The year 1968 was such an
interesting one for music. It was the year
of The White Album, and of the Grateful Dead’s most experimental record, Anthem Of The Sun. Pop and rock music
were certainly getting weird, exploring new areas. And so it seems completely
fitting that 1968 was also the year of Dr. John’s first album, Gris-Gris, exploring the strange
landscape of New Orleans. It’s now being re-issued by Real Gone Music.
It’s a fantastic record,
with a sound and attitude and ambiance far afield of the norm. A place it’s
wonderful to visit. At times it feels like Dr. John really is a voodoo practitioner
and could easily control your mind through these recordings. Listen to “Danse
Fambeaux,” for example.
“Gris-Gris Gumbo Ya Ya”
Dr. John starts off the
opening track, “Gris-Gris Gumbo Ya Ya,” with an introduction: “They call me Dr. John, known as the Night
Tripper.” The vocals have a sort of sly delivery, with a slow groove, like
he’s sneaking into your world. The vocals are very much to the fore, like the
band is in the background, under Dr. John’s hypnotic spell. They’ve already
bought what he’s selling, and are now helping him to win more clients. “If you got love troubles, you got a bad
woman you can’t control, I got just the thing for you.” There’s a short
percussion solo before Dr. John repeats the opening line. The whole thing has
such a cool effect.
“Danse Kalinda Ba Doom”
is a stranger, and more haunting track, with some wonderful percussion, which
has a loose feel, like it’s being performed out in some clearing in the swamp
at night. And I love that mandolin.
“Mama Roux”
Things begin moving
closer to normal with “Mama Roux,” with a good groove and fun vibe, and some
perfect backing vocals. And Dr. John’s relaxed, easy vocal delivery works so
well. “Mama Roux/She was the queen of the
little red, white and blue.”
“Croker Courtbullion”
“Croker Courtbullion”
features some more great percussion. Let your body swing and writhe, and check
out that interesting work on keys and on guitar. This is a bizarre, jazzy jam.
Things may seem a bit chaotic at times, but you get the feeling that’s just to
catch us off guard so these guys can go in for the kill. Clearly they’re
pulling us into some sort of jungle, leading us away from safety, from comfort.
“Jump Sturdy”
Things head a little more
toward normal again with “Jump Sturdy,” a song with a nice groove and something
of an old rock and roll vibe. It also creates an interesting character, with
lines like “People say she used to dance
with the fish/Some people say she juggled fire in a dish” and “She raised her hands and caused an
electrical storm/She was a treacherous lady.”
“Walk On Guilded Splinters”
Gris-Gris ends with the album’s most well-known tune, “Walk On
Guilded Splinters,” another wonderfully odd and hypnotic tune, with the title
line almost chanted. I love those backing vocals. And I like that this song
takes its time. It’s in no hurry. It knows it has you in its grip and is just
playing with you as it pleases. And it feels so good to be played with this
way. There is a great section that begins with some simple percussion, then
grows. I love it.
CD Track List
- Gris-Gris Gumbo Ya Ya
- Danse Kalinda Ba Doom
- Mama Roux
- Danse Fambeaux
- Croker Courtbullion
- Jump Sturdy
- I Walk On Guilded Splinters
Gris-Gris was released on March 4, 2014 (yes, on Mardi Gras) through Real Gone Music.
No comments:
Post a Comment