Take Me Home,
Midnight Roads
Jason & the Scorchers
Midnight Roads & Stages Seen (2-disc set)
Brian Mansfield;
No Depression Magazine, Seattle, Washington
May-June, 1998
Copyright 1998 - 2004 No Depression Magazine
Consider
the options for a Nashville music fan circa 1981. Country was in its
post-Urban Cowboy decline (Alabamas Love In The First Degree
and Kenny Rogers I Dont Need You were two of
the years biggest hits). Journey, Styx and Ted Nugent dominated
the rock airwaves. The local scene was negligible, except when a certain
mumble-mouthed college band drove up from Athens, Georgia.
Imagine introducing into this atmosphere a lanky hick from an Illinois
pig farm
who wore a goofy faux-leopard cowboy hat and shiny fringed shirts that
made him look like Porter Wagoner on mescaline, a guy who whipped his
body around as furiously as he did his microphone cord. Back him with
three of the towns most notorious rockers, including a guitarist
who looked like Gene Simmons without makeup (though nobody knew that
at the time).
They sang about all the grand ole country themes - whiskey, women, Southern
alienation - and ripped through the catalogs of Hank Williams, Jimmie
Rodgers and Eddy Arnold at three times the speed anybody ever intended
them to be played. The singer yelped and howled and hit the guitarist
about as often as he did his intended note, but he could tap into the
Southern legacies of storytelling and resentment over damage done by
outsiders more than a century before.
That was Jason & the Scorchers.
For hundreds of kids in Nashville - and thousands more throughout the
South - Jason & the Scorchers presented a new idea of what live
music could be, much like the Sex Pistols or the Ramones had done for
other kids a few years earlier. Not only did the Scorchers offer new
potential for rock, they reintroduced countrys honky-tonk heritage
to a group who had grown up viewing country as the dull, oppressive
music of their parents.
Some of those kids wound up working for Nashville record companies,
booking agencies, music publishers and the like. And the ideas the Scorchers
placed in their heads paved the way for rock-influenced country acts
such as Dwight Yoakam and the Kentucky HeadHunters, not to mention the
Americana format that would be born a decade later. The Scorchers themselves
didnt benefit directly from any of this, of course, and they disbanded
for five years in 1990 - just as Garth Brooks, who took a more conciliatory
approach to combining rock and country, was beginning to take over the
city.
The Scorchers havent had the same impact with the two studio albums
theyve
released since reuniting in 1995, but theyve given alt.country
fans a touchstone that shows them the potential for the style in a live
setting. Midnight Roads &f Stages Seen, a two-disc set recorded
last November over three nights in the familiar, beer-soaked confines
of Nashvilles Exit/In, captures that live sound, if not the significant
visual component of the bands explosive performances. (There is,
however, a corresponding video.)
Poetry-spouting lead singer Jason Ringenberg opens the album with a
Rudyard Kipling quote, while guitarist Warner Hodges often sounds like
hes trying to play rhythm andd lead and the same time - and usually
succeeds. The rhythm section, which consists of original drummer Perry
Baggs and new bassist Kenny Ames, gets stronger the faster they play.
Midnight Roads & Stages Seen includes songs from nearly all eras
of Scorchers history. Both Broken Whiskey Glass, the first
original tune the band learned, and Jimmie Rodgers Last
Blue Yodel appeared on the Reckless Country Soul EP in 1982. Going
Nowhere and the album-opening Self Sabotage come from
1996s Clear Impetuous is Morning (only 1989s Thunder And
Fire, the groups arena-rock bid, isnt represented).
The album includes a few tunes, such as Somewhere Within,
from 1995s A Blazing Grace, that the band doesnt usually
play live. Mostly, though, it consists of longstanding set list favorites
such as If Money Talks, White Lies and Help!
Theres A Fire, honky-tonk tunes that Scorchers fans can
quote as freely as they can any Lefty Frizzell tune. Theres also
a screaming version of Absolutely Sweet Marie, the Flamin
Groovies-inspired Bob Dylan cover that has remained the bands
signature tune.
If theres any doubt about the subtle subversive influence the
Scorchers have had on Nashville, just take a look at their guest list.
Todd Snider sings harmony on the albums one new tune, This
Town Isnt Keeping You Down, which he co-wrote with Ringenberg.
BR5-49 fiddler Don Herron fills out Blanket Of Sorrow and
the rarely performed Ocean Of Doubt. Mavericks keyboardist
Jerry Dale McFadden, who backed Jason during his brief solo sojourn
of the early 90s, also makes a guest appearance on a couple tracks.
But none of them can top the appearance by Hodges parents, Edgar
and Blanche Hodges, who provide one of the albums highlights when
they join the Scorchers onstage. (This is one I used to rock him
to sleep to, Blanche says as she introduces a rip-snorthing rave-up
of Rufus Thomas Walkin the Dog, on which she
sings lead.)
Its that kind of intimate yet high-volume moment that separates
Midnight Roads from most live albums. Elsewhere, Ringenberg dedicates
a song to his midwife and flashes moments of cornpone wit (Thats
funnier when Little Jimmy Dickens does it, he muses after copping
Dickens joke about being Willie Nelson after taxes),
things he can get away with only because he knows almost everyone in
the crowded club by name.
After 17 years of those midnight roads, Jason & the
Scorchers sound neither as ambitious nor as desperate as they once did.
If they dont sound as iconoclastic, either, its because
other bands have had 15 years to try to recreate the Scorchers
inspired vision. Even though Midnight Roads & Stages Seen ultimately
falls short of providing the full Scorchers experience, its proof
that those other bands still have a ways to go.
©
1998-2004
No Depression Magazine
All Rights Reserved