Album Reviews

Mavis Staples: If All I Was Was Black

Mavis Staples
If All I Was Was Black
(Anti-)
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

On the surface, the combination of Wilcoโ€™s Jeff Tweedy and gospel legend Mavis Staples seems incongruous. After all, Wilcoโ€™s edgy, often experimental rock isnโ€™t a natural extension from the innate soulful qualities and deep-seated church music that have been Staplesโ€™ calling card for the better part of six decades. But two previous albums produced by Tweedy have proven the partnership to be a somewhat surprisingly successful meeting of the minds.

After 2016โ€™s M. Ward-helmed โ€œLivinโ€™ On A High Note,โ€ Staples reconvened with Tweedy for this set of originals. Itโ€™s a variation from her previous release that featured covers from artists as disparate as Neko Case, Ben Harper and Nick Cave. Here Tweedy, inspired by contemporary politics after 2016โ€™s divisive election, contributes ten new tracks written specifically for Staples. Thatโ€™s a change, as is the overall low-key approach she applies to this material.

Instead of the gutsy, husky rumble that has become Staplesโ€™ signature, she drops the intensity a few notches on these selections. Thereโ€™s still plenty of passion infused in everything she touches, itโ€™s just more subtle on โ€œAinโ€™t No Doubt About It,โ€ a sweet, soulful duet with Tweedy about friendship. The title track is as pop-worthy a ditty as he has written, a mid-tempo bubbling melody that would have fit perfectly on late โ€™60s hit radio next to Aretha Franklin. For better or worse, Tweedy builds some selections around a repeated riff evident in the chugging โ€œNo Time For Cryingโ€ and the swampy opening โ€œLittle Bit,โ€ letting Staples inject her special sauce over a repetitive lick.

You may wish the songs were a little tougher (the Wilco frontman might have spread himself too thin writing the entire album), but Tweedyโ€™s words preach without sounding overly preachy. The backing musicians effortlessly find a funky/soulful groove and even at low boil, Mavis Staples remains a force of nature.