
Chuck Mead
Close To Home
(Plowboy)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
There are precious few artists keeping the sound of classic honky tonk alive in todayโs fractured marketplace. After all, the contemporary country crowd that buys โproductโ isnโt particularly interested in the old school music of Johnny Horton that Chuck Mead loves. But as the co-founder of BR5-49 with whom he released seven albums, and as a solo artist with three previous deep C&W roots discs to his name, you can depend on Mead to keep the honky-tonking fires alive and burning.
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Along comes producer/engineer Matt Ross-Spang. In conjunction with Mead, they decide to change the blueprint for solo release number four (and his first in five years). While pure honky-tonk is still very much on display in tracks such as the โClose to Homeโ title tune and โTap Into Your Misery,โ Spang moves Mead to record in Sam Phillipsโ Memphis studio. This adds a layer of dusky swamp, blues and rockabilly to the country proceedings, expanding Meadโs palette and sound.
On โShake,โ he borrows a moody lick from Creedence Clearwater Revival. For โThe Man Who Shook the Worldโ he nails a NRBQ-styled rocker, and in โMy Babyโs Holding It Down,โ Mead taps into a sharp balance between pop and Americana in a slow-burn rocker with a bit of an old Eagles vibe. Heโs still got his sense of humor though as you can tell just by the title of the Chuck Berry โRock and Roll Musicโ rip โDaddy Worked the Pole.โ Itโs the story of the singerโs dad who worked on a telephone pole so his mom didnโt need to work the pole in the exotic club where they met โฆ until they switched supporting each other.
Even further afield is the jittery reggae of โIโm Not the Man for the Job,โ (Mead describes it as โrocksteady from San Antonioโ) which adds pedal steel to its Jamaican rhythm for a unique juxtaposition which seems odd on paper but works well in execution. He goes countrypolitan too on the sweet Glen Campbell-influenced โThereโs Love Where I Come From,โ as close to a commercial single as Mead has ever come. And the opening โBig Bearโ rocks hard with twang guitar reverb pushed to 10. Even the pure country of โBilly Doesnโt Know Heโs Badโ has a weird lyrical twist that shows sympathy for an outlaw with mental problems.
Diverse? You bet, but Mead holds it together with his twangy, cool voice and a sense of roots that conveys heโs a country guy at heart looking to expand his boundaries โฆ but not too far. The disc is like the best jukebox you ever heard in a sleazy, punky country bar, perhaps like the broken down Seeburg pictured on the back sleeve. Plunk down your quarter and wherever the needle falls, youโll end up on the dance floor.
