Youthman Veteran is a fitting, if ironic, title for a new album from the legendary
Dillinger, who began his reggae career at the feet of
Dennis Alcapone (his original stage name, in fact, was Dennis Alcapone Junior) and later chatted in the studio for such top-notch producers as
Lee "Scratch" Perry,
Joe Gibbs, Bunny Lee, and
Yabby You. His latest finds him working in singjay mode with the British producer
Jah Warrior, who provides
Dillinger with eight of his trademark slabs of digital roots rhythms (and a dub version of each vocal performance, thus turning
Dillinger's eight vocal tracks into a 16-track, 60-minute program). For the most part,
Dillinger makes good use of
Jah Warrior's sturdy rhythms, ably riding both the cultural rockers anthem "No Racial War" and the distinctly nyahbinghi-flavored "Psalm a Day" and updating the sea chanty "Drunken Sailor" on "Drunken Junkies." The album ends with more of a whimper than a bang; on "Poverty" his declamatory delivery sounds like a bad parody of
Linton Kwesi Johnson. But it's the album's only really weak track. Recommended overall. ~ Rick Anderson