Dislocation Blues EXPLICIT LYRICS Chris Whitley

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CD

  • Release Date: 04/03/2007
  • Sales Rank: 62,131
  • Label: ROUNDER / UMGD
  • UPC: 011661219120
 
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  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Recorded in April of 2005, seven months before Chris Whitley's death from lung cancer, Dislocation Blues is a fine, perhaps even glorious, epitaph. Aussie blues guitarist Jeff Lang and Whitley, friends since the mid-'90s, hooked up as part of an Australian tour and took a couple of weeks to record these 14 songs (the final two, Robert Johnson's "Hellhound on My Trail" and Whitley's "Kick the Stones," are uncredited) with the rhythm section of Grant Cummerford and Ashley Davies. This collection of traditional blues tunes such as "Stagger Lee," covers of Bob Dylan's "When I Paint My Masterpiece" and "Changing of the Guard," and originals from the catalogs of both men is an intimate, loose, deeply intuitive, and complementary set. Whitley plays his trademark National Steel for a good portion of this (all but one cut, actually), while Lang plays National, amplified lap steel, and electric and acoustic guitars, while the rhythm section -- using a trap kit and upright and bowed bass -- burrows deep into the spaces these songs inhabit. Whitley's tunes such as "Velocity Girl," "Rocket House," and "Dislocation Blues" resonate more truthfully in this environment -- much as they did in his last few years playing live -- than they did on his earlier studio recordings. There is an aesthetic here, one that treats everything, whether it's Lang's beautiful ballad "Ravenswood" or Whitley's "Motion Bride," as blues. The latter features Lang on a fretless banjo à la Dock Boggs. Even "When I Paint My Masterpiece" is radically reinterpreted here -- much as Dylan might do himself on-stage on any given night -- and drenched in that sleepy narcotic cough-syrup blues played by latter-day Mississippi Delta dwellers such as Junior Kimbrough and David Malone. This is country music, taken from the extremes of Whitley's native Texas and Lang's wild and woolly Australia. "Changing of the Guard" is a different song entirely -- slow, purposeful, almost a hymn of a country gospel tune. If Dylan cares, he's gotta be proud about turning this barn-burning apocalyptic surreal poem into a forbidding love song. The two uncredited tunes show up in one selection, and the pair brilliantly morph "Hellhound" into the Whitley tune, taking it out on an eerie whisper, full of darkness and shadow -- much like death. This one is for the Whitley fans who dug War Crime Blues or Soft Dangerous Shores. Lang, of all the people Whitley played and recorded with, proved to be the most symbiotic of all. This is a collaboration in every sense of the word, but Whitley's silent but towering figure looms large. One can only hope that, at least posthumously, Whitley will get his due as a great American songwriter, storyteller, and bluesman -- not to mention an original guitarist. Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

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Dislocation Bluesby Anonymous

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May 02, 2007: Playing Time – 62:52 -- Chris Whitley is no longer with us, and before his untimely passing from lung cancer in November 2005 he suggested that the title of this album be “Road Dog Shall Inherit the Earth.” Chris and Jeff met in 1993 when Chris first toured Australia. When Chris returned in April 2005, this album was born in Melbourne. Whitley’s swagger coupled with Lang’s reedy tenor combine for a sensitive and inspired set. Their instrumental flavorings are rawboned with songs featuring National guitars, acoustic or electric guitar, lap steel, and fretless banjo. Nine of the twelve tracks are a little more raucous with a solid rhythm section with Grant Cummerford’s bass and Ashley Davies’ drums. "Underground" incorporates punk-folk elements of the Poques and Ramones. The duo delivers a spare set of raw bluesy tunes. Two months after recording “Dislocation Blues,” Whitley was back in the studio recording “Reiter In” with The Bastard Club. In these albums produced during the last year of his life, he was singing with shortened breath and abbreviated lyrical phrasing. However, his haunting vocal interpretations are full of unique fiber and flair. “Dislocation Blues” fulfilled their passion and dreams for an intuitive and playful collaboration of two “road dogs” out to get their groove on. Lang’s pathos in “Ravenswood” could very well carry a subconscious message in tribute to his friend Chris Whitley – “I knelt before him now, his song is sung, now his song is sung, we’re just another town, no point slowing down.” Lyrics for the originals are included in the CD jacket. In the bonus track (Robert Johnson’s “Hellhound On My Trail”), Whitley’s parting voice, resonant yet scarred by time, indicates he kept on moving and was defiant to the bitter end, and Jeff Lang joins in and promises to keep the blues fallin’ down like hail. (Joe Ross)