First off, Detroit's
Deadstring Brothers have left Motown and relocated to Nashville, a move that isn't all that startling, since they've always sounded like they were from some mythic deep south anyway, with a sound that wrapped country, gospel, and blues up into a skillful facsimile of "Wild Horses"-era
Rolling Stones, and
Cannery Row is
Kurt Marschke and company's first album since Nashville beckoned. The problem with this band, if it's really a problem, is that they sound exactly like that moment in time when
Gram Parsons collided with
the Stones in the 1970s, so much so that
the Deadstring Brothers' sound like a cover band for a whole era of
Stones albums recorded in an alternative universe where the actual
Stones never ventured, which is all fine if you like the thought of that kind of thing, but a problem -- and at the very least, a conundrum -- if you don't.
Marschke always sounds like
Exile-era
Mick Jagger when he sings, and one could swear the alternative ghost of
Keith Richards is in there somewhere, too, with all the layered, swampy arranging of acoustic and electric guitars. All of this wouldn't even be the slightest bit bothersome, since the songs and production are wonderfully done and sound almost vintage, if it wasn't so damn eerie. Did the move to Nashville change any of this and maybe move
the Brothers a little closer to an utterly original Americana country sound that was all their own? Well, no. There are a few more country elements on
Cannery Row, but it still sounds like the alternative trapped-at-"Wild Horses" facsimile version of
the Stones doing their thing. Hey, these guys do that thing well, and songs like the title tune, the majestic "Cannery Row," seem like they should have been great lost
Stones songs, while the couple of songs that take baby steps out of that sound, including the lovely and bouncy "It's Morning Irene" and the chugging two-step shuffle "Lucille's Honky Tonk," are really the brightest moments here, for they suggest a
Deadstring Brothers that could actually sound like themselves and not be dragging a long vanished phase of
the Rolling Stones around with them. ~ Steve Leggett