The late guitar virtuoso
Danny Gatton was many things -- talented, broad-minded, unpredictable, imaginative, versatile, chance-taking. But one thing
Gatton was not was easy to categorize. Those hearing
Gatton's work for the first time have often asked, "Exactly what category did he fall into? Jazz, rock, blues, R&B, country, pop?" And truth be told, he was a combination of all of those things. Anyone who hopes to pin
Gatton down stylistically won't find
Unfinished Business to be any help; stylistically, this excellent instrumental album (which originally came out on NRG Records in 1987 and was reissued by Powerhouse in late 2004) is all over the place.
Gatton is a ballsy blues-rocker on "Notcho Blues" (a
Gatton original), but his jazz chops are alive and well on
Charlie Byrd's "Homage to Charlie Christian" and the
Ray Noble standard "Cherokee" -- and on the very twangy "Nit Pickin'" (another
Gatton original), his appreciation of country and rockabilly is impossible to miss. Some might think, "OK, so
Gatton was eclectic, but he must have handled some styles more proficiently than others, right?" No; the fact is that on
Unfinished Business,
Gatton handles all of these styles equally well -- he had a deep and genuine appreciation of a wide variety of music, which is why he plays his guitar as convincingly on
Santo & Johnny's "Sleepwalk" as he does on Les Baxter's "Quiet Village" (the reissue's bonus track) and a dark, moody arrangement of
Jackie Gleason's "Melancholy Serenade." This memorable CD is as focused as it is adventurous and far-reaching. ~ Alex Henderson