Carl Perkins' first attempt at an album of new material in a decade is surprisingly successful, and one of the better records to come out of the early days of the rock & roll revival. Cut during the summer of 1969, it sort of follows the lead of
Elvis Presley's 1968 comeback special, presenting
Perkins doing blues ("Baby, What You Want Me to Do"), rock & roll ("C.C. Rider," "Brown Eyed Handsome Man"), and a few originals such as "Soul Beat" which, if they weren't distinguished, also do no harm to his reputation. There were a few touches that the album might've done well without, like the organ that occasionally crops up on some of the arrangements, and a runaway performance on the wah-wah pedal during one song, but the bulk of this was some of the better LP work up to this point in the career of an artist who was otherwise not especially known for his strong LPs. Among the real highlights is the obscurity "Superfool," written by a friend of
Perkins; "Champagne Illinois," a collaboration between
Perkins and
Bob Dylan that grew out of the sessions for the latter's Nashville Skyline;
Ronnie Self's "A Lion in the Jungle";
Perkins' powerful and touching "Power of My Soul"; and
Buddy Holly's "I'm Gonna Set My Foot Down."
On Top was subsequently deleted and, with a new cover and the deletion of a couple of songs, reissued on the budget Harmony Records line under the title
Brown Eyed Handsome Man.