Thirty-five years after their 1969 self-titled debut,
NRBQ's
Dummy delivers 13 highly accessible titles with enough quirky delight to rival
Elvis Costello,
Nick Lowe and other purveyors of the mid-'70s new wave sound. Oh the rhythm & blues is still there, as sure as that's part of the group's name, but on this mostly new album (which includes takes from stray sessions) the styles run the gamut from
Joey Spampinato's
Grateful Dead forged "I Need Love" (recorded by
Bonnie Raitt on her
Fundamental disc ) to a wondrous cover of "All That's Left to Say Is Goodbye" from the catalog of
Gilberto/
Jobim/
DeMoraes, the songwriters who wrote "Girl From Ipanema"." The bulk of the album was recorded by co-producer
Billy Shaw in Vermont, February 2004, while "All That's Left to Say Is Goodbye" comes from a 2002 Northampton Massachusetts session. Closing track 13, "Misguided Missiles," is a protest song recorded in Woodstock, New York, 1991 with former member
Al Anderson making an appearance. The older tracks blend in nicely with the 2004 material, making for a smooth listening experience. "Call of the Wild" opens with
George Harrison-type sitar sounds and veers off into a rockabilly
Beach Boys riff. "Hey Punkin Head" could be a
Brian Wilson parody clocking in at two-minutes-and-thirty-five-seconds -- the baker's dozen of tunes never straying into the four-minute land, with one under two minutes. Short and delightfully sweet, the material is vibrant and in the pocket. To those not familiar with
NRBQ Dummy is an excellent intro. A colorful 12-page booklet says little, but it doesn't have to,
Terry Adams' piano and clavinet speak volumes alongside bassist/co-leader
Joey Spampinato, guitarist
Johnny Spampinato and drummer
Tom Ardolino. Adventurous and lots of fun. ~ Joe Viglione