On the new album “Pine Needle Fire,” Georgia soul man Randall Bramblett’s warm, weathered tenor gives voice to average folks who are hanging on, and he provides a beat to keep them going
By STEVEN WINE Associated Press
November 12, 2020, 5:00 PM
• 1 min read
On “Pine Needle Fire,” Georgia soul man Randall Bramblett's warm, weathered tenor gives voice to average folks who are hanging on, and he provides a beat to keep them going.
Bramblett laments mortality, the rat race, co-dependency and misplaced passion. His solution? Dance those blues away.
Nearly everything comes with an irresistible groove, as has been the case for most of Bramblett's 45-year recording career. He and his crack crew of studio musicians do swampy, sweaty, Southern-fried funk, and like a great bar band they’re both loose and tight, while riding a gospel undercurrent. The chorus to the opening tune, “Some Poor Soul,” echoes “Amazing Grace,” and there are several songs of secular inspiration.
Nick Johnson contributes stinging guitar, and horns — including Bramblett's tenor sax — add momentum. The result is a succession of toe-tappers and hip-shakers with singalong chorus.
“Built to Last” lives up to its title, thanks to a six-note rock riff as its foundation. “Rocket to Nowhere” swings with Steely Dan-style syncopation, references “Kid Charlemagne” and serves up a Fagen-esque aside: “At least they didn’t look in the glove compartment.”
Imagine a world where musicians play concerts: These songs would have folks on their feet.