Published on May 16, 2006
T-Bone Burnett is one of those names you know you
should know from somewhere on some album in some time. In the case
of The True False Identity, you may have known and forgot;
it’s T-Bone’s first offering as a singer/songwriter since 1992.
Burnett has kept plenty busy during his hiatus,
snagging four Grammies for his work composing and arranging the
massively successful O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack
back in 2002. He produced exceptional LPs for the likes of Elvis
Costello, Counting Crows, The Wallflowers and young rootsy crooner
Gillian Welch in the 90s.
Yeah, now you know you knew him from somewhere.
T-Bone also played guitar on Bob Dylan’s legendary Rolling Thunder
Revue of the mid-1970s before founding the Alpha Band with some
tour mates. True False actually strikes a similarity to
Dylan’s late-career recorded-in-a-tin-can classic Time Out Of
Mind. It’s dripping with multi-layered, watery stomps and
stream-of-consciousness stanzas that evoke 1950s AM radio nostalgia
inspired by Highway 61.
The lyrics won’t change any lives, though: “If I
could only see through glass / I would know what has come to pass /
I wouldn’t hurry, but I’d get there fast / What’s last is first,
what’s first is last” Burnett recites on “Every Time I Feel The
Shift.” There’s more fun with clichés on the opening verse
of “Fear Country:” “The cat’s out of the bag and it ain’t going
back / Your plan has hit a snag, it has fallen off the track.”
But, the listener is rewarded with superior
musicianship and carefully produced backing tracks throughout.
True False is a spiritual volume, with a soul
that emerges in choral refrains and foot-stomping rhythms held in
place by jug band aesthetics. There’s plenty of electricity too,
though, best represented in the slow faux-reggae crawl of opener
“Zombieland,” the riffy sludge of “Blinded By The Darkness,” or the
funky, Beck-like intro to “Palestine, Texas.”
An acoustic-leaning intermission at the halfway point
blends the folky “I’m Going On A Long Journey Never To Return,”
with the skilled picking behind “A Poem Of The Evening: Hollywood,
Mecca Of The Movies” rather nicely. The rootsy stroll of “There
Would Be Hell To Pay” and Orbinson-esque pop of “Baby Don’t Say You
Love Me” round out the album’s better tunes.
What’s truly remarkable about True False is
the large and varied influences behind the sound and Burnett’s
skillfully cohesive presentation. It ranks high in the “first album
in 10+ years” category and seems a good introduction to Burnett’s
work on both sides of the studio glass.