Americana and roots music - No Depression

The Americana and roots music authority

For more reviews and other mutterings, go to Semi-Regular Raves 'n' Rants.

Greg Trooper says "The Williamsburg Affair" is the missing link in his recording history. Befitting any missing link, it's a piece of archaeology, a release of songs recorded in 1995 with his touring band featuring Brooklyn rocker Eric Ambel at the knobs. "I was touring with a band exclusively in those days and writing for that kind of energy," Trooper says. "I think it informed my future writing as well. I believe my writing has improved since then and that was a stepping stone towards what I do now."

What he does now is write and release some of the best roots work around, notably his last two studio discs, the infectious "Floating" and the soulful "Make It Through This World."

But to get here, he went through Brooklyn's Williamsburg on his way to Nashville and (metaphorically, at least) Memphis before returning to New York recently. "The Williamsburg Affair" is a snapshot of Trooper's progress. There's none of the assured humor of Trooper's live show and later work, but there's an appealing immediacy throughout. And it's Trooper so there isn't a dud in the set, including the lone cover of Neil Young's "Wrecking Ball."

There are the beginnings of his recently soulful forays on "Stronger All the Time" and "These Sunday Nights," which foreshadows later tunes like "I Love It When She Lies." Abel Domingues rips through "Paradise," one of many highlights with searing slide work. The twang that would slip into Trooper's work more obviously after he moved to Nashville in 1996 shows up on "These Sunday Nights" thanks to Larry Campbell's pedal steel work.

Not surprisingly given the band and Ambel's fondness for straight-ahead garage rock, the sound is more muscular, less adorned, than Trooper's recent work. Kenneth Blevins, the drummer on several Trooper albums when he's not hanging with John Hiatt, is ferocious from the opener, "Angel." Ambel and Dan Zanes provide the guitar muscle on "When You're Not Here." "Let's Pretend" is another in a long line of propulsively rocking love songs.
As usual, there are quieter moments as well. "Quite Like You" can take its place beside "The Lasting Kind." "21st Century Boy," a reflective ode to his son, hints at Trooper's genius for accompaniment featuring Joe Flood's sighing fiddle work ("21st Century Boy" and "Paradise" make appearances with different arrangements on "Popular Demons").
"Once I got to Nashville a whole new project emerged with a new label so I figured I'd return to the Ambel produced record shortly afterwards but of course things didn't go that way," Trooper says.


The way things went is Trooper became everyone's favorite songwriter who couldn't get a break. Yes, Buddy Miller and then Garry Tallent produced albums. Steve Earle took "Little Sister" for "Copperhead Road." Emmylou came in to sing harmonies. But Trooper has endured one hard luck label after another. He signs, records an album, and the label folds or fails to back him. "Floating" on Sugar Hill Records ended that string and landed Trooper on plenty of "best of" lists in 2005. Then Dan Penn produced the followup, the reflective "Make It Through This World."


"The road we ride is a little rough, the times we live in are a little tough...these are my shoes, will you walk in them? These are my blues, try avoiding them," he sings on "21st Century Boy." Trooper's road has taken him North, where he began life as Jersey boy. He's back on the road, telling those stories about being so French, suffering through another shitty Saturday night, and being mistaken for Joe Pantoliano, enduring obscurity.
If songwriters were paid for good reviews and the admiration of peers, Trooper would be on Easy Street. That he's not doesn't diminish the power and craft of another stellar set.

For a sample:

"Stronger All the Time."


Tags: affair, ambel, americana, eric, greg, trooper, williamsburg

Michael D Hansen Comment by Michael D Hansen on November 19, 2009 at 7:58pm
Jim Morrison lives !!

Betcha nobody's ever made that kind of remark ever. Anyhow Jim I can only second everything you wrote about Troop and this recording. It's a beauty ('cept I wonder about you giving the guitar nod to Dan Zanes. I can't find anything definitive but I would think Dan Baird would be a more likely cohort given his history with "Roscoe"). And doesn't the recording have Ambel all over it, which I think is a good thing, and Blevins is of course one of the hardest hitters going around. I love his work with Sonny Landreth as well as the Hiatt stuff.

I first heard about Troop in reading a Steve Earle interview praising his song "Muhammad Ali (The Meaning Of Christmas), and then my friend Kevin Welch backed all that up many times. Having a teenage daughter who (at the time) was going through some "issues" Greg's song "Damaged Eyes" had (and still has) a special resonance for me and I wrote to him through Myspace asking whether Annabel in the song was a real person, or based on someone he knew. I didn't have any real expectations regarding a reply but within 24 hours there he was, thanking ME for my note and explaining that Annabel was a composite character, some parts real, some created. What was evident to me was that Greg Trooper was 100% clear and 100% on the money in his understanding of and empathy with so many young women who fall into these "holes."

Fast forward a few years to September last year, and despite three previous visits to the USA form here in Australia, I still hadn't managed to catch Greg live. As fate would have it on my last night in Austin, Greg played at a house concert under a full moon in a lovely South Austin garden. Having heard about the gig I had called the hosts and they graciously invited me along. I arrived a few minutes before Greg was due to start and the host introduced me to him. "Ah Michael from Melbourne," says Greg, "great you could be here, now I gotta go to work." About half a dozen songs into his first set, he paused and said, "I don't play this song much, but it goes out to our guest over there from Australia" kinda nodding in my direction. Naturally I lasted maybe 30 seconds into the song before I started bawling my eyes out !! People around me were asking if I was OK ?? Did I need a beer ?? Or a whiskey ?? Or a chair ?? and my answer was yes to all !! When he finished the song I mouthed a "thank you" to Greg and he grinned broadly and said that I was more than welcome. What a treat.

Greg Trooper is one of the really "good guys" in a business that needs more like him. May he have the success he so richly deserves, but I'm betting that in his world his most valued asset is the unfailingly genuine peer respect that he gets wherever he goes.

Happy Trails & Thanks Jim ........ Michael (from the deep south).

Comment

You need to be a member of Americana and roots music - No Depression to add comments!

Join Americana and roots music - No Depression

Sponsors



If you enjoy this site please consider helping us with a small donation!
Don't like PayPal? Mail a check to: No Depression, PO Box 31332, Seattle, WA 98103

Notes

FAQ

Created by No Depression Feb 17, 2009 at 9:06pm. Last updated by No Depression Jun 24.

© 2010   Created by No Depression.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service