Swing – Duke Egbert

Swing
Compadre Records, 2003
Reviewed by Duke Egbert
Published on Sep 26, 2003

Country radio has a long history of having disposable stars;
that is, they get two or three good CDs out of an artist then toss
them for the next cleft chin with a cowboy hat or cute cleavage.
Despite most music pundits’ opinion, this isn’t a new trend; a
great deal of talented folks who owned chunks of the country
airwaves in the late eighties and early nineties have gone the way
of the dodo (anyone remember Lionel Cartwright?) Combine this with
country radio’s utter refusal to play older artists, and you have a
blasted wasteland that makes top 40 radio look intelligent.

Enter one Suzy Bogguss, who charted a total of eleven top forty
country singles between 1989 and 1994 — but because she took a
couple of years off to have a kid and a life, has only threatened
the charts once since then (and that was a number thirty-three
single in 1998). This, O Ye DV Faithful, is what is known as a damn
shame; Bogguss has an elegant, smoky, easy voice that goes down
like twelve-year-old single malt. Her latest effort,
Swing, is a lovely, rollicking, and toe-tapping piece of
country swing — and since no one will bother to play anything off
it unless hell freezes over, you should check it out.

Swing is in many ways a collaboration between Bogguss and
the lead guitarist of swing stars Asleep At The Wheel, Ray Benson.
Benson and Asleep At The Wheel provide a sonic background for
Bogguss’ heated-honey vocals. Add in five songs from Nashville
songwriter April Barrows, and you have a CD of sheer swing talent.
I’m sitting here right now, tapping my toes as I listen to it; it’s
infectious music, impossible to ignore. If I didn’t dance like such
a white boy, I might even be dancin’.

Bogguss also takes on a few classics: “Comes Love” (originally a
Billie Holliday number), Duke Ellington’s “Do Nothing ‘Till You
Hear From Me,” and Nat King Cole’s “Straighten Up And Fly Right.”
She handles them all with elegance and aplomb, especially “Comes
Love” — it’s a brilliant take on a classic. Bogguss also writes
her own music, penning one of the best things on the CD, the
shimmying “It’s Always New To Me” (with a great throbbing bass part
from Spencer Starnes).

All in all,
Swing is a wonderful CD. In a perfect world, it would be
getting airplay in every market on every country station; as it is,
those of us in the know can smile wisely and enjoy Bogguss’ talent
ourselves.

Rating: A

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