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Randy Thompson - "Further On" CD Review
FURTHER ON CD Review by Preshias If they hadnât already created the description âAmericana,â they would have had to come up with it for Randy Thompsonâs songs. Sure theyâre kinda Country. But then thereâs that Rockabilly beat (complete with echo) on tracks like the lead off song âDonât You See.â And then you move on and hear the mandolin pickinâ from Rickie Simpkins (late of bands with Emmylou Harris and Randy Scruggs) that gives you a definite whiff of Appalachian air. But wait! That sure sounds like a traditional folk song. Then you catch that bluesy slide guitar from Randyâs son Colin. He is incredible! So we mix it all up and call it Americana, and thatâs fine if programmers would just figure out a way to give airplay to songs that they consign to that genre. If you restrict your musical listening to broadcast radio, you are likely to miss out on a lot of great music, and that would probably include most if not all of this CD which is the third album from this unique and talented artist. Numerous standout tracks on this CD, including a raucous rendition of the folkiesâ favorite train wreck song, âOlâ 97,â with a slamminâ guitar and a lightning-fast fiddle intro worthy of Charlie Danielsâ devil going down to Georgia. Whew ! The introspective âRiptideâ allows Thompson to slow things down with a sparsely-backed acoustic guitar. âNow youâre caught in a riptide pulling out to sea / Being pulled under by the very thing you need / And itâs all you can do to keep your head up high / Mmmm⊠caught in a riptide.â He reminds us that we shouldnât fall faster than our angels can fly. Heâs soon back uptempo, however, with a knee-slappinâ farmer boy song, âGoinâ Down to Lynchburgâ that has him vowing to go downtown to carry his tobacco âthough the âbacco manâs sellinâ high and no oneâs buyinâ. Wailing guitar breaks and an insistent backbeat lift the tale of a hard country life into an anthem about moving up and moving on. âLeave the Light Onâ even has echoes of Bruce Springsteen in Thompsonâs wistful song to his sleeping woman as he comes home at three a.m. to a quiet house. âHold me close and get my jokes,â he pleads. âSmile at me like a girl from long ago.â (Tell us whatcha really thinkinâ there Randy). The title track (and the closing track on the album) is based on a poem written by Thompsonâs grandfather, Wesley Sober. âIt was found on an old yellowed piece of paper after he died,â said Thompson. âHe must have written it in the 1920âs or 1930âs. I just put the melody to it.â Randy Thompsonâs powerful vocals backed by some of the best musicians in the business make this a slice of Americana worth adding to your collection, even if â like most people â you canât really define what Americana is. This boyâs gonna show you!
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