CARL PERKINS: RESTLESS: THE COLUMBIA RECORDINGS (1958-1969; 1992)
1) Pink Pedal Pushers; 2)
Rockin' Record Hop; 3) Jive After Five; 4) Just Thought I'd Call; 5) Where The
Rio De Rosa Flows; 6) Because You're Mine; 7) That's All Right Mama; 8) Pop,
Let Me Have The Car; 9) Levi Jacket (And A Long Tail Shirt); 10) Honey 'Cause I
Love You; 11) Pointed Toe Shoes; 12) L-O-V-E-V-I-L-L-E; 13) Sister Twister; 14)
Hambone; 15) All Mama's Children; 16) Just Coastin'; 17) Restless.
For more than a decade, Columbia's degree of
interest in Carl was such that they did not let him record even one proper LP (dismayed
as they were, perhaps, with the failure of Whole
Lotta Shakin', as completely predictable as it was). He did manage to keep
on putting out singles, on a rather steady basis in the late 1950s, then
dwindling down to a tiny streak in the 1960s, alternating between rockabilly
and country, but hardly showing any big interest in all the new exciting
developments in music — as this sampler, released in 1992 and containing a
highly diagnostic, if far from complete, selection of those singles, amply
shows.
The selection in question is at least a huge
improvement on the disaster of Whole
Lotta Shakin', and is far more recommendable for those who like Carl in
particular and early rock'n'roll in general. Many of the songs are
self-written, most of them are not as heavily obstructed by misguided
production, and Carl's singing and guitar playing are generally in focus.
Starting out with a new, «rockier» version of ʽPink Pedal Pushersʼ, and ending
with the title track, released in 1969 and sounding every bit as if it could
have been released in 1959 (with the possible exception of the backup singers
and their slightly more modern touch of gospel-soul) — Restless rolls along at a restless pace indeed, and will be good
clean fun for all those who just want to have fun.
Still, it seems perfectly clear to me why these
singles, nice as they are, could never hold a candle to the Sun-era classics.
All of them got Carl Perkins sort of «institutionalized» — the songs are not
trying to delve into the subconscious, but are consciously written and recorded
according to the set-in-stone rockabilly formula. Something like ʽRockin'
Record Hopʼ, even if it tries to combine a rollicking Jerry Lee Lewis-style
piano melody with a poppy, almost surf-like guitar solo to see what happens,
still remains slightly «experimental» only in form rather than in the spirit —
and most of the other songs do not have even that. The titles of the songs
speak for themselves (ʽJive After Fiveʼ, ʽPointed Toe Shoesʼ, ʽLevi Jacketʼ
etc.) — betraying them as doomed attempts to cash in on a formula that was
quickly becoming outdated; and the lyrics, moods, and melodies have little
chance of delivering the same amount of excitement as ʽBlue Suede Shoesʼ or
ʽHoney Don'tʼ. In other words, do not expect to find anything here except for
creative stagnation. This is «technically solid», «responsible» work, and I
cannot rule out that Carl himself may have been proud of some of it, but it did
not woo the public back then, and there is hardly any hope that these singles
will be regarded as «forgotten gems» any time soon.
By the early 1960s, Carl could be occasionally
budged to expand his horizons — Otis Blackwell's ʽSister Twisterʼ deals
(somewhat ironically) with you-know-what, and ʽHamboneʼ is a satirical dialog
on the perils of stardom, recorded in the style of Bo Diddley — but much of his
stuff also sounds as if he was secretly envying his more successful Sun-era pals
like Elvis and Johnny Cash. Unfortunately, he did not have the creative genius
and «social foresight» of Cash, and certainly nothing even close to the Great
Promotional Machine that was programmed for the eternal rule of The King —
trying to compete with either of these two, instead of focusing on his own
thing, was like trying to corner a tank with a wooden spear. No doubt, a
sympathetic wooden spear, worthy of a small, respectable thumbs up, but even the most diehard
Carl Perkins fan, I think, would have to eventually admit that all the
promotion in the world could not have helped this kind of material conquer it
all over again.
Check "Restless: The Columbia Recordings" (CD) on Amazon
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