A two-for-one single-disc reissue of two 1962 albums: the studio date
Country Style and the live club recording At the Second Fret (here retitled Live). With a couple dozen songs in all, you get a good representation of
Elliott's repertoire of the time: old country songs ("The Wreck of the Old 97," "Mule Skinner Blues"), old-school country tunes ("Wabash Cannonball,"
Ernest Tubb's "Take Me Back and Try Me One More Time"), blues ("How Long Blues"), and naturally a few
Woody Guthrie tunes. He's trying to sound like Guthrie a lot of the time, of course, and as an inadvertent consequence, sounds similar to very early
Bob Dylan (who at the very beginning of his career was also trying to sound like
Woody Guthrie). He's not as good a singer as Guthrie or Dylan, and contributed no original material to these sets. That gives this something of a dry historical artifact feel, although the live portion of the disc has a slightly warmer atmosphere than
Country Style. ~ Richie Unterberger