3-Track Shack

3-Track Shack

by Link Wray
3-Track Shack

3-Track Shack

by Link Wray

CD

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Overview

While most anyone who worships at the altar of rock guitar knows Link Wray as the gutbucket minimalist who gave birth to the definitive six-string snarl on such primal 1950s singles as "Rumble," "Rawhide," and "Ace of Spades," that's not all the man was capable of, and folks expecting the hard-edged roar of his best-known work may be a bit taken aback by this release. Wray's Three Track Shack is a two-CD set which reissues three albums Link Wray cut between 1971 and 1973, recorded in a primitive home studio on his Maryland farm -- Link Wray, Beans & Fatback, and Mordecai Jones (the latter, in essence, a Link Wray album though pianist Bobby Howard, aka Mordicai Jones, took top billing). The music on 1971's Link Wray bears little resemblance to Wray's classic work, sounding more like a funky country blues set than anything else, with Wray playing as much acoustic guitar as electric, and pianos and mandolins adding a warm and down-home mood to the songs. If the approach is different, and Wray's rough but emphatic vocals establish this as a different animal from his early instrumental hits, there's an unapologetically raw and unpolished energy that sets this apart from the standard issue roots-music work of the day, and there's no questioning the passion and heart in these tunes, which often recall a childhood growing up poor and Native-American in the deep South. Beans & Fatback, which was issued by Virgin in 1973, is a noticeably looser and harder-rocking set than Link Wray, and "I'm So Glad, I'm So Proud" offers a solid dose of Wray's patented gnarly guitar, but most of the album still sounds rootsier and less hard-edged than Link's larger body of work, and offers a more personal insight on such songs as "Shawnee Tribe" and "Hobo Man." And finally, Mordecai Jones was an attempt on Wray's part to crash the charts by having his piano man, Bobby Howard, take the lead vocals under an assumed name; Howard's voice is more conventionally appealing than Link's (the fact Howard never lost a lung to tuberculosis doubtless helped), and there's a loose and engaging blues mood to the album that suggests a late-night jam caught on tape, with Link contributing some great slide guitar on the session (though one can't help but wish he could have hit his guitar a bit harder). Wray's Three Track Shack is a solid and comprehensive overview of an often overlooked period in Link Wray's life as a recording artist, and while newbies and casual observers may be a bit puzzled by its low-key tone, completists will find it fascinating (and be glad to pick up three hard-to-find LP's in one package). ~ Mark Deming

Product Details

Release Date: 09/04/2015
Label: Ace
UPC: 0029667073820
Rank: 40781

Tracks

Disc 1

  1. La De Da
  2. Take Me Home Jesus
  3. Juke Box Mama
  4. Rise and Fall of Jimmy Stokes
  5. Fallin' Rain
  6. Fire and Brimstone
  7. Ice People
  8. God Out West
  9. Crowbar
  10. Black River Swamp
  11. Tail Dragger
  12. Walkin' in the Arizona Sun
  13. Scorpio Woman
  14. The Coca Cola Sign Blinds My Eyes
  15. All I Want to Say
  16. All Because of a Woman

Disc 2

  1. On the Run
  2. Son of a Simple Man
  3. Precious Jewel
  4. Days Before Custer
  5. Gandy Dancer
  6. Beans and Fatback
  7. I'm So Glad, I'm So Proud
  8. Shawnee Tribe
  9. Hobo Man
  10. Georgia Pines
  11. Alabama Electric Circus
  12. Water Boy
  13. From Tulsa to North Carolina
  14. Right or Wrong (You Lose)
  15. In the Pines
  16. Take My Hand (Precious Lord)
  17. I'm So Glad, I'm So Proud [45 edit]

Album Credits

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