Twenty seven years after it was compiled, the apocryphal Stompin' Room
Only is finally released. The album, which suffers only from being the
seam album between Marshall Tucker's tenures at Capricorn and Warner Bros,
was recorded during the European tour in support of Carolina Dreams. Here
are 11 tracks by the original band -- with guests on a few -- with two
cuts from a Milwaukee 1974 show tacked on for good measure. This is Marshall
Tucker as they have never been heard on record. Like the Allmans, the
Tuckers were all about seamlessly expanding from one musical form into
another. Whereas studio versions of "Can't You See," "Take
the Highway," "Ramblin'," and "24 Hours at a time,"
would weave elements of jazz, blues, honky tonk, gospel, and Appalachian
folk music into the body of a song, on these extended jamming excursions
they fully indulged their passions, winding in and out of genres without
seams or sudden shifts. On an elongated cover of B.B. King's signature
tune, "The Thrill Is Gone," with a number of guests including
Dickey Betts and Charlie Daniels (making for a four-guitar front line!)
as well as Jimmy Hall and Chuck Leavell, Chicago blues, jazz, and country
are all enmeshed simultaneously, as the hidden nuances in the song come
to the fore. On the gloriously long "24 Hours at a Time," Tom
Caldwell's bass moves through the various jazz eras as Daniels fiddles
his ass off to keep time with Toy Caldwell's knotty, razor-wire leads.
And for those fans of the Marshal Tucker Band whose gauge is the song,
"Can't You See," there isn't a better one on record or bootleg
that's better than this one. With its shuffling, funky backbeat, and Toy
Caldwell's impassioned vocal leading the charge to his burning solos,
it literally send chills up the spine. This is one of the few cases where
a found "lost" recording lives up its legend.
(by Thom Jurek, All
Music Guide)
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