Jerry Lee Lewis made his first 
Steve Bing-produced comeback in 2006 with Last Man Standing, an all-star duets album that packed a surprising punch. With 
Jim Keltner replacing Jimmy Ripp as co-producer, 
Bing leads 
the Killer through the same basic formula for 2010’s 
Mean Old Man, even retaining many of the same all-stars from before -- 
Keith Richards, 
Mick Jagger, 
Ron Wood, 
Merle Haggard, 
Robbie Robertson, 
Ringo Starr, 
John Fogerty, 
Kris Kristofferson, 
Willie Nelson, and 
Kid Rock all return, because who wouldn’t want them all to return for seconds? -- but the vibe on this record is a little more subdued, with 
Keltner favoring a welcome muddy Sun murk over the crisp snap of Last Man Standing. So, there’s nothing that rampages like his take on 
Led Zeppelin’s “Rock and Roll” -- although “Roll Over Beethoven,” with 
Ringo and 
John Mayer in tow, comes close -- but the slower tempos suit the 74-year old 
Killer, letting him dig into the contours of the songs, and he gets into the nitty-gritty of 
the Stones’ “Dead Flowers” and “Sweet Virginia” (the latter cleaned up so 
Jerry Lee is cleaning the shine off his shoes), sounds invigorated to be singing gospel with 
Solomon Burke, and finds an ideal harmony partner in 
Gillian Welch, whose presence elevates “Please Release Me” and “I Really Don’t Want to Know.” On these last two, 
Jerry Lee Lewis doesn’t quite sound like the 
Mean Old Man of the title -- old, yes, but sorrowful, not spiteful -- but the record does find 
the Killer reviving his old snarl thanks to the title track, the 
Kid Rock and 
Slash-graced “Rockin’ My Life Away” and, best of all, a terrific reading of “You Can Have Her” featuring 
Eric Clapton and 
James Burton. With each track designed as a showcase for the featured guest, 
Mean Old Man winds up playing a little like a collection of moments, but it’s hard to complain when the moments prove that you can still be vigorous and vital at the age of 74. [An 18-track Deluxe Edition was also released.] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine