Jesse Winchester regularly took two years between record releases, but he brought in his fifth album,
Nothing But a Breeze, a mere nine months after its predecessor,
Let the Rough Side Drag. The impetus for such speed seems to have been the potential commercial bonanza to be gained by
Winchester's first U.S. appearances since he moved to Canada to avoid the draft in 1967, due to President Jimmy Carter's amnesty program.
Winchester also used a real producer,
Brian Ahern (known for his work with
Emmylou Harris), for the first time, and augmented his usual backup band with session stars such as
Ricky Skaggs and
James Burton, plus supporting vocalists like
Harris and
Anne Murray. The result was an
Ahern-style country-pop album, but, perhaps predictably, a rather light effort for
Winchester, who performed three covers among the ten tracks and included among the originals such comic trifles as "Twigs and Seeds" and "Rhumba Man." The title track, which became his first singles-chart entry, and "My Songbird," which
Harris later covered, were effective songs.
Nothing But a Breeze enjoyed a media buzz and became
Winchester's highest-charting album (which isn't saying much). ~ William Ruhlmann