Four albums in,
Charlie Daniels -- now fronting
the Charlie Daniels Band -- finally found a way to not just synthesize his various influences, he found a way to streamline them and polish them, turning them into something proudly Southern and redneck yet commercial with
Fire on the Mountain. This means that he's toned down the wild, messy eclecticism that he displayed on his ignored debut in favor of a bluesy, jam-oriented country-rock owing a great deal to
the Allman Brothers. The change is brought into sharp relief because he revives two of the best songs from
Charlie Daniels -- the rampaging rocker "Trudy" and the sweet ballad "Georgia," both given more direct arrangements here; the originals were ragged and right, but these have more of a rock feel, even if they're not as loose as those on the debut. And that pretty much sums up the difference with
Fire on the Mountain -- here,
Charlie Daniels and his band have fused their Southern-fried country to a rollicking, jam-intensive blues-rock, where it plays like rock but feels like redneck country. It's a rather brilliant move, because it's every bit as jam-oriented as Capricorn bands like
the Alllmans or
the Marshall Tucker Band (the latter are thanked in the liner notes, while
Dickey Betts of the former cameos on this record), but
the CDB have yet to give themselves over to playing for the sake of playing (which they soon would with
Saddle Tramp). Instead, they focus that energy into the songs, which are all top-notch, and the result is probably the best balance of songs and performances that
the Charlie Daniels Band ever did. They would wander into longer jams and
Daniels would become unapologetically redneck later, but here the mix is just right, which is why this is the quintessential
Charlie Daniels Band album. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine