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Rollin' Into Memphis: Songs Of John Hiatt

Various Artists
Release Date: 08/15/2000
Original Release:  2000
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 388054_CD
UPC # 089408350528
Label: Telarc Distribution
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Disc: 1
1. Falling Up - C.J. Chenier sound samples  real  |  windows media
2. It Hasn't Happened Yet - Terrance Simien sound samples  real  |  windows media
3. Old Habits Are Hard to Break - Irma Thomas sound samples  real  |  windows media
4. Listening to Old Voices - Odetta sound samples  real  |  windows media
5. Love Like Blood - Kenny Neal sound samples  real  |  windows media
6. Wrote It Down and Burned It - James Cotton/Kris Wiley sound samples  real  |  windows media
7. River Knows Your Name, The - Colin Linden sound samples  real  |  windows media
8. Feels Like Rain - Raful Neal/Tab Benoit sound samples  real  |  windows media
9. Thirty Years of Tears - John Hiatt sound samples  real  |  windows media
10. Real Fine Love - Chris Smither sound samples  real  |  windows media
11. Back of My Mind - Cliff Eberhardt sound samples  real  |  windows media
12. Have a Little Faith in Me - Patty Larkin sound samples  real  |  windows media

To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the real player real or windows media windows media players, click to download the FREE software.
Performer: Various Artists
Engineer: Kevin Keithley; Steve Drown
Producer: Randy Labbe
Distributor: Fontana Distribution

Notes: Personnel: Andrea Re (vocals, percussion); G.E. Smith (guitar); Bill Chinnock (slide guitar); Mary Jo Carlsen (violin); Anthony Geraci (piano, Wurlitzer piano, organ); Richard Bell (organ); Paul Ossola (bass); Dan Hickey (drums). Recorded at The Studio, Portland, Maine from January to June 2000. Includes liner notes by Ted Drozdowski. Personnel: Chris Smither, Cliff Eberhardt, Colin Linden, Kenny Neal, Kris Wiley, Patty Larkin, Tab Benoit (vocals, guitar); C.J. Chenier (vocals, accordion); Andrea Re (vocals, percussion); Irma Thomas, Odetta, Raful Neal, Terrance Simien (vocals); G.E. Smith (guitar); Bill Chinnock (slide guitar); James Cotton (harmonica); Anthony Geraci (piano, organ, Wurlitzer organ); Richard Bell (organ); Dan Hickey (drums). Audio Mixer: Lincoln Clapp. Liner Note Author: Ted Drozdowski. Recording information: The Studio, Portland, ME (01/2000-06/2000). Arranger: G.E. Smith. The variety of artists who have covered John Hiatt's songs is truly staggering. From Iggy Pop to Emmylou Harris, Hiatt's unpretentious Midwestern tunes filled with clever wordplay, nifty singalong melodies, and heartfelt stories seem to resonate with an astonishingly eclectic set of musicians. But the folk, country, and blues crowd like Buddy Guy, Rosanne Cash, and especially Bonnie Raitt have been the most commercially successful Hiatt interpreters, hence an entire album devoted to these genres is a logical, and even obvious, concept. This is not the first anthology of Hiatt covers; Rhino's 1993 Love Gets Strange got there first, but that was only a compilation of previously recorded tracks. Rollin' Into Memphis, with its title seemingly derived from "Memphis in the Meantime," oddly a song that does NOT appear here, is a well-meaning and generally successful attempt to mine the blues and folk roots of his music and breathe new life into these tunes with imaginative rearrangements from an intriguing assortment of players. The album benefits greatly from utilizing the same backing band on all tracks. Although the singers run the gamut from folk (Odetta, Patty Larkin, Chris Smither) to blues (Raful Neal, Colin Linden) and even to zydeco and Cajun (C.J. Chenier, Terrance Simien), the core group featuring guitarist G.E. Smith and keyboardist Anthony Geraci keeps the music in the same sweaty, swamp rock groove. Highlights are many with Irma Thomas blazing her way through a soulful "Old Habits Are Hard to Break," Kenny Neal's slow-boiling "Love Like Blood," one of Hiatt's best and least-known compositions, and Kris Wiley with James Cotton taking "Wrote It Down" to New Orleans with a subtly scorching harp-driven version that doesn't let up powered by Smith's revved-up guitar, stuttering and lurching though the song. Even the less successful tracks like Tab Benoit's "Feels Like Rain" where the second line beat doesn't mesh with the song's lyrics, Patty Larkin's unspectacular "Have a Little Faith in Me" -- one of the only Hiatt pieces that has worn out its welcome -- and Cliff Eberhardt's straight-ahead reading of "Back of My Mind" aren't failures. They're just not as compelling or interesting as the rest of the covers here. Hopefully this will be the beginning of a series of like-minded interpretations of John Hiatt songs. The concept is sensible, and Hiatt's catalog, filled with dozens of unheralded tunes, is ripe for the picking. ~ Hal Horowitz
CMJ (9/11/00, p.33) - "...Rootsy, poignant blues-rock....magical...' No Depression (3-4/01, p.124) - "...The album ahs grace and polish....and is beautifully played..."
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PID # 3870603


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