The album begins with “Black Lion,” a pretty good bluesy
rock number. “Cold rain falling on an
empty face/Black lion’s calling – crawling all over this place/All over this
place.” That’s followed by “Recipe For Disaster,” which has a little more
energy and is a more interesting song. Check out these lines: “And I’ve washed my hands in the bloody swamp
where the soul thieves made their beds/I drank from the pool where the rebels
stomped their arrogant shameless heads.” If you’re a fan of Warren Zevon
and Tom Petty, you’ll almost certainly dig this tune. And then “Lost In A Day” at
moments reminds me a bit of Roy Orbison, during the section where he sings, “Love fell hard on a time not forgotten/With
fear of change and the blues when they walked in all alone,” both in the
vocal line and the music.
One of my favorites on this CD is “Bughouse In Pasadena,”
an incredibly fun tune, with some great stuff on keys and horns, and a humorous
reference to BTO (“The radio only plays ‘You
Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet’/But I always kinda liked Ba-Ba-Bachman Turner Overdrive”).
And I like these lines: “There’s sad
painting hanging crooked/And they make tacos that you best not eat/I might be
better off homeless/Than in this prison with yellow stained sheets/Under lock
and key twenty-four seven.” He makes being locked up in the bughouse sound
like a party.
Another of my favorites is “Last Tear (Delaney’s Song),”
particularly because of the line “Open up
your heart, am I still there inside.” This is a mellower and kind of
beautiful tune. I really like the addition of strings, which add a wonderful
element without driving the song. “Memories,
they dance around to the sweetest music/How I miss that sound/Maybe time and a
little space/Will bring us back to where we belonged in the first place.”
This is such a strong song, and it’s followed by “Fisherman’s Daughter,” which
has a great, loose back porch sound that I totally dig. “Out in California, really comin’ down/Always bad weather whenever I’m in
town/A big black cloud rollin’ through/With a twelve-string guitar and three
dollars in my shoe.”
“Sooner Or Later,” with its lines “Sooner or later I’m gonna get my life straight/And if I live to be a
hundred you know it’s never too late,” is a good song for me to listen to
as I desperately try to get my shit together before the end of the year. (Don’t
I make similar attempts every year? Bugger.) This is a good bar band rock tune.
And “Moscow Girl” has something of a classic rock and roll vibe, its chorus
reminding me a bit of the sound of the verses of Chuck Berry’s “Rock And Roll
Music.” “Hey little Moscow girl/Can’t
wait to see this world/Cross the ocean where you long to be be/Turning dreams
into reality.”
CD Track List
- Black Lion
- Recipe For Disaster
- Lost In A Day
- Bughouse In Pasadena
- Feel Town
- Last Tear (Delaney’s Song)
- Fisherman’s Daughter
- Sooner Or Later
- Missing Guru
- Livin’ In It
- Moscow Girl
- Exiled
- Solar Powered Radio
- No More Runnin’
Musicians
Musicians on this album include Bill Carter on vocals,
guitar, bass, percussion and harmonica; Dony Wynn on drums and percussion;
David Holt on electric guitar; Mike Thompson on piano, organ, keyboards and
trombone; Charlie Sexton on electric guitar; John Mills on flute, saxophone and
strings; James Stevens on bass and backing vocals; Gabriel Rhodes on slide
guitar and percussion; Richard Bowden on fiddle, Denny Freeman on electric
guitar and slide guitar; Kimmie Rhodes on backing vocals; Ruth Ellsworth Carter
on backing vocals; and the Tosca String Quartet on strings.
Innocent Victims
And Evil Companions is scheduled to be released on February 26, 2016 on
Forty Below Records.
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