Last Fool Here, the first album from J.P. McDermott & Western Bop, is a sit-up-and-take-notice collection of red-hot rockabilly and vintage honky tonk from a singer who can really sing, with a band that can really rock.
A Fool's Paradise...
Per [+]Last Fool Here, the first album from J.P. McDermott & Western Bop, is a sit-up-and-take-notice collection of red-hot rockabilly and vintage honky tonk from a singer who can really sing, with a band that can really rock.
A Fool's Paradise...
Perhaps it was foolish to wait and worry as the studio tracked down some of the last reel-to-reel tape ever manufactured in order to finish the mixing of their debut release, Last Fool Here, but what J.P. McDermott and Western Bop have found in their fool's paradise is real rockabilly: the straight-up, genuine article, and their CD delivers it with authenticity and authority.
Any doubts are cast aside by the very first track -- My Damn Baby is a raucous, rocking original number -- this is going to be a ball! McDermott teams up with veteran Washington DC rockabilly guitarist Bob Newscaster (Tex Rubinowitz, Billy Hancock) on several originals including the high energy rocker, Go Cat, Go! and the Tex-Mex flavored Lucky Stars. One of McDermott's own, Not Enough of You, takes a straight-forward ballad, and builds it up to an exhilarating finish, thanks to J.P.'s soaring vocals. Another of McDermott's songs, Last Fool Here, closes the record. A last call waltz, it summons up the lonely feeling that hits "when they turn off the jukebox, and they put up all the chairs".
Despite the passion and enthusiasm J.P. McDermott brings to these memorable songs, he could be considered the "last fool here" in that title song because nobody records this way anymore; most music today is direct to the hard drive with digital mixing and editing. But Last Fool Here was made the old-fashioned way -- on magnetic tape using aging analog equipment -- more dependent on vacuum tubes than computer chips. Many of the tracks were recorded with the entire band playing live, all in the one room -- it's a pain to mix, but there is no better way to capture the exhilarating raw feeling of live music. But this isn't mimicking the old process for some sort of history project -- what comes across is not an academic exercise, but a celebration of heartfelt honky tonk tunes and the thrill of rip-roaring rockabilly.
In addition to originals, the collection has plenty of well-chosen covers. A particularly fine rendition of Johnny Cash's Cry
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