Otis Taylor can make people nervous. His take on the
blues is defiant, angry, aggressive, and confrontational, owing as much to
Peter Tosh as
Charley Patton. Although he carries the dust of 1920s
country blues in his mostly acoustic songs, his railings against social injustices are thoroughly contemporary.
Taylor is an often pedantic songwriter, but he pulls it off by sheer bravado and conviction, and like a driver who blows through a stop sign, he's sure about where he's going.
Truth Is Not Fiction follows the template of his previous three albums, with no drums (the rhythm comes from the sheer propulsion of
Taylor's guitar, banjo, and mandolin playing) and a sort of Appalachian griot approach to things. One of the highlights is the strange Russian
blues (complete with cello) of
"House of the Crosses," a perfect example of
Taylor's mix of rustic themes with cosmopolitan purposes. The full speed ahead rhythm banjo on
"Babies Don't Lie" drills into your head like a freight train, and the ante is upped with double-barrelled banjos in both channels on
"Shakie's Gone," making
Taylor sound at times like
Richie Havens on steroids. The album closer, a gut-bucket cover of the
Big Joe Williams classic
"Baby, Please Don't Go," seems oddly stuck in low gear, but overall
Truth Is Not Fiction works well. Given his agenda,
Taylor isn't for everyone, but he brings a fresh approach and a welcome shot in the ass to
contemporary blues. ~ Steve Leggett