Reggie is a
ninja.
That was my
first thought upon listening to his new release, No Country For Old
Musicians. That was what I tweeted, and that will be the thesis statement
around which this review is built.
A review
does seem in order. I already did a general review in April, and I will see the
concert, which should lead to a concert review, in February, so it could be
overkill. However, the April review has been getting page hits lately, which I
suspect is because of the new release, so there is interest. Also, I want to
talk about it. I did the Kickstarter; I am invested in this!
So the
first ninja thing about Reggie is something that I have kind of hit on before,
in that while on the surface things are very silly, there is serious talent and
skill and effort beneath. Because of this, he can catch you off guard. Yes,
this is one musician (James Dewees) with a lot of friends playing around and
having fun, which is great, but that is not all it is.
What this
leads to is that maybe you are smiling and having a good time, and there is
nothing wrong with that, but then you find yourself later singing about wizards
throwing apples at you, without having expected that result.
Again, I am
familiar with his work; I should know that it goes like that, but first you
hear the song on one level, and then it hits you later - that is a perfect Run
DMC beat; that was some pretty righteous shredding there, and those keyboards!
It was
actually more impressive having followed along with the Kickstarter, because
there were lots demos and previews, and yet with as much as was familiar, it
still sounded so different. I remember the demo for "Sundae, Booty
Sundae", but then hearing the polishing and refining that goes into it
casts a new light on everything. It makes me appreciate the studio process
more, and the process of moving from the conception of a song to the final
presentation of a song more, but also there is Robo-Fonzie, and wondering what
would happen if he met Henry Winkler.
There are
those things sneaking up on you, but there is another stealth level as well,
which is that there always seems to be something that packs an emotional punch
as well. And sure, you would expect it to be "Disregard", because the
title totally implies that it could go that way, and it has those haunting
melodies. But no, the one that caught me, completely off guard, was "Kanji
Tattoos...Still in Style???". It went right to my heart, and I did not
know what hit me.
So you may
think that when James Dewees is in black it is because of his musical roots, or
practical considerations like how it is slimming and hides dirt, but maybe he's
just a ninja.
No
Country For Old Musicians is available through the usual spots, like Amazon and iTunes. Also, you
can find tour dates at http://reggie.frontgatetickets.com/.
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