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Sung or Spoken

He’s been lauded as a sage and a shaman, but when it comes down to it, Jim Dickinson finds solace in a surprising place: Tennessee Williams’ corpulent character Big Daddy.

“What does Big Daddy say?” Dickinson wonders, before succinctly delivering the line with all the relish that Burl Ives could muster: “Crap!”

“‘I detect the undeniable odor of mendacity in this room,'” Dickinson recites, dreamily adding, “You know, studying theater kept me from getting drafted.”

Dickinson studied theater at Baylor University in the early 1960s. “I really miss it,” he says. “If I could go back, one of the things I’d like to do is play Big Daddy in a production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.”

It’s difficult to conjure the image of counterculture hero Dickinson taking a bow after portraying a dying Southern planter. Yet on two brand-new releases — Jungle Jim and the Voodoo Tiger (Memphis International Records) and the spoken-word album Fishing With Charlie (And Other Selected Readings) (Birdman Records) — Dickinson returns to his theatrical roots.

The former project, recorded with sons Luther and Cody Dickinson (on guitar and drums, respectively), guitarist Alvin Youngblood Hart, bassists Paul Taylor and Amy LaVere, fiddle player Tommy Burroughs, saxophonist Jim Spake, harmonica player Mark Sallings, and singers Jimmy Davis and Reba Russell at Dickinson’s own Zebra Ranch Studio in Coldwater, Mississippi, is a loose-knit collection of cover songs that was cut in 11 days. By comparison, Dickinson toiled over his last album, 2002’s Free Beer Tomorrow — itself a long-awaited follow-up to his 1972 solo debut Dixie Fried — for three-and-a-half years.

Jungle Jim is a purely Americana effort that elevates virtually unknown tunes like Collin Wade Monk’s eloquent “Violin Bums” and Greg Spradlin’s dirge-like “Out of Blue” to the same stature as, say, the classic blues swaggers “Hadacol Boogie” and “Rooster Blues.” Standards such as “Truck Drivin’ Man” and “White Silver Sands” get equal billing alongside Chuck Prophet’s “Down the Road” and Bob Frank’s “Red Neck, Blue Collar,” which parlays Luther Dickinson’s delicate banjo work into a flag-waving, beer-swilling anthem.

“I make my albums into little plays,” Dickinson explains. “There are no boundaries. It’s just music to me, songs I like.”

He’ll front the Jungle Jim musicians for a CD-release party at the New Daisy Theatre this weekend.

In recent weeks, many of the same session players have reunited at Young Avenue Sound, where Dickinson is producing a new album for New Orleans singer-songwriter Shannon McNally.

“Like my record, it’s gonna be all over the place, which will drive the blues Nazis and the Americana police crazy,” he chuckles, Big Daddy style.

As a producer — he’s worked with hundreds of acts, including the Replacements, Toots Hibbert, and his sons’ group, the North Mississippi Allstars — Dickinson draws on his theatrical experience, creating contrast between songs, keys, and notes.

He does that too when performing with the Yalobushwhackers, the house band for Oxford’s Thacker Mountain Radio, a show broadcast over Mississippi public radio.

“Just like live theater, there’s a thrill to broadcasting live that doesn’t come from anything else,” Dickinson notes of the program. “We’re never prepared, so we’re always on thin ice, and the audience is almost like church — blue-haired ladies sitting in the same chairs week after week and kids running up and down the aisles.”

The 10 spoken-word tracks that make up Fishing With Charlie might seem like a real anomaly, unless you factor in that theatrical background once more.

“I had no idea I was learning anything at Baylor,” Dickinson marvels, considering his recitations of Vachel Lindsay’s “The Congo” and Johnny Kellogg’s speech from Ramsey Yellington’s Drama of the Alamo, which harken back to his college years.

“In those days,” he says, “when I was depressed, I used to play William Faulkner’s Nobel Prize acceptance speech back-to-back with Fred McDowell’s ‘Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning.'”

On Fishing With Charlie, a section of Stephen Vincent Benet’s John Brown’s Body gets a workout, as does an excerpt from Michael Ondaatje’s Coming Through Slaughter, a fictional biography of jazzman Buddy Bolden.

Words penned by desolate literary angels Jack Kerouac and Larry Brown resonate in Dickinson’s gravelly voice, along with Langston Hughes’ “Weary Blues” and a broken fragment snatched from Stanley Booth’s Rythm Oil essays.

