Charlie Parr goes out of his way to recreate a sound lost in time – the sound of the local bluesman who sings of his friends and community, the everyday and the exceptional. And Parr keeps it simple. The hirsute Minnesotan told uprootedmusicreview.com that this stripped-down production – featuring his gravelly voice, acoustic guitar (alternated with banjo), plus friends Mikkel Beckmen (washboard et al) and Dave Hundrieser (harmonica) – was recorded in just three hours, mostly in first takes. His style is mainly the syncopated fingerstyle of Piedmont blues, with room for colourful, intense ballads. Opener
Jimmy Bell
sets the pace and tone: punchy, upbeat but rooted in the primitive. Parr could be in someone's shed, rasping out the fevered likes of
Motorcycle Blues
and
Rattlesnake,
or reflecting upon the fate of
Henry Goes to the Bank
or the chilling childhood memory of
Badger
. It's gritty and natural, though maybe too much for the un initiated.
Charlieparr.com
Download: Jimmy Bell, Badger