With 39 Number Ones behind him and the hundreds of other
gems in tow, he figured a new approach might fit the bill. A
few conversations between the Hag and legendary producer (and
Country Music Hall of Fame member) Roy Horton later, Peer-Southern
Productions was putting together the truly exceptional Audium
Records release, The Peer Sessions.
This is Merle at his smoothest and most effortlessly nuanced,
paying homage to the fathers and titans of country's heritage
and backed flawlessly by, as usual, some of the hands-down best
in the business. Old friends, longtime and sometime Strangers
(you do know the Strangers are Merle's band, have been from the
get-go, right?) pepper the credits. There's Biff Adam on the
drum kit, Abe Manuel Jr. filling in on accordion, harmonica and
even vocals here and there. Norman Hamlet on the dobro and steel
sounds as good now as he ever did, and Redd Volkaert managed
to find himself an electric guitar a time or three before the
dust all settled. Oleg Schramm on the piano would usually amount
to 'nuff said, but the ivories on the Tommy Duncan's "Time
Changes Everything," the final track, get tickled by the
great Owen Bradley - - the track was laid down just fifteen months
before his death in 1998. We could keep on rolling through the
all-star supporting cast here, but fact is it'd be like reading
those genealogies in Deuteronomy. Just slide your eyes through
the liner notes while you listen to your copy and you'll find
someone you've loved to listen to for years. And production?
Well. Merle and Roy handled that task themselves on all but
"Hang On To The Memories," a song covered in duet fashion
by Merle and author Jimmie Davis. Davis took Horton's place
alongside Hag at the boards for that track. And by and large
the studio work was done in two of the best places country music's
ever happened: Merle's own Tally Studios in his home state of
California, and the Bradley's Barn studio in Nashville itsownself.
So what are we looking at here, exactly? It's established
now who's playing and engineering, and the pedigree is above
reproach. It's time to discuss content, plain and simple. And
plain and simple it is, in all the soul-cleansing ways that Music
Row has forgotten. How about Jimmie Rodgers, the father of country
music? Yep, he's in here. "Peach Pickin' Time In Georgia"
leads off. His seminal "Anniversary Blue Yodel" gets
a faithful rendering as well. Bonnie Dodd gets a nod, and some
of Western swing's slowest and prettiest work ever is on display
with the W. Lee O'Daniel track "Put Me In Your Pocket."
Fort Worth never sounded so good on a Bakersfield singer's whiskey
voice.
Perhaps as a tip of the hat to the days when an artist could
write and make good music in any genre he chose, Merle put Bill
Halley's "Miss the Mississippi and You" at number seven
on The Peer Sessions. The combination of Katherine Styron's
lounge piano, Don Markham's mournful sax and rippling guitar
work from Volkaert and Joe Manuel is intoxicating in a far beyond
legal manner. And then it's right back into country of the stone
cold variety, with the Jimmie Davis/Floyd Tillman composition
"It Makes No Difference Now."
I learned to love you and
I thought you loved me too
Oh but that's all in the past
I'll get by somehow
I don't worry 'cause
It makes no difference now
The defiance of the rural way when caught in adversity's gaze
was one of the things Jimmie Rodgers voiced the best, and his
thrashing of his lifelong nemesis tuberculosis in "Whipping
That Old T.B." gets a significant reading as the ninth track
on this disc.
George Strait's legions of young fans should spend some quality
time with the next cut, Jimmie Davis' "Hang On to the Memories."
This was the kind of music Strait was hearing when he wrote
"Amarillo by Morning," and to listen to his new stuff,
maybe Strait should dig out the Rodgers library as well. As
noted above, Davis duets with Merle on this track, and it's a
sweet, sweet tragedy that the song doesn't last for a year or
two longer than the three minutes and six seconds it takes it
to leave the station.
Floyd Tillman's "I Love You So Much It Hurts" is
a masterpiece, always has been. This version ranks with the
original. But no matter how much love hurts, it's true, "Time
Changes Everything," and that's how The Peer Sessions
closes out. Tommy Duncan's vision of Western swing was one of
the truest ever, and it's fitting that an album of this caliber
closes out in this manner.
You can change the name of an old song
Rearrange it and make it swing
I thought nothing could stop me from loving you
But time changes everything.
Written to a woman, recorded again after all these years by
one of our kind of music's greatest, and heard through ears admittedly
jaded and cynical, this final track and the lyrics above play
like a damning reproach to the atrocity country music has become.
It is to Merle Haggard's credit, both as an artist and as a
man, that he is able to so eloquently showcase all that is wrong
with the genre today simply by playing to perfection so much
of what was right about its past. The album is called The
Peer Sessions because Roy Horton's Peer-Southern Productions
was intimately involved with the work. It could just as easily
be titled so because Merle Haggard, in this arena and surrounded
by lifelong friends on their best instruments, is, simply, among
peers when he sings the songs found here. Somewhere Jimmy and
Hank and Johnny are smiling, and when Merle goes to sit in with
them, it won't bother me much if I'm not far behind.
Contact David Pilot at: tailgunner-at-rockzilla.net
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