Jimmy “Duck” Holmes starts the
album with a solo piece, “Hard Times,” a different take on “Hard Time Killing
Floor Blues,” a tune written by Skip James It has a deliciously raw sound that
is undeniably powerful. This is pure blues, just voice and guitar, a wonderful
way to get things going, to pull us in and put us in the right frame of my mind.
The rhythm section then comes in on “Cypress Grove,” the album’s title track,
which was also written by Skip James. Eric Deaton and Sam Bacco set the groove
for Jimmy, who then comes in to tell us, “I’d
rather be dead/Dead in some old cypress grove/I’d rather be dead/Dead in some
old cypress grove/Than to have a woman I can’t control.”
The first track to include Dan
Auerbach is “Catfish Blues,” and on it he delivers some excellent stuff on
electric guitar, including a cool lead section in the second half of the song
that has just the right amount of fuzz. “I
don’t want to be no crawfish/And I don’t want to be no, no bullfrog/If I can’t
be a catfish/I don’t want to be no fish at all.” That’s followed by a good
rendition of “Goin’ Away Baby” that has a cool, groovy vibe and something of a
late 1960s blues feel. He sounds earnest, serious, as he sings “If you don’t want me, please don’t dog me
around/If you don’t want me, woman, please don’t dog me around.” This track
features more exciting work on electric guitar toward the end. We are then
treated to a cover of Muddy Waters’ “Rock Me,” which has a steady rhythm that
moves ahead, unimpeded. This track features three guitarists – Jimmy Holmes,
Dan Auerbach and Marcus King – so you can be sure there is some delicious stuff
on guitar.
Jimmy “Duck” Holmes delivers an
interesting rendition of Willie Dixon’s “Little Red Rooster.” It starts off
loose, like the band is just warming up, getting started. I learned about a lot
of great music through my passion for the Grateful Dead, and this is one of
those songs. They played it fairly often. I love the use of saxophone on this
rendition, and the way it leads the band into a cool jam at the end. That’s
Leon Michels on sax. That’s followed by “Devil Got My Woman,” which has more of
a raw, back porch vibe. This one is performed by the trio of Holmes, Deaton and
Bacco. And Jimmy Holmes gives a seriously good vocal performance here. “I said come back baby, please come back
baby/Try me one more time/I know it wasn’t nothing but the devil/Made you
change your mind.” He also delivers some absolutely wonderful work on
guitar. This song interestingly has the lines about trying to get some rest that
I mostly associate with “I Know You Rider”: “Lay down last night/Yes, I lay down last night, lay down last night/Trying
to get my rest/But you know my mind, my mind got to rambling/Like the wild
geese from the west.” And actually
those are the last lines of this version.
“All Night Long” has something
of an improvised feel, taking a moment to come together at the beginning. This
is the first of the album’s original numbers, written by Jimmy “Duck” Holmes,
and is a song he is revisiting, having used it as the title track to an earlier
release as well as on the album Ain’t It
Lonesome. Marcus King joins him on guitar on this track. “All Night Long”
is followed by another of Jimmy’s original compositions, “Gonna Get Old
Someday.” It’s interesting that he chose to put all the original numbers at the
end rather than placing them throughout the album. “If you keep on living/Man, you’re going to get old/You’re going to get
old someday.” And yeah, there is some humor to a man in his seventies singing
about getting old someday, but this song is playful through and through. “Yes, I said I was going to stop drinking/And
I was going to stop running around.” This is a song that Holmes had
recorded earlier, using it as the title track to his 2008 LP. Is he speaking
from experience when he sings “You’re
gonna wake up one morning, one morning/And you can’t do the things you used to
do”? I don’t know. Based on this music, he seems capable of whatever he wants to do.
“Train Train” is a song that
has some things in common with “Mystery Train.” Jimmy Holmes had recorded this
one earlier as well, including it on All
Night Long. The album then concludes with “Two Women,” another original
tune, this one about a man who has both a large woman and a tiny woman. “Yeah, they tell me, they tell me my woman
been hanging around, hanging around, hanging around the county jail/Tell me she
makes a whole lot of money going from cell to cell to cell.” Which woman is
he referring to here, I wonder. Perhaps it’s the tiny woman, for Jimmy then
sings that the big woman tells him, “What
I’m gonna do for you, Jimmy Duck, I swear I wouldn’t do for nobody else.”
CD Track List
- Hard Times
- Cypress Grove
- Catfish Blues
- Goin’ Away Baby
- Rock Me
- Little Red Rooster
- Devil Got My Woman
- All Night Long
- Gonna Get Old Someday
- Train Train
- Two Women
Cypress Grove was released on October 18, 2019 through Easy Eye
Sound.
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