Tarbox Ramblers

Tarbox Ramblers

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com's Best of 2000
On the surface, a modern quartet bringing old-time music into the next century isn't exactly cause for excitement. Yet there's a lot going on inside the music of the Tarbox Ramblers. The gritty guitar work brings to mind the muddiest of Delta blues; the dancing fiddle offers the appeal of string-band music; the rhythms add the buoyancy of jug-band booziness; and the whole band reinvigorates all of these classic styles with a decidedly modern energy and experimental edge. --Marc Greilsamer

Amazon.com
Where folk revivalists too often take a neutered, pedigreed approach, the Tarbox Ramblers prefer a mongrel mix with plenty of growl and bite. Much of the material on this Boston quartet's debut album comes from the Mississippi Delta, with the music's bluesy spirit reinforced by Michael Tarbox's unvarnished vocals and the slash of his slide guitar. Yet fiddler Daniel Kellar sounds like he was borrowed from a traditional string band, while the stand-up bass and stripped-down percussion recall the rhythms of skiffle or jug-band music. The Ramblers' dynamic blows the dust off standards such as "The Cuckoo," "St. James Infirmary" and "Stewball," but what's most encouraging for the band's future are a couple of atmospheric originals: "Third Jinx Blues" and "No Harm Blues." What the Pogues did for traditional Irish music, the Tarbox Ramblers could do for traditional American. --Don McLeese

Tarbox Ramblers,Tarbox Ramblers,Rounder Select,Americana,Blues Gospel,Country Blues,Old-Timey,Pop,Popular Music,Rock,Rock/Pop,String Bands


Tarbox Ramblers

Tarbox Ramblers
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Magnificent
  • Tarbox Ramblers fertilize & aerate roots music
  • Better live
  • American Delta revisited
  • Incredible live show
Tarbox Ramblers
Tarbox Ramblers
Manufacturer: Rounder Select
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Blues | Styles | Music
Alt-Country & AmericanaAlt-Country & Americana | Country | Styles | Music
Old-Time CountryOld-Time Country | Traditional Country | Country | Styles | Music
Traditional FolkTraditional Folk | Folk | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Strings | Instruments | Classical | Styles | Music
Rounder RecordsRounder Records | Specialty Stores | Music
Similar Items:
  1. A Fix Back East
  2. Good For What Ails You: Music of the Medicine Shows 1926-1937
  3. Pay the Devil
  4. We'll Never Turn Back
  5. All the Roadrunning

ASIN: B00004S548
Release Date: 2000-04-25

Tracks:

  1. Jack Of Diamonds
  2. Honey In The Rock
  3. Third Jinx Blues
  4. Columbus Stockade
  5. The Cuckoo
  6. Oh Death
  7. No Harm Blues
  8. St. James Infirmary
  9. Down South Blues
  10. Stewball
  11. Shake 'Em On Down
  12. Jug Band Music

Amazon.com's Best of 2000

On the surface, a modern quartet bringing old-time music into the next century isn't exactly cause for excitement. Yet there's a lot going on inside the music of the Tarbox Ramblers. The gritty guitar work brings to mind the muddiest of Delta blues; the dancing fiddle offers the appeal of string-band music; the rhythms add the buoyancy of jug-band booziness; and the whole band reinvigorates all of these classic styles with a decidedly modern energy and experimental edge. --Marc Greilsamer

Amazon.com

Where folk revivalists too often take a neutered, pedigreed approach, the Tarbox Ramblers prefer a mongrel mix with plenty of growl and bite. Much of the material on this Boston quartet's debut album comes from the Mississippi Delta, with the music's bluesy spirit reinforced by Michael Tarbox's unvarnished vocals and the slash of his slide guitar. Yet fiddler Daniel Kellar sounds like he was borrowed from a traditional string band, while the stand-up bass and stripped-down percussion recall the rhythms of skiffle or jug-band music. The Ramblers' dynamic blows the dust off standards such as "The Cuckoo," "St. James Infirmary" and "Stewball," but what's most encouraging for the band's future are a couple of atmospheric originals: "Third Jinx Blues" and "No Harm Blues." What the Pogues did for traditional Irish music, the Tarbox Ramblers could do for traditional American. --Don McLeese

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Magnificent.......2006-04-29

As ferocious, relentless, stomping blues records go, you can't do much better than this one. The question of whether it is or is not "authentic blues" is irrelevant: It's great music, which is what counts.

