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Still Lookin' Good to Me

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1 Disc(s)

  1. 1.

    The Train Singer's Song 5:39

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play The Train Singer's Song
  2. 2.

    Searing Wine 0:59

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play Searing Wine
  3. 3.

    Rusty Tracks 4:32

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play Rusty Tracks
  4. 4.

    Mope-A-Long Rides Again 2:57

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play Mope-A-Long Rides Again
  5. 5.

    Getting It Made 3:51

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play Getting It Made
  6. 6.

    Under the Table 2:16

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play Under the Table
  7. 7.

    Working on the Railroad 2:33

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play Working on the Railroad
  8. 8.

    Bored Lil' Devil 2:50

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play Bored Lil' Devil
  9. 9.

    The Muss of Paradise 2:25

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play The Muss of Paradise
  10. 10.

    Left Again 3:45

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play Left Again
  11. 11.

    The Moons of Impulse 2:50

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play The Moons of Impulse
  12. 12.

    Airstream [Live] 2:07

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play Airstream [Live]
  13. 13.

    My Hoo Ha 2:09

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play My Hoo Ha
  14. 14.

    Square [Live] 3:23

    Band of Blacky Ranchette

    Play Square [Live]

Description

The Band of Blacky Ranchette has released just four albums in 20 years. Not a bad average, especially if you are Howe Gelb and you've released countless other titles with your band Giant Sand and under your own name. The Band of Blacky Ranchette is a strange, lazy, hedonistic country music side project for Howe Gelb to record whatever Tucson hillbilly songs he has at the moment (no matter where they're written or taped, they all reek of Tucson) with a disparate yet jolly band of odds and sods strictly for the pleasure of recording them. While this may not seem to be the most lofty ambition for a bona fide singer/songwriter, but what the hell? It works. These 14 song all have Gelb's deep appreciation for country music at their root. How they are executed is something else again. At times, such as on "Train Singer's Song," the approach is ghostly and reverent and anchored by longtime partners drummer John Convertino and steel boss Jon Rauhouse. As on others, such as "Rusty Tracks," the song barely crawls out of its embryo and slithers along with strange vocals effects, loopy lyics that refence Captain Beefheart albums, misplaced guitar solos, and a nonexistent rhythm. "Mope-A-Long Rides Again," is a bona fide country-rock masterpiece that sounds as if it were cut after the gig, after hours, when everybody wanted to play their asses off but had only enough energy and sobriety to focus and get one solid take. With Neko Case (who guests with Richard Buckner on "Getting It Made") helping out on vocals and Joey Burns on bass, Dallas Good tracks Gelb's lyric line with tasty, sleepy lead lines that just drip beauty. On the aforementioned duet, Cuban son piano, mariachi guitar, jazzed-out funky acoustic basslines dream their way into a solid, 4/4 honky tonk tune. With Paolo Russo's bandoneon slipping underneath the piano and original Blacky drummer Tom Larkins returning for a guest spot, it's easily the most delightful thing on the record. The groove is easy but jarring in places, and altogether of apiece, despite the fact it might be two tunes jammed into one. While every cut on this set is equally sunny and peyote-drenched with humorous insanity and sheer musical brilliance, "The Muss of Paradise" features Kurt Wagner on blues vocals, turned lyric pages, and a full-on stop at a gas station with the attendant telling them to keep moving is a particularly wondrous rough diamond, as is "Airstream" with Bobby Neuwirth. But then there is the (relative) polish and sparkle of "Left Again," with its bleeding-heart pedal steel and Case buoying up Gelb's vocal as it becomes a country weeper par excellence. The down and out restless country soul of "Square" that closes the disc is graced by Burns' moving cello and Convertino whispering along his trap kit as Gelb plays some of the most achingly gorgeous guitar of his life while telling an honest and moving tale of love's woes. This is simply awesome. Let's hope that Gelb gets bitten by the Blacky bug again soon. Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Details

Description

    The Band of Blacky Ranchette has released just four albums in 20 years. Not a bad average, especially if you are Howe Gelb and you've released countless other titles with your band Giant Sand and under your own name. The Band of Blacky Ranchette is a strange, lazy, hedonistic country music side project for Howe Gelb to record whatever Tucson hillbilly songs he has at the moment (no matter where they're written or taped, they all reek of Tucson) with a disparate yet jolly band of odds and sods strictly for the pleasure of recording them. While this may not seem to be the most lofty ambition for a bona fide singer/songwriter, but what the hell? It works. These 14 song all have Gelb's deep appreciation for country music at their root. How they are executed is something else again. At times, such as on "Train Singer's Song," the approach is ghostly and reverent and anchored by longtime partners drummer John Convertino and steel boss Jon Rauhouse. As on others, such as "Rusty Tracks," the song barely crawls out of its embryo and slithers along with strange vocals effects, loopy lyics that refence Captain Beefheart albums, misplaced guitar solos, and a nonexistent rhythm. "Mope-A-Long Rides Again," is a bona fide country-rock masterpiece that sounds as if it were cut after the gig, after hours, when everybody wanted to play their asses off but had only enough energy and sobriety to focus and get one solid take. With Neko Case (who guests with Richard Buckner on "Getting It Made") helping out on vocals and Joey Burns on bass, Dallas Good tracks Gelb's lyric line with tasty, sleepy lead lines that just drip beauty. On the aforementioned duet, Cuban son piano, mariachi guitar, jazzed-out funky acoustic basslines dream their way into a solid, 4/4 honky tonk tune. With Paolo Russo's bandoneon slipping underneath the piano and original Blacky drummer Tom Larkins returning for a guest spot, it's easily the most delightful thing on the record. The groove is easy but jarring in places, and altogether of apiece, despite the fact it might be two tunes jammed into one. While every cut on this set is equally sunny and peyote-drenched with humorous insanity and sheer musical brilliance, "The Muss of Paradise" features Kurt Wagner on blues vocals, turned lyric pages, and a full-on stop at a gas station with the attendant telling them to keep moving is a particularly wondrous rough diamond, as is "Airstream" with Bobby Neuwirth. But then there is the (relative) polish and sparkle of "Left Again," with its bleeding-heart pedal steel and Case buoying up Gelb's vocal as it becomes a country weeper par excellence. The down and out restless country soul of "Square" that closes the disc is graced by Burns' moving cello and Convertino whispering along his trap kit as Gelb plays some of the most achingly gorgeous guitar of his life while telling an honest and moving tale of love's woes. This is simply awesome. Let's hope that Gelb gets bitten by the Blacky bug again soon. Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Features

  • Genre: Rock
  • Subgenre: Alternative Country, Alternative/Indie-Rock, Folk/Country Rock, Psychedelic/Garage
  • Category: Alternative Country-Rock, Country-Rock, Lo-Fi, Psychedelic
  • Release Date: October 07, 2003
  • Label: THRILL JOCKEY
  • Artist: Band of Blacky Ranchette
  • Format: CD

Additional Information

  • DPCI: 244-04-0413
  • ASIN: B002KJWEP8
  • Catalog #: 11429944
  • Item can not be gift wrapped.

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