No prizes for guessing what sound
the Mighty Imperials are aiming for -- it's the early, instrumental
Meters all the way on
Thunder Chicken, except when they shift to
James Brown on the four tracks where singer Joseph Henry shows up to soul-shout. The title track emulates
the Meters' "Chicken Strut," but then you can play guessing games on which
Meters songs
the Mighty Imperials were using as their model for every instrumental here. It's the same balanced interplay of four instruments, with the organist getting closest to capturing
Art Neville's minimal swoops and swirls. The guitarist has gone to school on
Leo Nocentelli and gets most of the way there, the funky, melodic basslines lack George Porter's fluidity, and the drums -- well, you can try for Zig Modeliste, but lotsa luck getting even remotely close to capturing the second-line percussive zags of New Orleans' chop funk master. The drummer fares better in the
James Brown pocket on the Henry-plus-horn tracks, and a
Meters-style instrumental cover of "Cold Sweat" closes out a homage to those late-'60s soul icons.
Thunder Chicken sounds like the kind of record made for, and by, people who like bars with jukeboxes loaded with hip rarities.