Around 1997 I used to go see these guys on Thursday nights at the Green Street Grille in Cambridge, MA. They were great: Like a freight train with no brakes. Absolutely riveting. They sounded like this record. It's a magnificent record. You should really buy it right now.

And as noted in other reviews, they own "St. James Infirmary".

4 out of 5 stars Tarbox Ramblers fertilize & aerate roots music.......2004-03-13

Michael Tarbox and his band, the Tarbox Ramblers, go to the very roots of rock and bring forth new green shoots from the many branches of early American music. Blues, Black Spirituals, Bluegrass, Honky Tonk. It's all in there. Tarbox's unique vocal style, the arrangements--even the flavor of the production--all work together evoke the early days of pop music recording (without the dust and scratches) and bring new life to classics we should all be familiar with. Get the disc, go see these guys live. The experience is like a history lesson you can dance to. And stomp. And holler. Have a good time!

3 out of 5 stars Better live.......2003-01-01

Saw this band in Somerville Ma and with a few beers and friends they were awesome. I am afriad this is a case of a great live band just not translating well in the studio. The songs lack energy and sound emotionally flat.
A must see live but the disc is essential only for die hard fans

4 out of 5 stars American Delta revisited.......2001-07-25

Michael Tarbox and bandmates take decades-old songs and re-invent them with a new verse, or new tempo, or whatever they choose. The sound (gravelly vocal, bluesy guitar, upright bass, fiddle) feels like it was dredged up from the ooze of the Mississippi Delta. Keep in mind though, they are from Boston! The tunes sound familar, because its the sound of America in the 1920s and 1930s. A solid debut and a great, unique sound.

5 out of 5 stars Incredible live show.......2001-07-17

When I tell people about the Tarbox Ramblers' unorthodox-sounding lineup (slide guitar, upright bass, fiddle, and inventive percussion), they're as incredulous as I first was when I saw them get up onstage. I've now seen the band twice in Newport, KY, and they get better each time I see them. This time, we made sure they came out for at least one more song (they were the opening act), and they returned to perform a blistering version of "Ain't No Grave Gonna Hold My Body Down." While the CD is absolutely incredible (and, in my case, signed by the band), they need to be seen live to be fully appreciated. I'm heading down to hear them whenever they're in town.
A Fix Back East
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • AMG Review of "A Fix Back East"
  • A Masterpiece
  • An Explosive Masterpiece
  • Second-rate No. Miss. All-Stars
  • Amazing
A Fix Back East
Tarbox Ramblers
Manufacturer: Rounder / Umgd
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Blues | Styles | Music
Alt-Country & AmericanaAlt-Country & Americana | Country | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
Rounder RecordsRounder Records | Specialty Stores | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Tarbox Ramblers
  2. Big Lonesome Radio
  3. Live at Massey Hall 1971
  4. Traveling Wilburys (2CD/1DVD, Deluxe Edition)
  5. The Watchman: A Joe Pike Novel

ASIN: B0000WN0XW
Release Date: 2004-01-27

Tracks:

  1. Already Gone
  2. Were You There?
  3. Country Blues
  4. A Fix Back East
  5. No Night There
  6. Honey Babe
  7. Cloth Of Gold
  8. The Shining Sun
  9. From The Algiers Station
  10. Last Month Of The Year
  11. Ashes To Ashes

Amazon.com

This Cambridge, Massachusetts-based foursome picked up some of the Delta's dirt and dark mystery when they traveled to Memphis to make this album, their second, with legendary Southern producer Jim Dickinson. Some tunes, like "The Shining Sun" and a cover of Dock Boggs's "Country Blues," stomp as hard as a bona fide juke-joint band, with bold drumming and guitars that grind and squeal out ecstatic slide lines. Others, like "Ashes to Ashes" and "Were You There?," use droning chords, simple beats, religious imagery, generous reverb, and leader Michael Tarbox's dark vocal intonations to create mist-shrouded soundscapes that raise the music's old spirits. There's also Dan Kellar's jazz-influenced fiddle, which adds a lonesome, crying voice to the title track and other cuts and, along with Johnny Sciascia's two-step upright bass, propels the hymn "No Night There" toward Nashville. All of which makes this strong album a haunting, stomping blend of tradition and the cutting edge. --Ted Drozdowski

