Comebacks are a staple of the music business, and few have come back from as far as
Bob Frank, for whom
Keep on Burning is his first album of original songs since his self-titled debut 30 years ago. The late-twenties
Frank who made
Bob Frank for Vanguard Records was a drink- and drug-obsessed hippie who wrote and sang songs with titles like "Wino." When no second album was forthcoming, it would have been easy for those who noticed (they can't have been many, since
Bob Frank sold poorly) to assume that the singer/songwriter overdosed or drank himself to death long ago. Instead, the late-fifties
Frank emerged in 2001 on his own Bowstring Records label with
A Little Gest of Robin Hood, an English major's musical adaptation of a 13th century epic poem done as a talking blues. Of course, the only way young
Bob Frank could have become old
Bob Frank was by changing his ways, and anybody expecting a long-belated follow-up to
Bob Frank in the same style is going to be disappointed. He may have survived, but the songwriting persona he displayed in 1972 did not.
Keep on Burning, which was produced by
Frank's old friend
Jim Dickinson and features
Dickinson's sons from
the North Mississippi Allstars as backing musicians, is a good album of country-rock touching on cowboy ballads, mariachi songs, trucker tunes, and love songs.
Frank sings those songs in a sturdy baritone that suggests a Nashville veteran rather than a man who's been building irrigation systems in Northern California for three decades. He does not, however, sound much like the
Bob Frank of
Bob Frank, even when he covers "Judas Iscariot" from that album, a song that rewrites the betrayal of Christ and throws in considerable substance abuse along the way. Another old song, this one never before recorded by
Frank, is "With Sabers in Our Hands," a spirited celebration of the Confederacy that, like most paeans to the Lost Cause, conveniently sidesteps the little matter of slavery.
Frank might have continued to live fast and then have died young, leaving behind that one album as a cult favorite. Instead, he slowed down and grew up, resulting in a mature singer/songwriter who remains a cut above the Nashville standard, but one less interesting than his reckless youthful self. ~ William Ruhlmann