For those who were rightfully seduced by
James Blood Ulmer's stripped-to-the-bone 2005 Birthright recording, where the great harmolodic jazz, blues, and funk guitarist played a single guitar and stomped on a board and played the blues like a Delta hoodoo shaman,
Bad Blood in the City will come as quite a shock. The session was recorded at the Piety Street Studios in New Orleans, and
Blood made use of its atmospherics and its history as a killer room for recording the Crescent City's second-line rhythms, electric blues, and swampy funk. Once more, the album was produced by
Vernon Reid -- who plays a hell of a lot of guitar here -- and
Ulmer chose his old friend from the
Odyssey days,
Charles Burnham, to play electric violin and mandolin, along with a cast that also includes vocalist
Irene Datcher, bassist
Mark Peterson, harmonica player
David Barnes, drummer/percussionist Aubrey Dayle, and keyboard boss
Leon Gruenbaum. The tune mix is wild, ranging from the tough hard funk of the opener, "Survivors of the Hurricane," to a cover of
Junior Kimbrough's "Sad Days, Lonely Nights" that keeps its blues yet gets deeply funked up with the roiling guitars of
Ulmer and
Reid,
Barnes' spooky harmonica, violin, piano, clarinet, and a B-3!
Then there are the originals, such as
Ulmer's blues tune "Katrina," which echoes "Flood in Mississippi." It feels like some strange cross between
R.L. Burnside,
John Lee Hooker, and
Ulmer at his deepest, most soulful and driving.
Reid fills in the spaces and the entire tune is a wall of beautifully chaotic yet utterly sophisticated sound. He echoes the hypocrisy that some rather famous ministers railed on the city as being a den of sin and the hurricane being God's vengeance. He answers the tune with a soul-gospel tune called "Let's Talk About Jesus," where he and
Datcher do their own form of preaching about mercy, grace, healing, and forgiveness.
Blood's sermon with its killer B-3 break in the middle and whomping funk bassline is infinitely more interesting and danceable than Jerry Falwell's.
Blood also answers
Woody Guthrie's ghost on
John Lee Hooker's "This Land Is Nobody's Land," while he agrees with him completely, putting the swamp blues up to
Guthrie's folk music and commenting on the times as they are. Other covers include
Willie Dixon's "Dead Presidents,"
Son House's "Grinnin' in Your Face,"
Howlin' Wolf's "Commit a Crime" (a wailing stomper that does the original justice), and the traditional "Backwater Blues," with a radical arrangement. The final cut is a barrelhouse number with wily guitars and crying harmonica and scratching called "Old Slave Master," where
Blood spits his rage in a blues shouter that could get a corpse to get up out of the box and start throwing down on the dancefloor. The creative place
Blood finds himself in his partnership with
Reid is yielding great fruit. This album is the strongest of their collaborations thus far, and is a wild ride through blues, R&B, and hard-driving distorted and feedback-laced -- yet utterly musical -- New Orleans funk. It's a monster. ~ Thom Jurek