Unlike the dozens (literally) of rip-off compilations of very early material that was never meant for release, this
Music Club set,
The Best of Dr. John: The Night Tripper, is a very solid representation of the musician's early years as a solo artist. It is culled from his
Atlantic and
Atco sides off his first seven records, issued between 1968-1974:
Gris-Gris,
Babylon,
Remedies,
The Sun, Moon & Herbs,
Dr. John's Gumbo,
Right Place, Wrong Time, and
Desitively Bonnaroo. It includes many obvious choices: "I Walk On Gilded Splinters," "Right Place, Wrong Time," "Mama Roux," "Such a Night," and "What Goes Around Comes Around," but also his sometimes radical (for the time, anyway) reinterpretations of NOLA anthems, from
Professor Longhair's "Tipitina" and
James Crawford's "Iko Iko" to
Bob Shad's "Junko Partner" and
Earl Gaines' "Big Chief." About the only thing that's really missing here is "Angola Anthem," from
Remedies, though its exclusion appears to be because of the tune's extreme length. For a budget label,
Music Club has excellent sound quality (compare to the
Rhino double-disc), making this a very solid introduction to
Dr. John's official early catalog. ~ Thom Jurek