Released in 1982,
Middle Class White Boy was
Mose Allison's first recording in six years, and his debut for the fledgling and relatively short-lived Elektra Musician label run by Bruce Lundvall.
Allison is featured here in a sextet setting. His fellow front-line players are saxophonist
Joe Farrell and guitarist
Phil Upchurch. The set is a well-blended collection of originals and covers including
Muddy Waters' "Rollin' Stone," and
Duke Ellington's "Just a Lucky So and So." As is his trademark,
Allison effortlessly blends jazz, backwoods blues, and Southern hipster jive in a heady brew of fantastic musicianship. His work on electric and acoustic piano here is as startling as ever and his songwriting is canny, wildly swinging, funny, and biting. The opener, "How Does It Feel to Be Good Looking," is a case in point, with a fantastic electric piano solo. The title track is a choogling shuffle that walks the line between blues and bop. "Back Down South" is a cooking bebop blues that pits
Upchurch and
Allison against one another in some startling contrapuntal interplay that's firmly in the groove. Through these 11 tracks,
Allison shines and the band cooks. It's as welcome a comeback as one could hope for. ~ Thom Jurek