- Ken Barnes, Rolling Stone, 1/30/75.
Bonus Review
I liked the first Ozark Mountain Daredevils album a lot a few times but soon got over my need to hear it at all. It could turn out that way with this one, although I don't believe it will, but then longevity is not exactly the whole idea behind rock, even country-flavored rock. The band has a tuneful repertoire, self-created with the help of wives and friends, and a rhythm section considerably tighter than any of John Ehrlicman's alibis. The lead instruments, while fare from being inept, are never quite the most ept you ever heard, but that only helps make it all a little funky (a quality we claim we want), and the singing is plain and functional. I am inexplicably fascinated with Larry Lee's "Kansas You Fooler," and impressed with the way Steve Cash has -- like a good fiction writer -- laid in atmosphere in sneaky ways in "E. E. Larson" (and, of course, that cut is introduced by frog-pond sounds, and I'm a sucker for the sound of frogs croaking). The dead-on, driving rhythm of "Walkin' Down the Road" is an easy example of the spontaneity and sparkle that brighten most of the pieces. There are a few, of course, like "Look Away," that have their sag problems, but a comparison with the first album readily shows something good: that the band is sticking with its style and improving both its material and its performances.
- Noel Coppage, Stereo Review, 4/75.
Reader's Comments
No comments so far, be the first to comment .
Main Page
| Readers' Favorites
| The Classic 500
| Other Seventies Discs
| Search The RockSite/The Web