Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 10/07/1992
Run Time: 34:46
In any other circumstance, that title would be hyperbole, but in the case of
the Flatlanders, it's the simple truth. Although their only commercial release during their nearly four-year existence was an eight track on the tacky
Plantation label, bandleaders
Jimmie Dale Gilmore,
Joe Ely, and
Butch Hancock went on to become pioneers in
alternative country, directly influencing bands ranging from
Uncle Tupelo to
Ely disciples
the Clash. This 1990 reissue gives that eight track a proper CD release for the first time ever (minus two weaker tracks, covers of the
country standards
"Hello Stranger" and
"Waiting for a Train"), plus four previously unreleased tracks recorded during the same March 1972 sessions.
The Flatlanders didn't fit in the least in early-'70s Nashville, both because their music is too weird (
Gilmore, a devout Hindu, contributes a song of devotion called
"Bhagavan Decreed," and non-musician
Steve Wesson contributes musical saw to the proceedings) and, frankly, too
country. Tunes like the heartbreaking
"Tonight I'm Gonna Go Downtown" have much more in common with
Lefty Frizzell and
Jimmie Rodgers than the countrypolitan glop of the era. The percussionless, all-acoustic instrumentation is akin to
traditional bluegrass, but the gentle, easygoing vibe (tempos barely even break into a trot on the entire album) are much more akin to mellow hippie
folk-rock à la
Pearls Before Swine. Every song is a small gem, with
"Downtown" and
Gilmore's career highlight,
"Dallas," being the very best of a uniformly fabulous lot. The entire '90s
alt-country movement can trace its genesis to these powerful and underappreciated songs.
~Stewart Mason, All Music Guide