Despite
Johnny Dowd's fixation with death, the 56-year old guitarist has inexplicable appeal on his fifth album,
Cemetary Shoes. Beneath all of the bloodstained clothes is a man with superb axe prowess and a
Nick Cave-meets-
Tom Waits-meets-
Tom Verlaine-vocal approach. "Brother Jim" is an offbeat, twangy rock/blues concoction that's as delightfully fun as it is peculiar, "Garden of Delight" is a blistering stomper and "Whisper in a Nag's Ear" is an eerie jazz-tinged offering. If the latter's chorus, "You're carrying a coffin!," makes it a must for all future Halloween parties, the creepy,
Cramps-ian white trash barnburner "Rest in Peace" is equally worthy. At times,
Dowd's obsession starts to grate -- specifically on "Dear John Letter" where frenzied percussion uncomfortably meshes with his nightmare-inducing spoken word -- but often enough there is magic in the midst of his morbidity.