Music Review: JJ Grey and Mofro - Country Ghetto

Part of: New Indie CDs

Mofro's sizzling new CD - their first on Alligator Records - goes deep-fried with a panful of swampy blues and Stax-Volt soul. JJ Grey's direct, concise songwriting has sharpened, while the band's incantatory live shows translate better to disc here than on past recordings. The triumphant result strengthens Mofro's position as the most important rock force to come out of the deep South in a while - maybe since Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.

Many bands think they can make magical songs out of repetitive grooves; few can. But Mofro comes out swinging with the mid-tempo rocker "War." Muscling through any and all distractions with its borrowed 1960s sounds, it pounds out a twenty-first century message: "There's a war going on⁄And the ones about to die are safe at home⁄There's a war going on⁄And the world stops feeling now." Grey doesn't have to preach about the destruction of the environment and the degradation of a people's soul, however much those issues may weigh on him. It's all there in a plain image and a single insistent riff.

The intensity actually mounts with a shift to a more personal theme in the deliberately paced "Circles." Pushed along by Grey's rolling electric piano, the song builds to a chorus that hangs on one desperately tense, off-rhythm, one-note melody: "There's no way I can change the past or your pain⁄I don't want to fight walking in circles." The bitter narrator of the title track doesn't want any handouts or "Hollywood words"; "The only voice that speaks for me speaks from this clay." And the slow-building, persistent guitar and harmonica almost sound like clay.

The delusional, drug-addled figure in "Tragic" ("Are those FBI agents still hiding in his pine trees?") isn't so different from the protagonist of "By My Side," where Grey uses his most powerfully soulful singing to declare humbly, "Now you know just how feeble/and how weak a man can be." The slow, tribal-sounding "On Palastine" - about rapacious, early twentieth century timber barons - evokes a violent past with place names and earthen imagery, musically akin to Peter Matthiessen's Florida novels. The mostly instrumental "Footsteps" is like a lost Doors jam with shades of Fleetwood Mac.

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Article Author: Jon Sobel

Jon Sobel is Blogcritics' Culture and Theater Editor. In addition to reviewing NYC theater, he writes a semi-regular round-up of independent music releases. By day he is a computer professional and a freelance writer and editor, and at night he's a …

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Article comments

  • 1 - Nolan Teter

    Feb 25, 2007 at 10:15 pm

    Thank you for this insightful review of this amazing, down to earth band's new cd. I had the good fortune of meeting Mr. Grey very briefly before a show in Miami and he was gracious, genuine and friendly. I saw them perform in Fort Lauderdale last year and they played Destiny's Child's "Survivor" and it was the most powerful performance I have ever seen (and I once saw The Clash from the front row). Wouldn't it be a wonderful world if there was a radio station that would play Mofro tunes?

  • 2 - Connie Phillips

    Feb 28, 2007 at 12:58 pm

    Congrats! This article has been forwarded to the Advance.net websites.

  • 3 - Clay

    Aug 03, 2008 at 10:41 am

    Nice stuff... well put.

    JJ Grey & Mofro have a new record hitting Aug 26, 2008. They will be touring the U.S. extensively through Nov in support of "Orange Blossoms," their 4th album. You can learn more on their website or the Mofro fansite.

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