Athens Flagpole, Tishamingo
Debut Album Review
01-22-2003
Were
one to approach Tishamingo's self-titled debut with
some trepidation, well... that would be understandable.
The local quartet's been described more than once as
"blues-based Southern rock," and more often
than not that tag is just a way to say a band does little
more than lash together a half-dozen hoary blues licks
and clichéd "My woman done left me"
lyrics. The state of modern blues and anything that
calls itself Southern rock is pretty goddamn dull these
days, and with the exception of Gov't. Mule or the North
Mississippi Allstars, a wade through such music would
scarcely get your feet wet.
That being said, my children, feel
free to dive headfirst into Tishamingo and ol' Scratch
take the hindmost. Recorded with the able help of
John Keane, the foursome brew up a potent mix of solid
rock and roll with a decidedly swampy Southern tinge,
clever lyrics and blistering guitar.
Like the all-mighty Mule on its best
nights, Tishamingo doesn't jam. No, no, not by a long
shot. The band's grooves are tight yet airy, and any
instrumental extrapolation is well-crafted by guitarists
Cameron Williams and Jess Franklin. The pair also
handle the vocal chores and both posses smoky, soulful
pipes that'd do Greg Allman proud. The powerhouse
rhythm section of Stephen Spivey on bass and Richard
Proctor on drums is potent and forceful, shedding
any thought of disconnected funk for a solid foundation
not heard in these parts for way too long. Keane pops
up here and there on various stringed instruments,
and Athens' own boogie woogie king Jason Fuller adds
his considerable talents on keyboards and organ.
While the main thrust of Tishamingo
is the aforementioned blues-rock - and a very fine
example of which kicks the doors down on the opening
"Whiskey State Of Mind" - the band stretches
out a bit, from the slow, sultry "Pete's Lament,"
the country-esque "Little Red" and the bouncing
"Turry & The Tellico Millitia." The
band closes the album with a Lantino-tinged one-two
punch of "El Perro Frio" and "Last
Ride," clocking the whole affair in just under
an hour of some of the most engaging blues-based rock
since Widespread first panicked. Take a swim, kids,
the water's plenty warm.
By Matt Thompson, ATHENS
FLAGPOLE
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