Album Reviews

Chuck Mead: Close To Home

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 todayโ€™s fractured marketplace. After all, the contemporary country crowd that buys โ€œproductโ€ isnโ€™t 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 โ€œClose to Homeโ€ title tune and โ€œTap 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 Meadโ€™s palette and sound. 

On โ€œShake,โ€ he borrows a moody lick from Creedence Clearwater Revival. For โ€œThe Man Who Shook the Worldโ€ he nails a NRBQ-styled rocker, and in โ€œMy Babyโ€™s 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. Heโ€™s still got his sense of humor though as you can tell just by the title of the Chuck Berry โ€œRock and Roll Musicโ€ rip โ€œDaddy Worked the Pole.โ€ Itโ€™s the story of the singerโ€™s dad who worked on a telephone pole so his mom didnโ€™t need to work the pole in the exotic club where they met โ€ฆ until they switched supporting each other.  

Even further afield is the jittery reggae of โ€œIโ€™m Not the Man for the Job,โ€ (Mead describes it as โ€œrocksteady 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 โ€œThereโ€™s Love Where I Come From,โ€ as close to a commercial single as Mead has ever come. And the opening โ€œBig Bearโ€ rocks hard with twang guitar reverb pushed to 10. Even the pure country of โ€œBilly Doesnโ€™t Know Heโ€™s 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 heโ€™s a country guy at heart looking to expand his boundaries โ€ฆ 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, youโ€™ll end up on the dance floor.