JOHNNY
DOWD
Johnny Dowd is an American original: His is a singular musical vision
distilled from the raw detritus of primal rock and roll, free jazz,
swamp blues and greasy funk, all anchored by a voice channeling Johnny
Cash through Chet Baker.
Cruel Words, Johnny Dowd’s sixth album and second for
Bongo Beat, follows a trajectory set in motion by the self-released
Wrong Side of Memphis in 1998. Johnny was 50 years old at the time,
working at Zolar Moving Company in Ithaca, N.Y. by day and recording
in their offices by night (it’s ok, he’s one of the owners)
— a pattern that hasn’t changed much over the years except
for Cruel Words, which was recorded at Ithaca’s Pyramid Sound
with longtime friend and engineer Alex Perialas.
It’s no surprise that Europeans were the first to embrace him.
Here was a fully formed character who’d emerged from nowhere,
a guitar-toting white-haired James Dean flashing a sly grin as he
casually hand-rolled a cigarette during the course of a song. Born
in Ft. Worth, Texas, Johnny spent his childhood in Pauls Valley, Oklahoma.
“This is where my musical education took place. I had a pair
of pointy shoes and a red shirt that I wore when I pretended to be
James Brown.” After his parents divorced, the family moved to
Memphis, where Johnny got his first guitar.
Dowd’s musical canon cuts a wide swath across the fringes of
American music, twisting and prodding each form into something it
shouldn’t be: country funneled through free jazz, an Okie drawl
crooning over swamp psychedelia. It all becomes a little clearer when
you’re told that his two favorite records as a kid were James
Brown’s Live at The Apollo and Hank Williams as
Luke the Drifter, a yin-yang template that frames the Johnny
Dowd songbook.
Cruel Words raises the stakes considerably. The core trio of Dowd
(guitar, vocals), Brian Wilson (drums, bass pedals) and Mike Stark
(keyboards) is joined by Mekons’ Sally Timms and Jon Langford
on the standout “Drunk.” The album also marks the return
of longtime Dowd back-up vocalist Kim Sherwood-Caso to the fold.
There’s an almost Kerouac sense of naive wonderment as Johnny
chronicles the desperate measures of the marginalized characters in
these songs, displaying a Brothers-Grimm view of the forces conspiring
against them (sometimes with their own complicity). “You’re
not the father of the child that I carry,” taunts the title
character of “Unwed Mother,” while the wheelchair-bound
war vet of “Praise God” questions the price paid for loyalty.
Longtime live-set closer “Johnny B. Goode” reprises that
role here with the same jarring effect: when did THIS song become
so threatening?
Released in Europe in February 2006, Cruel Words arrives
on our shores with 4-and 5-star reviews from every influential UK
publication, including Mojo (4 Stars, “as much jazz
as roots music, as much poetry as rock”); Maverick
(5 Stars, “Johnny Dowd is a law unto himself”); Classic
Rock (8 stars, “the songs are quirky but they rock”);
Time Out London (5 Stars, “Gothic Folk Funk”);
Daily Mirror (4 Stars, “wit and wisdom to match even
the late great Warren Zevon”); and The Independent (5
Stars, “may be the greatest album of his career”).
Following a very successful European tour, Johnny is set to swing
through the US and Canada starting in late July. The records can only
prepare you so much for the live experience: Johnny’s ramshackle
music-stand tottering under the weight of his lyric book, the dry-wit
delivery of between-song vignettes and a casualness reminiscent of
Dean Martin (believe it or not). But don’t be fooled, there
is more craft going on than Johnny lets on (for example, he’s
a stunning guitar player no matter how casually he may downplay it).
“This was an easy record to make,” says Johnny. “We
had been playing the songs live for almost a year, so our plan was
to go into the studio, cut the songs live with a minimum of overdubs
or other studio trickery.”
Recently Johnny’s riveting performance in the British documentary,
Searching For The Wrong Eyed Jesus (hosted, starring, and inspired
by Jim White) has gotten him considerable attention and led to forming
a group with drummer Brian Wilson and Jim White called Hellwood
(Europe only album and tour to follow later this year).
Cruel Words is a career-defining work — the quintessential
distillation of Johnny Dowd’s America, a guided tour into the
dark heartland of all that is uncomfortably familiar.
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