Birmingham, AL resident Joe Poonanny had been a fixture on the Southern chitlin circuit for around 30 years when, in 1993, he finally recorded his debut album,
Poonanny Be Still, for Malaco's Waldoxy label. Other labels had expressed interest in the blues/soul singer known for his raunchy humor, but allegedly,
Poonanny was distrustful of record companies in general and couldn't be persuaded to record an album until Malaco's Tommy Couch, Jr. came along. This fun, highly entertaining CD won't appeal to those who shy away from off-color humor -- it isn't as explicit as a
2 Live Crew album, but it isn't exactly gospel either.
Clarence Carter's "Strokin'," Latimore's "Let's Straighten It Out" and
Denise LaSalle's "Steppin' Out" were perfect choices for
Poonanny, whose album has as much to do with Southern R&B as it does with the blues.
Poonanny Be Still did especially well in the South -- the people who bought this disc were the same people who were into soul-minded bluesmen like
Bobby "Blue" Bland,
Little Johnny Taylor and the late
Z.Z. Hill and blues-friendly souls singers like Carter and LaSalle. With
Poonanny Be Still, national audiences finally got a chance to hear a talented singer who had gone unrecorded for too long. ~ Alex Henderson