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Thursday, July 27, 2017

Russ Still and the Moonshiners - Still Cookin' (2017)




Written by Aaron Ellis, posted by blog admin

It’s evident from the first minute of lead-in number “Promised Land” that Russ Still and the Moonshiners have arrived to rock you.  The guitar based swagger collides into plucky bass playing, pocket time-keeping, excellent lead/harmony vocals and a very lively bounce that could see the band conquering a Charlie Daniels’ Family Jam or the toughest biker bar in town.  Ok, they aren’t a full on hard rock band but Russ Still and his troops have enough riffs to put them at ease on any bill they happen to land on. 

The album slinks into ballad mode during the early moments of “Long Way from Home,” with the acoustic guitar setting the stage.  Utilizing varied songwriting, the band progresses the song into an electric 2-step with plenty of boogie artillery to keep your eardrums constantly engaged.  “Glorine’s” is where chorale style country harmonies merge with swinging rock n’ roll chops, the guitars dealing out hands of tasty licks amongst all the aces of spades.  It’s very much the old outlaw country sound crossing over into guitar rock turf; sounding positively adept at both sides of the coin flip.  Every good southern album with an electric guitar bent usually has a vast number with multiple crescendos that flirt with rise/fall dynamics and Still Cookin’ is no different thanks to “I Can’t” and its acoustic prowl going into dramatic rock n’ roll fervor as it comes to a close. 

If the first half of the album is varied and eclectic, the second half sees the band settling into a groove and sticking with it.  This segment is nearly completely country rock oriented with only “10, 000 Ways” breaking up the action in sweeps of acoustic guitar, grand vocal harmonies, slow dance rhythms and electric guitar action added in just the right spots for color.  The remaining tracks range from up-tempo grooves that go full bore with the catchy vocal interplay like “Goin’ Fishin’,” “Juanita” and “Run Away,” to the backwoods snarl of “Workin’ Class Hunter’s” heftier guitar meat and stomping rhythms.  All in all, Still Cookin’ is a darn good country/hard rock album that is neither too hard, nor too country.  It falls into some sameness here and there but even that doesn’t really bring down the quality of the material, which is always above par and in several instances truly outright excellent. 

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