As part of the
American Explorer series, this album of
Boozoo Chavis' work came maybe half a decade after his return to the recording scene in the mid-'80s. The tone slides between the slower, more countrified ballads and the more rollicking works toward the mainstream end of zydeco. The focus is rarely on the instrumental virtuosity, nor is it set on the lyrical content or vocal ability. The focus for the listener is the groove that
Chavis and his band set up. When they get into it, it's full-fledged dancehall boogie music, and the details only exist to add to the groove's structure. When they slow down, though, the sound can get a little sparse pretty easily. The call and response can get a bit overly burdensome in the slow numbers, but there's an element of the rural sounds of zydeco throughout. This isn't the slicker, refined form from
Buckwheat Zydeco, or even the middle-of-the-road basic form embraced by
Chenier, but an older form with closer ties to Cajun in some cases, and a deep country feel throughout.
Chavis isn't performing the same music that the others do, but that might be just the reason to give it a listen. ~ Adam Greenberg