The second outing from
North Mississippi Allstars Luther and
Cody Dickinson consolidates their growing strengths, both instrumental (read: fewer drum machines) and compositional (only two covers here, as opposed to the raft of Fred McDowell/
R.L. Burnside titles on 2000's
Shake Hands With Shorty). Featuring guests like ancient fife player Othar Turner and
Big Ass Truck's John C. Stubblefield, the band certainly smokes like they did on their debut, opening with an excellent driving rocker (the title track) that ends with Luther cooing just like
Howlin' Wolf. The second song, "Snakes in My Bushes," is a dead-ringer for an age-old blues along the lines of "Stones in My Passway," though ironically it's also one of the few tracks with a drum machine. Yes,
51 Phantom does lose in the comparison game to its excellent predecessor: the
Dickinson brothers can't quite hold up an LP with their own songs, and a few of the guitar licks end up as recycled
Led Zeppelin clichés. Still,
North Mississippi Allstars make the blues sound just as energetic, raucous, and earthy as it's sounded in years. Added bonus: closing out with a raging, nearly demonic "Mud" (a quasi-cover of the Tin Pan Alley standard "Mississippi Mud"), a track verging on grindcore or rap-rock. ~ John Bush