On his first four albums, Setting the Standard (1994),
It's a Wonderful World (1995),
Here Comes Allan Harris and the Metropole Orchestra (1996), and
Love Came: The Songs of Strayhorn (2001),
Allan Harris followed the career of a jazz-pop singer, earning plaudits from the press and from
Tony Bennett along the way as he crooned "Lush Life" and "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" in a voice that reminded many listeners of
Nat King Cole. Most of that should be forgotten in approaching his fifth album, Cross That River.
Harris still sounds a bit like a husky
Cole, but he has taken a hard left turn in musical styles and in material. Simply put,
Cross That River is a concept album about African-American cowboys, its ten songs all written by
Harris in an acoustic country style. The first two songs, "Cross That River" and "Blue Was Angry," suggest a unified story about a slave in Louisiana just before the Civil War who steals his master's horse and escapes west. After that,
Harris adds a series of story-songs on various related topics, one about "Buffalo Soldiers" (black army troops), and another about "Black Seminoles"; a "Mail Order Woman"; a gambler named "Diamond Jimmy" and his fateful encounter with his lover, Dancing Annie, and her new boyfriend, Mustang Billy; a "Dark Spanish Lady"; a "Mule Skinner" who was a homesteader until his woman was raped and killed, and he went in search of her assailants; an aging gunslinger reluctant to add "One More Notch" to his gun; and "Dat Dere Preacher." Many of these songs come off simply as Western ballads like those one might find on a
Marty Robbins album, and
Harris performs them in drum-less arrangements that emphasize acoustic guitar, violin, and other stringed instruments, most of them acoustic. The songs have a country lilt, sometimes with a bluesy or Tex-Mex feel. The work is of a piece, even if it doesn't quite add up to a single coherent story. And
Harris clearly has bigger intentions for it. In the press materials, he speaks of planning to "write the next 10 songs for Part 2, finish the Novel, and start work on the Musical." It's too soon to know how all that will turn out, but
Cross That River the CD is a good beginning, even if it will surprise the fan base
Harris has amassed up to now. ~ William Ruhlmann