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Nitro Burnin' Funny Daddy
Nitro Burnin' Funny Daddy

Nitro Burnin' Funny Daddy in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $22.99
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After retreating to his
big-band
persona for 2002's
Boogie Woogie Christmas
,
Setzer
drops the horns for a leaner, more eclectic sound on this 2003 release. There is straight-ahead
doo wop
(
"To Be Loved"
features
a cappella
vocals with softly strummed guitar and could have come off a
Persuasions
album),
bluegrass
shows off his banjo skills on
"When the Bells Don't Chime,"
one of two versions of that song), '50s-style slow dance
R&B
"That Someone Just Ain't You"
), and of course
rockabilly
(the instrumental
"Rat Pack Boogie"
sounds as if it were written with the loungy
big band
in mind and
"Ring, Ring, Ring"
seems like a
"Stray Cats"
outtake). This is also the hardest-rocking
album since his mid-'80s work, as he turns the volume up on rootsy
guitar rockers
like
"Don't Trust a Woman (In a Black Cadillac)"
and the bluesy
ZZ Top
-styled scorching leadoff track,
"Sixty Years."
sounds great throughout and little seems forced or calculated. Lyrically he stumbles occasionally, especially on
"Sixty Years"
as he lambasts the corruption of big money, hardly a unique take on the topic. He also sounds unduly angry on
"Drink Whiskey and Shut Up,"
a song that could have been grabbed off a
Reverend Horton Heat
album.
's guitar is rightly prominent in the mix. He displays his classic, echoed '50s style and nimble fingers, in particular on the jumpy
"Smokin' 'n Burnin'."
He even shifts into
Ennio Morricone
territory on a windswept Wild West
ballad
"Wild Wind,"
an evocative, cinematic piece that means well but tries too hard to be
"The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance"
and comes up short. Regardless, this is an enjoyable and extremely varied listen from an artist in his prime who proves that he's far from a one-trick pony. Those who have followed
from his early days will especially appreciate its diversity. ~ Hal Horowitz
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