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Jessie Mae Hemphill & Friends – Dare You To Do It Again
219 Records
7/26/04
Looking at the photo that adorns the cover of Olga’s CD, ‘Blues
Babe’ is an apt description of this talented artist whose
sultry beauty is evident in both her looks and more importantly
her music. Playing acoustic, electric, slide and classical guitar,
as well as tambourine, chimes, recorder and washboard, Olga lays
down a wonderful set of, often, haunting and melancholy blues that
entice the listener into her ‘blues world’ in the same
way that the Sirens lured the sailors in legend.
Olga opens with the hypnotic rhythms of ‘One Good Thing’,
her insinuous, and sensual, vocals reminding me of a female RL
Burnside, a feeling that is carried over into the broodingly hypnotic
Mississippi hill country blues of ‘O Man I Picked The Wrong
Brother Again!’. The sultry sweet ‘Gotta Put My Hands
On You’ is a request it would be difficult to refuse; the
wistfulness of ‘My Baby Blue’ is accentuated by the
catch in Olga’s vocals and her haunting slide work, the use
of a recorder and the song’s hypnotic rhythms giving the
perception of a fife and drum band; whilst ‘I’m Off
Your Sugar exudes a melancholy Skip James feel.
The haunting slide driven ‘I See Through You’, and
two wistful country blues, ‘Can’t Keep A Good Girl
Down’ and ‘Mama’s Boy’, are further highlights
of a set that will delight all lovers of quality country blues.
The Hemphill family have long been doyens of the North Mississippi
hill country blues scene, Jessie Mae distinguishing herself with
some of the toughest blues to emerge from that area, prompting
her nickname of the ‘She Wolf’. Since her stroke in
1993, Jessie Mae has given up singing blues, concentrating instead
on ‘church’ music, but don’t let this influence
you, as she performs her religious material with the same intensity
and passion that she bought to her blues; the dividing line between
both genres being minimal in Jessie Mae’s hands.
For this double CD set, producers Olga Wilhelmine Munding and
Tyler Austin gathered a plethora of Jessie Mae’s musician
friends, including Kenny Brown, Robert Belfour, Ruthie Foster,
Jumbo Mathus, Sharde Turner and the Rising Star Fife & Drum
Corps, Gary and Cedric Burnside and Kent Kimbrough, at Sherman
Cooper’s Farm in Como, Mississippi for what sleeve note writer
Jumbo Mathus describes as “an alcohol fuelled juke-joint
throw down presided over Sister Jessie Mae in a leopard skin cowboy
hat”, a comment I could have no arguments with.
The first CD, titled ‘Songs For Pookie’, opens with
the wonderful ‘Fife & Drum Intro’ replete with
vocal asides from Jessie, who then launches into ‘Lay My
Burden Down’, the frailty of her vocals allied to haunting
slide (Kenny Brown?) belying the gospel intensity this number engenders. ‘Nobody’s
Fault But Mine’ mines an hypnotic hill country groove fired
by Jessie’s tambourine and replete with intoxicating fiddle
and slide, both of which again come to the fore echoing Jessie’s
vocals as she draws the listener inexorably into her proclamation
of ‘Old Time Religion’. The wistful string band styled “I
Shall Not Be Moved’, the Cajun feel of ‘This Little
Light Of Mine’, and the stark contrast between Robert Belfour’s
tough and uncompromising vocals and slide, and Jessie’s plaintiveness,
gives added depth and textures to the wonderful ‘Motherless
Children’.
The second CD, ‘Songs For Bebe’ opens with the hypnotic
country (blues) gospel of ‘God Is Good To Me’, Jessie’s
tambourine highlighting the hill country rhythms whilst her vocals
are permeated with pathos. I can only describe ‘Treat Me
Right’ as a 23 minute gospel groove fired by tantalizing
harp and slide, Jessie’s vocals not appearing until the song
is half way through; ‘Swing Low’ is ‘back-porch’ gospel
with ethereal fiddle and slide accentuating the pathos inherent
in the vocal harmonies; whilst the loops and other electronic tricks
on ‘Porch Logic Remix’ actually work accentuating the
number’s deep blues feel. Ruthie Foster further enhances
her burgeoning reputation with the deeply soulful ‘Runaway
Soul’, Jessie imploring the band to “take the music
down while she’s singing so I can hear her”.
Throughout both of these CDs, Jessie is clearly enjoying herself
constantly laughing and interjecting the music with her vocal asides,
an enjoyment and enthusiasm that the listener will be unable to
ignore, making this an essential purchase for all lovers of North
Mississippi Hill Country music. (www.219records.com).
Mick Rainsford
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