MARK LEMHOUSE

 
By Ted Drozdowski  |  December 29, 2005
3.0 3.0 Stars
AMERICANA Mark Lemhouse sandwiches country, blues, bluegrass, and rock and roll.Lemhouse transitions from solo blues-based songwriter to eclectic Americana explorer with his second album, sandwiching country, blues, bluegrass, and rock and roll into his intensely rhythmic electric/acoustic combo arrangements. It’s a shift that seems as natural for him as his 1997 relocation from his native Salem (Oregon) to Memphis, where his subtle drawl and equally easeful command of Delta-fueled slide guitar make him seem more of a resident than most natives. His lyrics are evocative of back-country terrain, full of stories of lost love and tortured souls — the kind of men who need to set a razor on the nightstand to keep the Devil at bay (to paraphrase “Scarlet”). But he’s got a great sense of humor, too. “You’re a Bastard” is a belligerent drunk’s manifesto; “The Unofficial Ballad of Story Musgrave” is a tongue-in-cheek interior dialogue about the 16-year wait the astronaut endures before flying his first space-shuttle mission, piqued by jealousy when he’s beaten into infinity and beyond by a chimp. Lemhouse does return to his solo roots with the banjo-and-voice hardscrabble tale “Never Me,” but it sounds more like a refugee from an Otis Taylor album than one of his own edgy stories, which, like his North Mississippi reworking of the traditional “Cluck Old Hen,” shake the house with juke-joint thunder, or blow gently as a hot breeze off the Mississippi.
  Topics: CD Reviews , Entertainment, Music, Music Reviews,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY TED DROZDOWSKI
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   TOM HAMBRIDGE | BOOM!  |  August 23, 2011
    Roots rock is the new country and ex-Bostonian Tom Hambridge is the style's current MPV.
  •   COUNTRY STRONG | SOUNDTRACK  |  January 11, 2011
    This steaming pile of songs is emblematic of the state of mainstream country music — all artifice, no heart, calculated anthems written to formula and meant, like the film itself, to do no more than capitalize on the genre's current success and rob its undiscriminating fans.
  •   MARC RIBOT | SILENT MOVIES  |  November 02, 2010
    This exceptional, eccentric guitarist has traced a slow evolution from screamer to dreamer.
  •   IN MEMORIAM: SOLOMON BURKE, 1940 — 2010  |  October 11, 2010
  •   REVIEW: RONNIE EARL AND THE BROADCASTERS | SPREAD THE LOVE  |  September 07, 2010
    Boston-based blues-guitar virtuoso Ronnie Earl seems to be considering his past on his 23rd album as a leader.

 See all articles by: Ted Drozdowski