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Country Funk III: 1975-1982
Barnes and Noble
Country Funk III: 1975-1982
Current price: $19.99


Barnes and Noble
Country Funk III: 1975-1982
Current price: $19.99
Size: CD
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Conventional wisdom has it that there's a sharp divide between white and Black culture in the American South, but music fans know that ain't necessarily so. Country and rhythm & blues are both steeped in similar blues and gospel traditions, and not only did a lot of country folks like to dance to a funky jam every once in a while, a lot of the same Southern studio cats played on both kinds of records.
Zach Cowie
,
Patrick McCarthy
and
Matt Sullivan
gave the place on the Venn diagram where the two styles overlapped a name with 2012's
Country Funk: 1969-1975
, a fine compilation they curated for
Light in the Attic Records
. Seven years after a second volume appeared,
LITA
has brought us
Country Funk: 1975-1982, Vol. 3
, with
Jason Morgan
drawing up the track list. This volume digs deep enough into the 1970s that disco rather than funk is the real calling card of many of these tunes, but thankfully most have a deep groove that's not as stiff and an easier hip-shake than most production-line disco of the era. The easygoing sway of "Shake the Dust" by
Steven Soles
, the cool but emphatic seduction of "One and Only One" by
Eddie Rabbit
, and the party-hearty mood of "I Got the Fever" by
Ron Galbraith
certainly put them ahead of most of what passed for mainstream dance music in that era. Elsewhere,
Dolly Parton
is looking for good times on "Sure Thing,"
Billy Swan
has a truly superior alien abduction story on "Oliver Swan,"
Conway Twitty
reaffirms his status as Nashville's leading love man on "Night Fires," and
Jerry Reed
reliably delivers swampy rhythms and funny lyrics on "Rhythm & Blues." The fact
Delbert McClinton
J.J. Cale
, and
Tony Joe White
are all represented with superior cuts should surprise no one (
White
's is even previously unreleased), but the relatively unsung
Terri Gibbs
delivers a stunner with "Rich Man," a more cynical sibling to
Bobbie Gentry
's "Fancy," and if
Ronnie Milsap
's "Get It Up" can't fill up your dance floor, your guests have fallen asleep.
is less revelatory than the original, since
's crate diggers thoroughly established that this oft-ignored crossover exists, but if you want to check out what happens when Nashville and Memphis decide to get together to have some fun, this album will send you to the land of the twangy good groove. ~ Mark Deming
Zach Cowie
,
Patrick McCarthy
and
Matt Sullivan
gave the place on the Venn diagram where the two styles overlapped a name with 2012's
Country Funk: 1969-1975
, a fine compilation they curated for
Light in the Attic Records
. Seven years after a second volume appeared,
LITA
has brought us
Country Funk: 1975-1982, Vol. 3
, with
Jason Morgan
drawing up the track list. This volume digs deep enough into the 1970s that disco rather than funk is the real calling card of many of these tunes, but thankfully most have a deep groove that's not as stiff and an easier hip-shake than most production-line disco of the era. The easygoing sway of "Shake the Dust" by
Steven Soles
, the cool but emphatic seduction of "One and Only One" by
Eddie Rabbit
, and the party-hearty mood of "I Got the Fever" by
Ron Galbraith
certainly put them ahead of most of what passed for mainstream dance music in that era. Elsewhere,
Dolly Parton
is looking for good times on "Sure Thing,"
Billy Swan
has a truly superior alien abduction story on "Oliver Swan,"
Conway Twitty
reaffirms his status as Nashville's leading love man on "Night Fires," and
Jerry Reed
reliably delivers swampy rhythms and funny lyrics on "Rhythm & Blues." The fact
Delbert McClinton
J.J. Cale
, and
Tony Joe White
are all represented with superior cuts should surprise no one (
White
's is even previously unreleased), but the relatively unsung
Terri Gibbs
delivers a stunner with "Rich Man," a more cynical sibling to
Bobbie Gentry
's "Fancy," and if
Ronnie Milsap
's "Get It Up" can't fill up your dance floor, your guests have fallen asleep.
is less revelatory than the original, since
's crate diggers thoroughly established that this oft-ignored crossover exists, but if you want to check out what happens when Nashville and Memphis decide to get together to have some fun, this album will send you to the land of the twangy good groove. ~ Mark Deming