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Potato Hole
Potato Hole

Potato Hole in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $31.99
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Potato Hole
is
Booker T. Jones
' first solo album in two decades and the early buzz in the media has already termed it his most "audacious," but that's not exactly the case with this new set. It isn't audacious so much as it is moderately predictable, which isn't necessarily a bad thing. Recorded quickly with producer
Rob Schnapf
in Georgia and California,
Jones
is backed here by Athens, GA's
Drive-By Truckers
with
Neil Young
sitting in on electric guitar for nine of the ten tracks, most of which were written by
. This isn't
the MGs
, and nothing here is close to being as timeless as
"Green Onions,"
but the album is a pleasant listen with a nice, funky, and kind of grungy groove that settles into a deep pocket, even if it never really completely catches fire. There's plenty of
' Hammond B-3, of course, but he branches out and plays both acoustic and electric guitar on the title track, and with up to five guitars going on some tracks, this is almost as much an instrumental guitar album as it is an organ one. If there's really anything audacious here, it would be the cover of
Outkast
's
"Hey Ya,"
which sputters around more than it grooves, and
' B-3 lines simply can't approximate the sassy joy of
Andre 3000
's original vocal.
also covers
Tom Waits
'
"Get Behind the Mule,"
which comes off more successfully, although, again, one misses
Waits
' vocal. The final cut,
"Space City,"
is a lovely chill-out instrumental while the opening track,
"Pound It Out,"
does exactly that, pounding things out, full of fuzzed-out guitars.
Young
, for those wondering, doesn't take over anything here but remains the consummate session player, showing a delicate sensibility on guitar that one wishes he'd apply more often to his own work. Again, there's no
"Green Onions"
track here, and nothing that'll end up as everyone's ringtone.
isn't a slab of greasy
Stax
soul, either. It is what it is, a new
album, and hopefully it won't take another 20 years to get to the next one. ~ Steve Leggett
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