Respect The Dead

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Respect The Dead album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 41:49

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Absolute Solace

DJuvenal

I was waiting on a friend's funeral service to begin in a frigid winter snow storm and asked my son to put in a CD. He randomly picked this album out of a hundred discs and as it played, we watched the casket get carried from the car to the grave and be lowered down by shivering men. Never have I felt so surprisingly comforted by songs. Not only is this a personal favorite now, I feel it is an American masterpiece recorded by one of our most under appreciated artists. Feel the African pain and download everything from this master channelizer of it.

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They Say All Music Guide

Otis Taylor might well be the best and most inspired of contemporary bluesmen. His White African album was a masterpiece — which makes the task of following it doubly difficult. With Respect the Dead, however, he does a superb job — the man is still very much on a roll. Kicking off with the stark, banjo-led “Ten Million Slaves,” the intensity level never dips. It doesn’t matter whether he’s basing a song around a single chord, as he does on “Hands on Your Stomach,” or simply using voice and harmonica on “Baby So,” there’s a remarkable urgency about his singing and lyrics, never more so than with “Black Witch,” a tale of the American South that goes right back to Africa — but the album returns and takes its tone to Mexico and racing for “Three Stripes on a Cadillac.” The support, from Kenny Passarelli, Cassie Taylor, and atmospheric lead guitarist Eddie Turner, always serves to push the tension of the songs even higher. Taylor doesn’t work within standard blues structures, and his lyrics stray far from the standard blues lines to encompass history and mythology. Where others seem content with the established limits, Taylor is pushing them further and further — and in doing so, he’s making some of the most exciting music around. – Chris Nickson

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