Rusty Wier - Stacked Deck (Reissue) (1977/2017)
Artist: Rusty Wier
Title: Stacked Deck
Year Of Release: 1977/2017
Label: Columbia Nashville Legacy
Genre: Rock, Blues, Country, Soul
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 36:09
Total Size: 97/267 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Stacked Deck
Year Of Release: 1977/2017
Label: Columbia Nashville Legacy
Genre: Rock, Blues, Country, Soul
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 36:09
Total Size: 97/267 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Walkin' Thru New Orleans
02. Sundown Sally
03. Good, Good Lovin'
04. Black Queen
05. Midnight Angel
06. Black Molly Blues
07. Think About It
08. Burned
09. Lola
10. Don't Let Me Down Again
Line-up:
Bass – Bob Glaub, George Rary
Drums – Jimmy Marriot, Mike Baird
Guitar – Leonard Arnold, Waddy Wachtel
Guitar, Vocals – Todd Potter
Keyboards – Shane Kiester
Percussion – Steve Forman
Piano – Kim Snider
Producer, Keyboards – Glen Spreen
Vocals – Addie Clement, Brenda Briant, Patrisha Smith, Venetta Fields
Vocals, Guitar – Rusty Wier
Stacked Deck, the 1977 follow-up to Rusty Wier's classic Black Hat Saloon, is one of the finest records of his career, and one of the most surreal. Leaving Nash Vegas completely out of the picture this time, Stacked Deck was recorded entirely in California. It is a dirtier, funkier affair than Black Hat, which has at its root the city of New Orleans as its inspiration... The opener, "Walkin' Through New Orleans," though it sounds like it could have been written by Dr. John, is actually Wier with a couple of collaborators. It uses the second-line rhythm and standard, strolling R&B feel that Dr. John employs as a pianist and arranger. On the very next track, "Sundown Sally," even with the Crescent City serving once again as its backdrop, there seems to be a conscious effort to evoke the gritty funkiness of Tony Joe White, though it's far too slick to capture the same swampiness. There's another change-up with the soulful, R&B-tinged "Good Good Lovin'," with its bluesy, velvety-smooth sheen and production; it makes Wier sound (almost) like he's not southern and was looking for the Northern soul feel of Chicago or Detroit with a NO rhythm track. The album gets grittier from there with some confusing moments thrown in, like the Thin Lizzy-styled twin lead guitar lines on "Midnight Angel," before it gives way and gets all muddy and funky. Stacked Deck has very few lulls in the action ¿ it moves, grooves, slips, slithers, and snakes its way through all ten tracks and by the end it feels like the Meters met Wier and the L.A. studio mafia and got rough and tumble in the alley ¿ after a good bout of drunkenness. Along with Black Hat Saloon, this album sounds as weird and innovative ¿ with its fusion of styles, songwriting skills, and production techniques ¿ as it did in the mid-'70s.