Tribal

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (59 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 58:33

eMusic Review

Avatar Image
Richard Gehr

eMusic Contributor

Richard Gehr has been writing about international music -- and many other things -- for more than two decades. After moving to Los Angeles from Portland, OR, vi...more »

08.03.10
A greasy, grimy, gritty example of the Southern gothic sublime
2010 | Label: 429 Records

Dr. John (aka Mac Rebennack) comes full circle on Tribal, fusing the New Orleans voodoo funk of his brilliant 1968 debut, Gris-Gris, with the pissed-off political provocations of his 2008 post-Katrina manifesto, The City That Care Forgot. Tribal also offers a grooving sampler of Crescent City sounds, especially in its particularly tasty top half. Something subtly surprising starts to happen four songs in: Beginning with R&B legend Allen Toussaint's new "Change of Heart" and culminating in "Manoovas," Rebennack uses four cranky-yet-funky love songs, all perhaps inspired by a single "hard-kicking bee-otch," to reflect the spiritual world's spin on everyday life in his neck of Louisiana. Rebennack muses just as pungently on current events, too. "Big Gap," measures that "mighty big gap between the rich and the poor," while "Only in Amerika" (with that klaxon of a K) questions Louisiana's record-setting prison population. And "Whut's Wit Dat," possibly the funkiest song about nutrition ever tracked, begins with the sobering observation that, "If you're eatin' white bread, you're walkin' with the dead." Dr. John plays both organ and piano throughout Tribal, giving it a meat-and-potatoes gospel push. But the album's real marvel is, as usual, that amazing voice, a greasy, grimy,… read more »

Write a Review5 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

dr . john tribal

emusic-0126098d

i have been a fan of dr john for many years. he is truly an amazing performer and his new orleans roots cannot be dismissed, but this cd, like so many of his other releases is quite dissapointing. its a gumbo that just taste's bad. cj

user avatar

Some good with the so-so

boon52

The good Dr. still hasn't impressed me as much as Gumo and In The Right Place but this recording has some nice elements. I prefer he stay away from the political tunes and focus on his funky, organ-drenched groove.

user avatar

The Night Tripper

skeenen

Not sure what a night tripper is, but Dr. John can play up a tasty melange of southern blues, and gritty ballads. His voice grows on you very quickly.

user avatar

Very Solid Outing!

TerrapinFlyer

Well-done, Mac! Thank you! As good as anything he's done in a long time. Up there with some of his early releases. Holding on strong right now to #5 on the year (a very fluid list). #1 Black Keys "Brothers", #2 Delta Spirit "History", #3 Los Lobos "Tin Can", #4 Alejandro Escovedo "Love Street" and this one's in the 5-spot right now. What a year for music!

user avatar

All Gold!

rubiconvict

Pretty remarkable career for Dr. John. And still going very, very strong. No compromises. No corny synth or awful ballads. Dr. John is a true freak, in all the best senses of the word. Love the new record, love the old ones. Love it all.

Recommended Albums