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars AMG Review of "A Fix Back East".......2004-06-10

Hey everyone,

I just came across this review of the new Tarbox CD and thought I'd share it. It's from the All Music Guide, and is the best description of "A Fix Back East" I've read.
--------------------------------------------------

Four years ago, when the Tarbox Ramblers introduced their train wreck of swamp blues, hillbilly, gospel, and woolly folk, the North Mississippi Allstars, Black Keys, Fiery Furnaces, or that Detroit band with the funny clothes, weren't even blips on the screen. Now they're the competition. It's OK, it's a big world, and with A Fix Back East, the Tarbox Ramblers go down into the deep reaches of their frontman's collective American Gothic psyche, and dredge up the ghosts, the faded photographs, the myths and texts of a time that may never have existed in the popular consciousness. This is a much wilder record; yet its very rawness contains starkly beautiful textures that are drenched in sepia-toned images, and black and white newsreels from the focal point of the ravaged human heart. The album opens with a huge, R.L. Burnside-styled barroom record machine groove. Using the riff from "Honey Hush," and warping it all to hell, Michael Tarbox indulges his iconographic marriage of rural loneliness, backwater holiness, and steaming sex, which, immediately after is dragged through a drunkenly redemptive version of "Were You There (When They Crucified My Lord?)" where violins, electric guitars, and echoing drums from time immemorial try to match the grief and longing in Tarbox's convicted voice. But it's right back to hell in the band's caveman read of Dock Boggs' "Country Blues," with a roiling slide guitar all nasty and distorted, like it was calling from the devil's playground. And this is where it all starts. From the elegiac loss and shimmer of the title track, to the backwoods two-step of the American traditional song, "No Night There," to the murderous gutter blues of "Honey Babe," this is a slash and burn affair that holds it secrets close, and offers its dirty treasures abundantly and regally -- if the parades in Robert Frank's The Americans are your idea of majesty. Produced by Jim Dickinson, Paul Q. Kolderie, and Sean Slade, this is the banshee's howl after all the liquor is gone; it's the drunken, lascivious, preacher's moan when he's still in the whorehouse at seven a.m. on Sunday morning; a dying bluesman's final snarl at a world that's left him empty and broke, and a brokenhearted cowboy's last lament -- all rolled into one. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

5 out of 5 stars A Masterpiece.......2004-05-08

By turns brooding, dreamy and explosive, "A Fix Back East" clearly draws on traditional music as a source of inspiration. But there's something else going on here that makes this album completely unique. Drenched in blues, these tracks have a noirish sensibility, akin in some ways to Wm. Burroughs's novel "Naked Lunch," Dassin's glorious "Night in the City," and landmark recordings like "White Light/White Heat" and "Tonight's the Night."

The comparison to books and movies, as well as to other CDs, is intentional: each of these cuts unfolds slowly, with the sprawling cinematic quality that's found throughout the album. And bandleader Michael Tarbox is a gifted songwriter, with verse after shimmering verse conveying an otherworldly sense of strangeness with compelling, at times anguished, immediacy. A few examples:

"Through the yawning railyard hear the lonesome brakeman cuss
And Jesus redeemer calling back through the dust;"
(Already Gone)

"Night falls, memory returns, I trace each hour that's passed
Forsaken loves call my name and claim me as their own at last...
Outside the air is sweet, the water so still, Honeysuckle's on the vine
People say there's a heaven somewhere, I know I'll make it mine."
(A Fix Back East)

Other favorites on "A Fix Back East" are the haunted, yearning "Were You There?" and the jarring "Ashes to Ashes," which combines lyrical precision with a loose, seemingly improvised performance featuring some of the album's most powerful - and ominous - guitar playing. Tarbox also pays homage to his influences with his take of Dock Boggs's "Country Blues." It's a raucous guitar/drum assault featuring some of the darkest, and best, slide playing you'll hear anywhere.

