Blackie & the Rodeo Kings
Kings and Queens
(File Under: Music/Dramatico/Universal)
[Rating: 4 stars]
After 15 years, a small but impressive clutch of albums and near universal critical praise, Canadaโs Blackie & the Rodeo Kings trio havenโt made many inroads south of their border. Chalk that up to an unusual moniker, spotty distribution and the fact that its three members (Tom Wilson, Stephen Frearing and Colin Linden) stay busy with full time solo careers that havenโt made any of them household names in the States.
Perhaps to remedy that, B.A.R.K. (as theyโre known to fans) invited thirteen women (the โqueensโ in the title), many of them icons of American roots music, to add star power and a marketing hook, to their new release. While it smacks somewhat of a gimmick, the result is a marvelously conceived fourteen song set that generally justifies the hype. A few Canadians who arenโt well known in America (Serena Ryder and Mary Margaret OโHara) appear, but with personalities like Emmylou Harris, Rosanne Cash, Lucinda Williams and Exene Cervanka providing both harmony and duet accompaniment to the scruffy yet classy guys, the effect ranges from moving to hypnotic and even riveting. Others such as Nickel Creekโs Sara Watkins, Ollabelleโs Amy Helm and Sam Phillips may not be as immediately recognizable but all are likely familiar to Americana music fans.
The tunes lean towards beautifully crafted, strummy, melodic ballads with a few token rockers. A barely audible Janiva Magness duets on the rollicking Tom Petty styled โHow Come You Treat Me So Badโ and Lucinda Williamsโ always distinctive work on the upbeat opening โIf I Canโt Have Youโ lightens the predominantly somber/introspective mood. Cash is particularly effective on the mid-tempo โGot You Covered,โ a Linden/Ron Sexsmith co-write. Husky voiced jazz chanteuse Cassandra Wilson brings a unique slant to her co-lead with Frearing on his bittersweet story song โGolden Sorrowsโ and Patti Scialfa takes Julie Millerโs part to Lindenโs Buddy Miller on a cover of the coupleโs gospel inflected โShelter Me Lord.โ Colin Lindenโs rootsy production is typically atmospheric and open, leaving space for an occasional guitar solo to spar with the male/female yin/yang energy.
Three years in the making, itโs a varied, inspired, and often moving collection thatโs never forced or predictable. Hopefully it will provide much deserved American exposure for this talented but thus far under-the-(US) radar male threesome.

