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John Scofield: John Scofield: Country for Old Men
ByBill Frisell
guitar, electricb.1951
Scofield may be approaching the midpoint of his seventh decade on earth, but maintains an active touring schedule and a pretty reasonable certainty that fans can expect at least one new album every year. Still, beyond culling its material from genre that many jazz fans hate with a vengeance, that the guitarist is releasing another jazz album back-to-back with the 2016 Grammy Award-winning reunion with saxophonist

Joe Lovano
drumsb.1952

Ray Charles
piano and vocals1930 - 2004

Vince Mendoza
composer / conductorb.1961
Still, at this point in his life and career, Scofield can pretty much do as he pleases and, not unlike This Meets Thatwhich shares the same longstanding trio of longtime bassist

Steve Swallow
bassb.1940

Bill Stewart
drumsb.1966

Larry Goldings
organ, Hammond B3b.1968

James Taylor
guitar and vocalsb.1948
Rather than divide up his many interests, however, on Country for Old Men Scofield brings many of them together under one umbrella even more successfully than This Meets That, where the same core trio of Swallow and Stewart was augmented by a four-piece brass and reed section on a set of largely Scofield originals, a horn-heavy, rockin' but surprisingly re-harmonized look at the

The Rolling Stones
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1962
Scofield opens Country for Old Men with a relatively down-the-middle rendition of the gospel-tinged George Jones/Darrell Edwards/Herbie Treece song "Mr.Fool" (a single that can be found on recently expanded reissues of Jones' 1959 album, Country Church Time). One of the best, most immediately evident aspects to his playing here and throughout the recordas was also true with Past Presentis his decision to forego the bevy of effects that often expand his tonal palette with Medeski, Scofield, Martin & Wood, his ?berjam Band, his earlier fusion efforts and more recent special projects.
Not that there's anything wrong with effects, and Scofield has, over the decades, certainly evolved a distinctly personal approach that sends his playing on albums like 2015's Sco-Mule (Evil Teen)a long overdue document of one of two 1999 encounters with

Gov't Mule
band / ensemble / orchestra
Warren Haynes
guitarb.1960

Ben Street
bassThings change quickly, however, when a completely unexpected look at "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" follows "Mr. Fool." Bolstered by Swallow's high-velocity, walking bass lines, Stewart's lithe, thoroughly interactive kit work and Goldings' otherworldly textured Hammond organ, Hank Williams' familiar melody may be instantly recognizable but beyond that, Scofield's group fires on all cylinders, as the guitarist takes a motif-driven solo filled with the kind of inside/outside movement that other guitarists may employ, but never with Sco's effortless combination of fluid phrasing and, again, perfect timing, as he engages empathically with his band mates at a mitochondrial level honed across two-plus decades of working together. Goldings' solo is a masterclass in pulling a wealth of colors from the Leslie-amplified instrument, but it may be his accompaniment behind Scofield that's most impressive...at least, on this track.
Fans of the Grateful Dead's Bob Weir and his interpretation of "Mama Tried" will be taken aback by this quartet's reading of Merle Haggard's evergreen tune, as Scofield and his partners dispense with the theme quickly and open up into another fervently swinging interpretation. This time Goldings is on piano and, alongside Scofield, gets more space for his solo; his highest profile gig has been, in recent years, as musical director and keyboardist for James Taylor (rendering "Bartender Blues" all the more relevant); but as has been the case with a singer/songwriter who regularly draws upon musicians with jazz in their DNA (the gone-too-soon

Don Grolnick
piano1947 - 1996

Carlos Vega
saxophone, tenor
Michael Landau
guitar
Jimmy Johnson
bassb.1930

Steve Gadd
drumsb.1945
Scofield takes Dolly Parton's "Jolene"the hit title track to her 1973 album that was ranked #217 on Rolling Stone's "500 Greatest Songs of All Time" list in 2004and turns it into a simmering 6/8 reading that, with Goldings' fourths-based pianism, Stewart's

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004
Since his career took particular flight after his mid-'80s tenure with

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
And, beyond the lyrical, country-tinged ballads and fiery swingers, Country for Old Men saves its biggest surprises for its final minutes: a version of the traditional "Red River Valley" that opens as the closest thing to rock 'n' roll as can be found on the record, with Goldings delivering the familiar theme on Hammond but, before long, shifting to a bright, ambling swing for Scofield's solo on what ultimately becomes the most mainstream song of the set.
After a gentle look at Shania Twain and John Robert Lange's "You're Still the One"the Canadian country singer's first song to break the top ten on Billboard's Hot 100, peaking at #2Scofield closes the hour-long career milestone of Country for Old Men all on his own, contributing a thirty-second version of Johnny Mercer's "I'm an Old Cowhand," played on ukulele and produced, intentionally, lower-fi and with the sound of scratched vinyl blended in. It's a curious but somehow perfect closer to an album which suggests that not only does Scofieldplaying better than he ever hashave plenty of surprises still up his sleeve, but that he may well be moving in a direction where the myriad of music he loves is now all fair game, all while still remaining firmly in the jazz sphere.
Only time will tell. ">
Track Listing
Mr Fool ; I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry; Bartender's Blues; Wildwood Flower; Wayfaring Stranger; Mama Tried; Jolene; Faded Love; Just a Girl I Used to Know; Red River Valley; You're Still the One; I'm an Old Cowhand.
Personnel
John Scofield
guitarJohn Scofield: chitarra, ukulele; Steve Swallow: basso; Larry Goldings: piano, Hammond; Bill Stewart: batteria.
Album information
Title: Country for Old Men | Year Released: 2016 | Record Label: Impulse!
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