Memphis, Tennessee's Lucero gained immeasurably when they added keyboard
ace Rick Steff to their ranks in 2006. Steff is deeply rooted in their
native city's musical heritage. As evidenced from their brief romance
with Universal on 1372 Overton Park, he added a touch of Memphis' soul
and R&B traditions to Lucero's rocking alt-country and barroom
boogie. On Women & Work, their ATO debut, they step even deeper into
Memphis traditions. Working once again with producer Ted Hutt at
Ardent, the sextet has been augmented by the horns of Memphis' Jim Spake
(Al Green) and Scott Thompson (Ray Charles, Solomon Burke). That said,
Lucero still sound like no one but themselves; it's as if this sound was
always there just waiting for them to mature enough to let it breathe.
Ben Nichols' songwriting is as homespun and sharp as ever. His
protagonists are the same romantic, hard-bitten characters that real
life exudes in spades, and he has a way of twisting acceptance into a
refusal to accept defeat. On the brief intro to "On My Way Downtown,"
the album's opener, he rasps with a young Marlon Brando's bravado: "I
know the last time we drank, I was a little less than behaved/But come
on out tonight. Oh I'll be good tonight." As the song kicks into gear
with a B-3, an upright piano, and guitarist Brain Venable's woolly
I-IV-V progression, the horns kick in hard. When Nichols sings: "When
you're around, I'm more the man I should be....." it's as if he's
convinced, and she will be too. The title track is a choogling, bar
stomping drinking song with '50s-style barrelhouse rock piano from guest
Rick Jeffries. The band's trademark alt-country is tinged by Memphis
soul on "It May Be Too Late." Nichols' wayward protagonist wants his
woman back in the worst way despite his wandering ways. As is typical,
his final reasoning for her to return is twisted -- with souled-out
horns blazing, he sings: "Maybe the best way...For you to save me..Is by
letting me save you." Only Nichols can turn lines like that and get
away with them. Southern-fried boogie is evident in "Juniper" and "Like
Lightning" (with a dynamite female backing chorus on the latter). And
Lucero may never get closer to straight Memphis soul than on the greasy
"Who You Waiting On?" The closer, "Go Easy," is an affirmative country
song that eventually builds itself up with a gospel chorus -- complete
with choir! Intensity rises with repetition; piano, organ, guitars, and
low slung tom-toms all erect it. Nichols' growl in front of that choir
becomes awe-inspiring. Women & Work is the sound of a mature,
confident band, fully embracing their hometown's musical legacy, and
wrapping it inside their own sound, making each both larger and deeper.
All killer, no filler.
aCá
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
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