RUSS TOLMAN : CITY LIGHTS ( BLUE ROSE )
***
Like the previously reviewed  John Wesley Harding disc Awake this latest offering from Russ Tolman employs a whole 'unstable' of talent - indeed there are more handprints on this one than that famous Hollywood sidewalk! The usual suspects rounded up under the 'Gangsta Folk' moniker are herei.e. Steve Wynn (this time production duties), Chris Von Sneidern (engineer), John Wesley Harding /Chuck Prophet playing on a track or two and even ex-Rain Parader Steven Roback contributing. With a  completely separate band including Jim Huie working a second studio session over in Portland you start to realise that it looks more like a crew  for a movie than a record! It's a tribute to Russ Tolman that the disc holds together as well as it does with the two sets of recordings gelling surprisingly well. For me the Steve Wynn produced set just shades it but the real question is does the disc as a whole stand up despite a first-eleven of Hearsay favourites being involved?


Definitely maybe or yes and no! Hence the three as opposed to four stars. Scanning Russ Tolman's  hard to locate back catalogue you'd come across a couple of mid-eighties LP's with punk-country band True West that first showed his songwriting abilities. These recordings didn't really capture the live power of the band as well as recently released bootleg The Big Boot. File next to Blood on the Saddle/Long Ryders/Jason and the Scorchers as alt.country precursors. Following the band's demise he quit San Francisco and went all Hollywood in 1986 with solo records -Totem Poles And Glory Holes and Down In Earthquake Town followed in 1990 by Goodbye Joe. This period saw him and his recordings become as elusive as a renegade trapper. You sort of knew he was out there but unless you caught sight of those Skyclad or Zippo releases, a rare performance at the Mean Fiddler or a brief mention in Bucketful of Brains as he toured Europe along with 'Gangstas' Sid Griffin, Howe Gelb, Chris Cacavas and Mr.Harding you'd be hard pressed to realise he was around at all!
What you would have missed out on are a series of fine records which start off with an almost Stooges ferocity, mix in a good part of Paisley Underground (Dream Syndicate/Long Ryders) punk and country and slowly evolve with a good bit of acoustic song-smithery! Standout songs litter these recordings like Palm Tree Land,  Murphy's Barn  and Galveston Mud. By 1990 the States had all but lost a hold on their wayward son and he almost became another relocated west-coaster trading sun for rain like pal Sid Griffin. 1992's Road Movie appeared on French label New Rose and is to my mind his best to datebarring the unheard 1994's Sweet Spot.

What we find here are more vulnerability and  gentle acoustic strummery as he revealed a romanticism emphasised by songs such as 'Sleepin' All Alone. Judged against that 1992 offering though City Lights goes even further down this route! Gone are the out and out rockers with there Wynn/Verlaine antecedents as mellow acoustic balladry wins the day. This produces two superb place-name songs in Monterey and Salinas. Both cast a spell and wouldn't disgrace an out and out country rock disc. I can almost hear Parsons and Harris singing Salinas which last appeared as a destination on Me And Bobby McGee as far as I know! Irrelevant detailing aside it is a classic and is followed by another gem in Two Drinks From Genius -yes we've all been there- that explores Nick Cave bottom of the glass territory and feels uncannily similar in vocals to Dave Graney. Sometimes the melancholy becomes overwhelming as in Losers Club and the Harding/Prophet co-write I Want Out which can turn into a rocker live but is an effective mid-tempo song here. Two 'Gangstas' come up with the goods here rather than 'supergroup' bland. Other tracks don't quite hit the mark -You Oughta See Her Drive relies heavily on cute chorus.. I'll follow you ..whilst King City has lyrics so surreal they could have dropped off Robyn Hitchcock's' pen! Second Harding/Prophet co-write She's My Alibi doesn't match up to the first whilst Your Sister has a gentle Suzanne Vega finger-picked mood. Two tracks -Building A Decent Human Being and a Steve McAvoy song Perfume On A Faded Rose are too sentimental for this listener. That leaves closer Big Ol' Wedding Party which closes the disc on a fun note! Rock and rolling like an old Sha Na Na track it sees our eternal bachelor  Russ gazing forlornly in dismay at an Altman-like wedding scene where another of the species "… finally traded his bachelor-hood for a castle and a crown". Always the bridesmaid, never the bride, Russ Tolman deserves more recognition for his song-writing skills. A sort of west coast post-punk Hoagy Carmichael back in San Francisco sauntering along under sunset and palms still looking for that elusive true love.


This review first appeared in
Hearsay Magazine