Near the end of the album, Dickinson lurches into a familiar piece of Tennessee Williams’ shattered prose.

The speech Dickinson performs is not a slice of wisdom from Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, dispensed in Big Daddy’s basso voice. Instead, he’s chosen Tom Wingfield’s lonely meditations from The Glass Menagerie, delivered just before the curtain closes at the end of the play.

“‘The cities swept about me like dead leaves,'” Dickinson recites. “‘I would have stopped, but I was pursued by something. It always came upon me unawares, taking me altogether by surprise.’

“‘Perhaps it was a familiar bit of music. Perhaps it was only a piece of transparent glass.'”

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Record Reviews

Pearl Jam

Pearl Jam

(J)

Don’t call it a comeback: Eddie Vedder’s Whitmanesque humanism trumps political complaint as his band churns out dud-free filler.

With their newest album, grunge-rock survivors Pearl Jam have garnered some of their best notices in years. Critics have hailed the album as “their best in 10 [years]” (Rolling Stone) and “the return to form that Pearl Jam fans have been waiting for” (Pitchforkmedia.com). And it’s true, the band has had a “return to glory” album: 2002’s Riot Act. It was that album that showed the band at the peak of their musical and lyrical prowess. The problem with Pearl Jam is that it’s a summation of their previous work rather than a culmination.

If there is blame to be placed for this, it must fall at the feet of lead singer/songwriter Eddie Vedder. Vedder has written the lyrics for all but one of the album’s tracks (and co-writes another with Damien Echols, one of the West Memphis Three) and likes to do nothing more than pontificate about the lies politicians tell and our attempt at escaping the ones we tell ourselves. On the political, Vedder’s act wears thin, as he’s rephrasing ideas he’s spouted many times before. He’s on firmer ground with the personal: His brand of Whitmanesque humanism just seems to improve with age.

The album’s highlights are retreads but ones at least worthy of their predecessors: “Gone” describes the desire to get out previously explored on “MFC.” “Comatose” is a return to the punk sensibilities the band once flirted with more frequently. At least there’s a few firsts: “Come Back,” a kind of modern country-blues tune for which Vedder’s smoky-wounded voice is well suited, and “Inside Job,” a hyper-produced rock extravaganza a la Use Your Illusion-era Guns N’ Roses.

If you’re looking to rediscover Pearl Jam, check out Riot Act. The new album — though with notable bright spots and nary an outright dud — is mostly filler. — Greg Akers

Grade: B-

Less and Less

The American Princes

(Yep Roc)

Is there a harder trick to pull off in pop music at this moment than launching an all-male indie-rock band? Little Rock’s the American Princes made two tuneful, guitar-centric albums for the hometown label, Max Recordings, before this leap to big-deal indie Yep Roc. Less and Less is a tight record that delivers the forgotten thrills of gritty rock-and-roll with driving guitars propped up by well-thought-out melodies. “Annie,” a melancholy, end-of-relationship song that reminds one of Paul Westerberg at the top of his game, is where you know this band might have a chance to beat the long odds. Certainly there is as much pleasure in Less and Less as there is in any of the albums released by the Strokes. (“Never Grow Old,” “This Is the Year”)

— Werner Trieschmann

Grade: A

Broken Boy Soldiers

The Raconteurs

(V2)

Mixed (but not recorded) in Memphis, this is Jack White (Stripes)’s boy band — a safe haven to talk about girls without having an actual one in the studio to either keep him honest or (more importantly) inspire him to transcend guy-rock generality. With poppier indie vet Brendan Benson (theoretically, the McCartney to White’s Lennon) collaborating and the rock-solid rhythm section from Ohio garage-rockers the Greenhornes backing them up, the Raconteurs are a more conventional, less resonant gloss on the Stripes’ mission: Instead of transforming classic-rock tropes, they just play them — and well. The sugary power chords that drive the commitment-phobic lead track/first single “Steady As She Goes” signify Pixies/Nirvana, but the rest is pure mid-’60s-to-early-’70s Revolver and The Who Sell Out and lots of lesser objects of adoration. The music is strong; the songs disappear on contact. Bet they’re real good live, though. (“Steady As She Goes,” “Together,” “Store Bought Bones”)

— Chris Herrington

Grade: B+