I first learned about Tarbox Ramblers, and their new album, when I came across a description of its "grimy, thrilling noise" - an opinion I second. This raw, urgent CD will strike a chord with listeners who favor intensity and who are looking for something new.

5 out of 5 stars An Explosive Masterpiece.......2004-03-31

By turns brooding, dreamy and explosive, "A Fix Back East" clearly draws on traditional music as a source of inspiration. But there's something else going on here that makes this album completely unique. Drenched in blues, these tracks have a noirish sensibility, akin in some ways Wm. Burroughs's novel "Naked Lunch," Dassin's "Night in the City," and landmark recordings like "White Light/White Heat" and "Tonight's the Night."

The comparison to books and movies, as well as to other CDs, is intentional: each of these cuts unfolds slowly, with a sprawling cinematic quality that's found throughout the album. And bandleader Michael Tarbox is a killer songwriter, with verse after shimmering verse conveying an otherworldly sense of strangeness with compelling, at times anguished, immediacy. A few examples:

"Through the yawning railyard hear the lonesome brakeman cuss
And Jesus redeemer calling back through the dust;"
(Already Gone)

"Night falls, memory returns, I trace each hour that's passed
Forsaken loves call my name and claim me as their own at last...
Outside the air is sweet, the water so still, Honeysuckle's on the vine
People say there's a heaven somewhere, I know I'll make it mine."
(A Fix Back East)

Other favorites on "A Fix Back East" are the haunted, yearning "Were You There?" and the jarring "Ashes to Ashes," which combines lyrical precision with a loose, seemingly improvised performance featuring some of the album's most powerful - and ominous - guitar playing. Tarbox also pays homage to his influences with his take of Dock Boggs's "Country Blues." It's a raucous guitar/drum assault featuring some of the meanest slide playing you'll hear anywhere.

I first learned about Tarbox Ramblers, and their new album, when I came across a description of its "grimy, thrilling noise" - an opinion I second. This raw, urgent CD will strike a chord with listeners who favor intensity and who are looking for something new.

2 out of 5 stars Second-rate No. Miss. All-Stars.......2004-03-18

Despite being produced by the legendary Jim Dickinson--father to the brothers who lead the North Mississippi All-Stars--this CD is as disappointingly tiresome/enervating as the first Tarbox CD. The hype is overdone, folks.
I admire the apparent intent (to update the country blues a la the North Mississippi All-Stars, but with more "depth" and "art"), but cannot applaud the mostly annoying results.

5 out of 5 stars Amazing.......2004-03-15

A new Blues Must!! I was listing to a "blues Sunday" on a local station today and in between some old Led Zep and Clapton came this jewel. I have their first album and was blown away by the second. Great Job Tar Box!!!
Rounder Records 2000 Sampler
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Rounder Records 2000 Sampler
    Joe Ely , Jimmie Dale Gilmore , Slaid Cleaves , Tish Hinojosa , Tarbox Ramblers , Juliana Hatfield , Irma Thomas , Nathan and the Zydeco Cha Chas , Sax Gordon , and Rhonda Vincent
    Manufacturer: Rounder
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    Indie RockIndie Rock | Indie & Lo-Fi | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    Rounder RecordsRounder Records | Specialty Stores | Music
    ASIN: B000M9GILO

    Product Description

    1. Jules Shear - Hard Enough 2. Juliana Hatfield - Somebody in Waiting for Me 3. Merrie Amsterburg - Radio 4. The Nields - Mr. Right Now 5. Tish Hinojosa - Hey Little Love 7. Slaid Cleaves - Key Chain 8. Jimmie Dale Gilmore - No Lonesome Tune 9. Joe Ely - all Just To Get To You 10. Tarbox Ramblers - Oh Death 11. Smokin Joe Kubek featuring B'nois King - Lay it On Me Leona 12. Candye Kane - Toughest Girl Alive 13. Irma Thomas - If You Want It, Come and get It 14. Nathan and the Zydeco Cha Chas - Can't Get Nuthin' sucka 15. Sax Gordon - Speed Rack 16. Claude Williams - The Preacher 17. Rhonda Vincent - You're in My Heart 18. Claire Lynch - Missionary Ridge 19. Everton Blender - Kanta

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