Recorded and released in 2003, the "Year of the Blues,"
Chris Thomas King's
The Roots is a tribute album of originals and covers celebrating
Leadbelly,
Skip James,
Blind Willie Johnson,
Tommy Johnson,
Son House, and
Robert Johnson. With
King leaving his hip-hop blues visions in the laboratory, this is a tried and true recording of traditional blues music played mostly on a lone acoustic or National steel guitar.
King's performances of tunes like
James' "Hard Time Killing Floor" and "Cypress Grove" may feel a little reverential, but only on first listen.
King's reads of these tunes are through the eyes of a younger man who grew up with this music as a monolith. This sounds especially true of his performances of
Blind Willie Johnson's (whose character he played in Wim Wenders' film Soul of a Man) "Trouble Will Soon Be Over" and
Leadbelly's "CC Rider." But these songs, too, are stunning in their ghostly modern incarnations, with
King's amazing voice expressing nuances in the music that went unheard in the past. But it is
King's own songs that are the crowning achievements here. "John Law Burned Down the Liquor Sto'," "Watermelon Man," "Dark Clouds," and the closer, "Raining Angels," among others, offer the true weight of the album's importance. These are modern folk-blues songs that sound as timeless and hunted as the music that came from the Delta and migrated later to Chicago.
King's no academic; he's a singer with great soul and emotion and he's a writer with a keen sense not only blues history but of soul music phrasing, offering a solidly new chapter in the blues tradition. Highly recommended. ~ Thom Jurek