LEVON HELM

ELECTRIC DIRT

2009-06-19

After hitting a home run with his 2007 release, Dirt Farmer, Levon Helm returns with Electric Dirt. Featuring a cast of musicians that has a wide and deep background in roots music of all forms and tracks written or popularized by the likes of the Grateful Dead, Pops Staples, The Carter Brothers, Nina Simone, Ollabelle, Muddy Waters and Randy Newman, Helm has crafted a disc that is loose, organic and a solid delight from beginning to end. As always, tying all of the pieces together are the rough, gruff vocals that Rolling Stone Magazine has ranked in the top 100 of all time. With the ravages of time and throat cancer seemingly held in abeyance Helm gives a boisterous reading to Muddy’s "Stuff You Gotta Watch", goes deep into the delta for the field holler groove of Staple’s "Move Along Train", duplicates the good time vibe of the Band on "I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free" and rocks out on guitarist Larry Campbell’s "When I Go Away". While there are contemporary flourishes and horns on many of the tracks that distinguish this disc from the stripped down folk of Dirt Farmer, Helms seldom veers too far from his past. On "Golden Bird" and "White Dove", Helm and crew move deep into Appalachia with dulcimers, fiddles and acoustic guitars providing the backdrop to odes about hard times and simple pleasures. Given his roots in rural Arkansas and long tutelage in folk and blues music Helm is able to perform these numbers with an authenticity that lays waste to the efforts of modern roots pretenders. Electric Dirt gets beneath your nails and won’t scrub out with a simple washing. Smitty Kingfish- “Shitkickers”, “Ass”

More reviews tagged #Folk

  • reviewed 10/2006

    Jess Klein
    City Garden

  • reviewed 11/2016

    The Shacks
    The Shacks EP

  • reviewed 09/2010

    DARDEN SMITH
    Marathon

  • reviewed 08/2011

    SLAID CLEAVES
    SORROW & SMOKE LIVE AT THE HORSESHOE LOUNGE

  • reviewed 08/2004

    The Avett Brothers
    Mignonette

  • reviewed 06/2010

    GRIFFIN HOUSE
    The Learner

Compiled by the WYCE Journalism Club

The opinions expressed in these reviews are those of the individual volunteers that submitted the article and do not necessarily reflect the views of WYCE or GRCMC; nor its staff, donors, or affiliates.