Singing songs about one horse towns rodeo
clowns and girls with holes in their stockings, The Hick-Ups are breathing
new life into antiquated styles such as the heel and toe polka and the
cowboy waltz.
Mick Daley reviews
Jimmy Willing &The Real Gone Hick-Ups
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Jimmy Willing and the Real Gone Hick-Ups have finally released
their debut, self-titled album, a landmark rustic masterpiece containing
13 joyful, rambunctious songs.
Hearkening back to old time epics by the likes of Hank Williams,
Leadbelly and Woody Guthrie, it's an eclectic carousel of lovesick
sailors and dipsomaniacal rodeo clowns, singing dogs and satanic
cardsharks that co-exist in a compact disc sounding like it was
made in Sun Studios sometime in fashionable antiquity.
Jimmy has been extremely canny in selecting his musicians, a well-drilled
squad of unlikely hillbillies who have adapted their talents to
his backwoods ballads with charm and poise.
Clancy Robinson has been playing with Jimmy for 15 years now, a
Faustian pact that has seen Clancy, already a superb hardcore rock
drummer, develop his playing to incorporate the archaic waltzes,
jigs and shuffles that distinguish Jimmy's songs.
Likewise Tom Jones, who came to the band a slick electric bass
player, had to dig deep to gain proficiency on old-school double
bass, but now he swings it around like a Grand Ole Oprey sessioneer.
Dave Ramsey, already a veteran blues and folk balladeer when he
joined the band, lends a powerful presence and bona fide hillbilly
chops on rhythm guitar, but it is the unassuming Dan Rumour on
electric guitar that provides Jimmy's songs with their most telling
motifs.
Dan is of course the lonesome guitar voice of the sadly departed
Cruel Sea and his concise, scientific playing is none the less
as lyrical as the likes of Link Wray and gives the songs a weight
and authentic lustre that helps make this album a genuine alternative
country classic.
Then there are the incomparable contributions of the album's two
guest star diva appearances. Glenys Rae Virus, a former Toe Sucking
Cowgirl and current leader of the Tamworth Playboys, is a virtuoso
on country fiddle and squeezebox, and she plies her weapons with
consummate skill and bawdy finesse, while Christa Hughes, Queen
of cabaret and seamless one-liners, struts about her duet 'Catfish
Fishin' with all the saucy panache of a hussy born to the hills.
With the contributions of these luminaries wedded to Willing's
saucy prose and simple, addictive ditties, this album has landed
intact as the new word in hillbilly music. Available via jimmywilling.com
or at any of the band's shows.
Mick Daley is a music jounalist and singer songwriter
with Australian country rock troubadors The
Re-Mains. Check Out his act.
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