The North Mississippi Allstars bring it all back home on
Up and Rolling, the band's debut offering for
New West.
Cody and
Luther Dickinson (scions of the late producer
Jim Dickinson) may have taken their brand of roots rock, dirty-blues crunch, soul, and funk across the globe many times, but they've never forgotten their roots in Mississippi's Hill Country mud. In 1996, Texas photographer
Wyatt McSpadden visited the
Dickinsons and took pictures of local hill country musicians
Otha Turner,
Junior Kimbrough,
R.L. Burnside, and others, along with their musical families. All the musicians and their kin played together at
Kimbrough's juke joint. Most if not all of the offspring are or have been
NMA collaborators through the decades. (Singer and fife player
Sharde Thomas,
Otha's granddaughter, continues to lead grandad's
Rising Star Fife & Drum Ensemble.) The photos went undiscovered for some 20 years, and they are what inspired this "soundtrack." The band enlisted friends for a wonderfully unruly celebration of blood, land, and musical ties.
Jason Isbell sings lead and plays guitar on a wooly read of
Little Walter Jacobs' "Mean Old World" with
Duane Betts adding his own axe.
Mavis Staples fronts
NMA on a bubbling, funky take of her own family's "What You Gonna Do" (written by
Pops Staples) with
Rev. Charles Hodges on Hammond B-3, and a vocal chorus courtesy of
Tierinii and
Tikyra Jackson.
Cedric Burnside sings and plays on his uncle
R.L.'s crunchy blues choogler "Out on the Road" and a countrified version of
Thomas A. Dorsey's gospel standard "Take My Hand Precious Lord."
NMA --
Luther and
Cody on guitar and drums, respectively,
Thomas on vocals and fife,
Carl Dufrene on bass, and
Sharisse Norman on vocals -- are a well-seasoned outfit; the quintet and most of their guests have been playing together in various capacities for most of their lives. "Call That Gone" is a filthy, squalling, bottleneck-guitar blues driven by rolling tom-toms with souled-out vocals from
Luther and
Thomas, her fife trading licks with his guitar. The title track is a summery country-blues framed by
Cody's Wurlitzer and sung in three-part harmony. "Peaches" is lusty, groove-and-grind blues funk with
Thomas and
Luther exchanging sung lines with real heat. "Lonesome in My Home" is low-down trance-dance blues penned by
Kimbrough.
NMA's read is led by
Garry Burnside's roiling bassline with killer guitar by
Luther that will make you shiver. So will the punchy, funky "Bump That Mother," with
Roosevelt Collier's wily steel guitar and
Cody's breaking snare march. "Living Free" is good-time, back porch soul with snaky slide guitar, Wurlitzer organ, and sweeping vocals by
Norman and
Thomas. "Otha's Bye Bye Baby," with long-ago-demo'ed vocals by the man himself, is paired with
Luther's guitar, which adds swamp mud and murk to bring the album full circle.
Up and Rolling clears away decades of cobwebs, dust, and wisteria vines from the doorway to the past: It's a family reunion offering that looks to the Hill Country's history and mystery for both its inspiration from the past and guidance to its present. ~ Thom Jurek