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Chulahoma: The Songs of Junior Kimbrough
Barnes and Noble
Chulahoma: The Songs of Junior Kimbrough
Current price: $9.99
Barnes and Noble
Chulahoma: The Songs of Junior Kimbrough
Current price: $9.99
Size: CD
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is a stopgap EP from
, a collection of six covers of songs by cult bluesman
, whose
they covered on their 2002 debut,
. Considering that this is the first time the
guitar-n-drums duo has devoted an album to nothing but straight-ahead
songs, it wound seem logical that
would be the bluesiest recording in their catalog, but
aren't that simple. The six songs on this 28-minute EP are hardly replications of
's gritty originals, nor do they have the dirty, punch-to-the-gut feel of any of the duo's three proper albums. Instead, this is the weirdest set of music the band has done to date, a trippy, murky excursion into territory that floats somewhere between the primal urgency of the duo's best work and the dark, moody psychedelia of late-'60s
. Take
-- its winding, narcotic
groove settles into a bed of droning organ and bongos, but the interplay between guitarist/vocalist
and drummer
prevents it from sounding as affected as psychedelia, while infusing it with a real sense of danger. That unsettling undercurrent flows throughout this brief EP, and it makes
an album that's ideal for pitch-black nights, where the music can worm its way into your imagination and then run wild. That alone would make it a unique, noteworthy detour for
, but when this is compared to
's original recordings, it becomes an instructive listen since a side-by-side listen reveals how
drew inspiration from
's stripped-down, idiosyncratic grooves and took it into some place entirely different. And while that might mean that
doesn't necessarily sound like a kissing cousin to
's originals, it does make it a greater, richer tribute than most cover albums, and it certainly proves that
's testimonial in the liner notes about how
changed his life is no lie. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine