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Well After Awhile

Shinyribs

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Album Review

Kevin "Shinyribs" Russell made his name in the roots rock and Americana scene as the lead singer, main songwriter, and accomplished multi-instrumentalist in the Gourds, one of Austin's most popular and unpredictable bands. Their albums range from bluegrass to hardcore honky tonk, with side trips to the swamps of Louisiana and the acid-drenched highlands of psychedelia. The ever-prolific Russell started performing as Shinyribs in 2006, in an attempt to showcase the tunes he was writing that didn't fit into the Gourds' format, as unlikely as that may sound. On his solo debut, he's backed by some of Austin's best musical mavericks, and turns in another unclassifiable romp full of his enigmatic word play and powerful, countrified vocal style. Folk-rock with a taste of R&B informs "Who Built the Moon," a slow-grooving tune with a poetic lyric that imagines the origins of the moon. "Poor People's Store" has a jug band feel with acoustic guitar, shoe box percussion, standup bass, and a ragtime beat. Shinyribs sings about all the nifty deals you can pick up on the cheap, including socks with flames, some pills for yer pain, and a fish that sings "Take Me to the River." "Country Cool" is an old-fashioned honky tonk tune that salutes the joys of organic farming and drinking beer with a solid backbeat, wailing harmonica, and icy pedal steel. The apocalyptic "(If You Need The) 442" is a rocker has a hint of early Motown with a crackling electric guitar and rollicking barrelhouse piano. "Morning's Night" is a funky Southern rocker with more than a hint of progressive psychedelia in its wide-open sound. An extended outro features huge clanging guitars soaring from speaker to speaker to produce a lonesome, desolate aura. Shinyribs closes the set with a soulful, bare-bones cover of Sam Cooke's "Change Is Gonna Come," with just Shinyribs on ukulele and vocals that show off the high range of his expressive tenor. ~ j. poet, Rovi

Customer Reviews

Good music is good music.

I have seen these guys 3 times in the sweet city of Austin and it just gets better. The live shows will blow yer hat in the creek. You got a fan. Later, I'm just headin' to the poor peoples store.... Need just a few goods....mascara and what not...

Gourds’ lead vocalist sings country-soul

Kevin “Shinyribs” Russell has taken a break from his front-line duties with the Gourds to record his first solo album. The voice and obtuse lyrics will be familiar to fans, but the sound isn’t as driving or rough as the Gourds’ records, sitting instead in a deep country-soul groove that sports unusual production touches around the edges. The second-line rhythms that pop-up with the Gourds are still here, but relaxed from a march to a stroll, and electric piano is dominant on many tracks. Russell sings with the sort of choked vocals made famous by Boz Scaggs, and though this music is lighter with its blues, the vibe may remind you (those few of you who are remindable) of ‘70s concert stalwarts the Climax Blues Band. The album opens with a lunar creation myth that manages to evoke both ancient times and space-age travel, and “Country Cool” essays Russell’s easy-going, unpretentious tastes. There’s a fever to “(If You Need the) 442,” though it’s not exactly clear what the testimony is about, and the unusual selection of goods at the “Poor People’s Store” will be familiar to those who know their city’s thrift store treasures. The band turns funky for “East TX Rust,” bringing to mind Dr. John’s Gumbo and Swamp Dogg’s Cuffed, Collared and Tagged. It’s a shame Russell didn’t cover “Sam Stone,” though he does close with a wailing solo version Sam Cooke’s “Change is Gonna Come,” and it’s a treat to finally hear him sing a straightforward lyric. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

Well After Awhile, Shinyribs
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Customer Ratings

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