Tom Russell is perhaps the only living American songwriter who could get away with describing his album as "
Jack Kerouac meets
Johnny Cash...in Bakersfield." It may read like conceit, but his work over the last 45 years has earned him that claim.
Russell is a renaissance man: He writes songs that have been covered by
Cash,
Ian Tyson,
Doug Sahm,
Iris DeMent, and more; he is also a fine painter, poet, essayist, and author. For over five decades his work has documented an all-but-forgotten North America -- from Mexico to the Northwest Territories -- through cultural and historical human archetypes, landscapes, events, and roads. The title derives from a long, rambling prose entry by
Jack Kerouac that appeared in the Evergreen Review in 1957 recounting his experiences as a "student brakeman" on the Southern Pacific Railroad. It's fitting; these songs are rooted in endless travel, loneliness, strange encounters, tragedy, and the lives of hard-bitten, eternally restless angels. Assisting
Russell are former
Commander Cody guitar hero
Bill Kirchen, singer and songwriter
Eliza Gilkyson, pedal steel boss
Marty Muse, drummer Rick Richards, and
Los Texmaniacs'
Josh and
Max Baca. This 11-song set is steeped in country, rockabilly, and folk. No matter how these songs are arranged, they all tell stories rooted in life experiences -- some his own. "Small Engine Repair" illustrates what
Russell does best: It charts the life of the anonymous working man, encompasses his sense of purpose, his defeats, and his willingness to continue even when hope is stacked against him. The whining pedal steel hovers above balanced acoustic and electric guitars with Richards' insistent snare framing it all, as his resonant baritone embodies the life of his subject. "Isadore Gonzalez" is a corrido about a Mexican cowboy who died performing in Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show and lies buried in England. It's an ironic allegory about fame. The dignity with which he imbues his subject is revelatory. The honky tonk ballad "Red Oak, Texas" is about twins who served in the Middle East and came back broken. Using Robert Graves' WWI poetry as a metonymic device, he draws a fitting parallel. The duet between
Russell and
Gilkyson on "Back Streets of Love" is arresting in its sparse arrangement and wistful beauty. Few songwriters capture the desperation of romance and loneliness like this. The rocking Americana of "Hand-Raised Wolverines" is an allegory about the pace of modern life that leaves no recourse for depth and substance. "When the Road Gets Rough" is a roots rocker co-written with his wife Nadine. The narrative recounts strangeness, frustrations, and small victories while the pair are stuck on the highway. He closes with a fine, rocking rendition of
Cash's "Wreck of the Old 97" with
Kirchen and
Muse on stun. After dozens of records, it's impossible to rank this in
Russell's catalog because the vast majority of his albums -- this one included -- are prized treasures in the wandering American songman tradition. ~ Thom Jurek