Veteran folksinger
Bob Gibson had been a friend of
Shel Silverstein's long before he devoted an album to singing compositions by the country and novelty songwriter.
Silverstein, the author of "The Cover of Rolling Stone" and "A Boy Named Sue," supplied
Gibson with a characteristic collection of mostly comic story songs for this release. "The Man Who Turns the Damn Thing Off and On" poked fun at automation, for example, while "Golden Kiss" was the tale of a country songwriter who encounters the ultimate country music muse -- so she says, anyway -- and "Makin' a Mess of Commercial Success" was a first-person account of a beer drinker's recruitment to make a beer commercial. There was some gallows humor, too, including "Nothin's Real Anymore," a complaint about artificial substitutes of various sorts; "Killed by a Coconut" (complete with
Silverstein's own interjections); and "Still Gonna Die," which expressed skepticism about fashionable attempts to improve one's health.
Gibson's ability to render such material good-naturedly was remarkable given that he was facing death himself, already suffering from a form of Parkinson's Disease that would kill him the year after the album's release. Despite that challenge, he also brought a knowing sense to the lead-off song, "Stops Along the Way," a philosophical backward glance at life's experiences. "I Hear America Singing," which followed, was an attempted anthem on which he was joined by a chorus of longtime friends including
Tom Paxton,
Peter Yarrow, and
Oscar Brand. Like them,
Gibson was a folkie decades into his career, but the album, recorded in Nashville, was a country-oriented effort. Overall, it was a pleasant but minor effort, providing more of a light coda to
Gibson's career rather than a real conclusion, though it was his last album to be released in his lifetime. ~ William Ruhlmann