Skeets McDonald made records throughout the 1950s, but it wasn't until 1958 that his first album was issued.
Goin' Steady with the Blues occupies a somewhat odd niche within the country and pop trends of its time, though the music itself doesn't sound at all forced or trendy. It's not rockabilly, or rock & roll, but certainly has some beats and swagger that show
McDonald was being influenced by those currents. It's not straight-ahead commercial late-'50s country either, though it's somewhat in tune with where honky tonk was moving during the era. It's just a comfortable mix of those styles,
McDonald singing in a likably laconic and slightly bluesy manner, at times recalling the most country-oriented sides of early
Jerry Lee Lewis. If you need a reference to a another bigger figure from the era, if you like some of
Marty Robbins' gutsier late-'50s work but want something rootsier, you might well take a shine to at least some of this.
McDonald wasn't quite in the league of, say,
Lewis or
Robbins in either his material or his vocals, which makes this something of a minor pleasure. But it's certainly pleasing enough on its own terms, getting into a slightly tropical mood with "Hawaiian Sea Breeze." The 2009 CD reissue on Righteous adds considerable value with eight bonus tracks, including his most celebrated and famous venture into pure rockabilly, "You Oughta See Grandma Rock," as well as other cuts that generally go for a more frenetic mood and rhythm than the material on the
Goin' Steady with the Blues LP (though "Mean and Evil Blues," "The Tattooed Lady," and "Birthday Cake Boogie" skirt novelty territory). It's too bad, however, that the package doesn't include any recording or release dates for the bonus tracks. ~ Richie Unterberger