ROY ROGERS
Slideways
(Evidence)
US release date: 26 March 2002
UK release date: available as import
by Barbara Flaska
PopMatters Associate Music Editor
:. e-mail this article
:. print this article
:. comment on this article

Roy . . . Boy! Here he is about to put out a brand new record, and this recalcitrant is just now getting around to reviewing his last one. I'm sorry to all real slide guitar junkies, but you've probably already heard this and know how good this is. I played it a lot, I really did. I put this CD in my car player and decided to take a little mosey, and soon I was winding through the very mountain ranges where Rogers was born. And I suspect I know where he got his inspiration, because all you have to do is careen for thousands of precipitous miles around the switchbacks, swing around the curves, and then power straight on through the slide zones. And that's how some musicians kick in to a piece of music, they edge in slideways.

For those who don't know, Roy Rogers is a master of technique when it comes to all things slide. If he was ever a show off, like the kind of kid who jumps off the steel bridge into the fast moving icy mountain river far, far below, that's Roy on this record. Or maybe more like the other kid, who strung a lumberjack's steel cable and log pully hook far up the steep hillside and across the river. All to travel at increasing acceleration before dropping off to knife into a deep section. This sounds a little dangerous.

Slideways is a captivating selection of instrumental grooves, all composed by Rogers, all with many fine shadings, and nothing if not innovative. While slide guitar may have been invented to imitate the human voice, here you listen only to the voice of the slide. Lots of polished, smooth sustain and a heavy touch when the long slow notes call for it. Every conceivable technique is here, from the slash to the quiver, to the bouncing staccato notes. From the heavy metal attack to the sexy quaver, Rogers is floating, jumping, and diving with graceful finesse. There are timely buzzes, rattles, and squeals just like when I walked into that rattlesnake on the trail last week. This guy sounds a little dangerous.

"Avalanche" gets things rocking big, a sweaty fast-moving and wild sonic landscape alive with surprising and unpredictable frenzied movement. Every piece has an individual mood and familiar geography all etched in well-articulated steel. From the slightly sinister mystery of "Razor's Edge" to the bouncing "Duckwalk", a tribute to Mr. Charles Berry, and on into steamier sounds of "Swamp Dream" and "Gumbo Funk". Drums are pounded by Scotty Mathews, harmonica by Norton Buffalo, and more good surprises than almost any heart can stand.

Rogers also invited the recognized master of second-line drumming, the one who originally powered the Meters, to stamp some syncopation into several tunes. Here, Zigaboo Modeliste links his percussion with Roger's playing, and together they create the strut and joyful springiness of "Crescent Steps", an aural delight that can put you in the mood for going just about anywhere. And, if that weren't unbelievable enough, Rogers got Freddie Roulette into the studio for several tracks. Listen to Roulette's brilliant lapslide, creating tonal backdrops before unrolling a dazzling landscape with his inimitable solos on "No Destination". The mood of the whole piece combines into that sense of unbelievable freedom, an easy-going feeling of no particular place to go.

Slideways, Roger's first all-instrumental album, is a good place to start if you want to hear some of the most creative electric slide guitar. Though I'm willing to bet that won't be the stopping place because you'll just want to sample more of Roy Rogers and his amazing technical prowess. That means soaking up some more with his older catalog, like Slidewinder or Slide Zone, until Roots of Our Nature, that's his next one, comes out.

— 17 September 2002

TODAY ON POPMATTERS
Columns | recent
Queer, Isn't It?: The People at the Airport Took it Well
Hapa Nation: A ‘Loving’ Memorial
Events | recent | archive
:. Geoff Muldaur — 27.April.08: Cedar Rapids, IA
Film | recent | archive
:. The Fall
Books | recent | archive
:. Being Armani: A Biography by Renata Molho
:. The Finder by Colin Harrison

RECENT MUSIC
In bold are PopMatters Picks, the best in new music.
CD REVIEWS
Abe Duque
be your own PET
Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys
The Bottle Rockets
The Brand New Heavies
Camille
Johnny Cash
Slaid Cleaves
Elvis Costello & Allen Toussaint
Cut Chemist
Dabrye
Miles Davis
Daedelus
Dinosaur Jr.
Dr. Octagon
Alejandro Escovedo
Fatboy Slim
Four Tet
The Handsome Family
Matthew Herbert
India.Arie
Ise Lyfe
Jefferson Airplane
Kaada
Keane
Lord Jamar
Mission of Burma
Mr. Lif
Mojave 3
Allison Moorer
Paul Oakenfold
Oneida
Grant-Lee Phillips
Priestess
The Procussions
Corinne Bailey Rae
Ramblin' Jack Elliott
Rhymefest
Julie Roberts
Diana Ross
7L & Esoteric
Alice Smith
Snow Patrol
Sonic Youth
Soul Asylum
Sound Team
Regina Spektor
Sufjan Stevens
Matthew Sweet
Vetiver
Rhonda Vincent
Wa-Zimba
Thom Yorke

EVENT REVIEWS
Baby Dayliner
The BellRays
Brookville
Cat Power
The Clientele + Great Lakes
The Coup + T-Kash
Mike Doughty Band
Download Festival 2006
Fiery Furnaces + Man Man
The Futureheads
The Handsome Family
High Sierra Music Festival
Billy Idol
Joi
Bettye Lavette
Love Parade
Nine Inch Nails + Bauhaus
Pretenders
Sonic Youth
Splendour in the Grass 2006
The Streets
Sunset Rubdown

 
advertising | about | contributors | submissions
© 1999-2008 PopMatters.com. All rights reserved.
PopMatters.com™ and PopMatters™ are trademarks of PopMatters Media, Inc. and PopMatters Magazine.