Rock & Roll Joe: A Tribute to the Unsung Heroes of Rock & Roll is the opening salvo in a multi-faceted project by Grammy-winning songwriter
Chip Taylor and friends to right some of history's wrongs. While traveling through Norway and Sweden with his backing band -- guitarist
John Platania, fiddler
Kendel Carson, drummer
Bryan Owings, and bass player
Ron Eoff -- the group held long discussions about some of the important men and women who influenced rock & roll and who never got their due. Together, they conceived of a website where musicians and others could share their recollections of these players and singers. This album collects
Taylor's own songs from various eras -- which discuss in various ways nostalgia, historical reflections, and some truly arcane memories -- some of which have little more than tangential connections to the album's title. It's a confusing collection with some decent tracks, not the least of which is "Monica (These Fingers Move for You)," which is based around the unused riff
Platania wrote for
Van Morrison's "Domino." (He wrote the one that
was used, as well.) It features
Carson's killer backing vocals (she's easily the best singer on this date and her fiddle adds more than backing on this disc). "Sugar Sugaree" is based on the
Taylor-
Jerry Ragavoy tune "Try (Just a Little Bit Harder)" for
Janis Joplin. It has a vamp that comes right out of the middle, but with shuffling country rockabilly added to turn it into something else.
The Hollies' hit "I Can't Let Go" was written by
Taylor and
Al Gorgoni in the middle of the '60s, and also scored for
Linda Ronstadt a decade-and-a-half later. That said, this version adds nothing to the previous two. "The Van Song" is a comical country waltz about
Platania being increasingly called upon to tour by
Morrison in recent years. The rest of these 16 songs are a sloppy assortment of insider observations about their heroes, experiences, and the pitfalls of the business. Only the title, which namechecks everybody from
Mickey Baker and
Hank Garland to
Charles Mingus (!) has anything to do with "unsung" heroes. In fact, the liner notes, which contain short essays by
Bill Frisell,
Greg Leisz,
Platania, and
Donnie Fritts (which are of the type that will apparently be featured on the website) have more to do with the album's topics than the songs do. For hardcore
Taylor fans only.
–
Thom Jurek, Rovi