Country singer
Bob Wayne's Century Media debut (and fourth solo album overall) will undoubtedly leave the metalheads who comprise 99 percent of that label's consumer base scratching their heads, but the singer's roots in the heavy metal community and subsequent collaboration with
Hank Williams III are both rather legit bona fides in his favor. Make no mistake, though, the contents of
Outlaw Carnie are 100 percent banjo-picking, fiddle-sawing, boot-stomping, leg-slapping, gun-toting, wife-beating country music (unless you think a little cussing and taking the lord's name in vain now and then automatically disqualifies it as such), and a lot of it actually consists of manic, "Devil Went Down to Georgia"-styled barnburners (see "Road Bound," "Mack," etc.). They ain't very original, but they sure have spunk, and
Bob does ease off the accelerator a few songs in to allow his sordid yarns filled with colorful characters to stand out, front and center -- but the mixture of excesses and clichés abused throughout occasionally feels rather forced, or worse, like a parody of the entire country genre. Not helping
Bob's candidacy to receive the key to the city of Nashville is the song "Ghost Town," which commits some sort of sacrilege by involving the ghost of
Johnny Cash in its story line, and is then followed by the morose "Reptile," where
Bob just flat-out impersonates
the Man in Black's every baritone drawl. But it's probably the barely disguised
Pantera tribute, "Driven by Demons," that confirms this record's function as a country album for open-minded metalheads, more so than a country record for broad-minded country music fans (and is there really such a thing, anyway? Just kidding). That's not so say
Outlaw Carnie isn't entertaining at times, because it sure as hell is, but the album leaves little doubt as to why
Wayne eventually found himself signed to a heavy metal label. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia