The Dirt Drifters
This Is My Blood
(Warner Bros. Nashville)
[Rating: 4 stars]
Self-reliant country band The Dirt Drifters have put their feet down with their boldly titled debut, This Is My Blood.
After years of grinding tours in RV campers, the band offers an album of road tested tunes, 10 of 11 written by the band themselves, recorded without the help of session aces and showing a rare flash of artistic independence from Nashvilleโs Music Row. Combined with commercially appealing hooks and a current, rocking sound, these self described โnobodiesโ might have a real chance at country stardom.
Familiar blue-collar themes abound, but unencumbered by focus-group writing, they shine with honest enthusiasm. โSomething Better,โ the albumโs first single, tells the tale of half-heartedly working a dead end job, all the while waiting on the next one. โAlways a Reasonโ turns a drinking song into a hometown pride anthem without uttering the words โjacked up truck.โ And โHurt Somebodyโ turns a tender phrase that will strike a chord with the hell-raising, Miranda Lambert-loving, female set (โGirl youโre gonna hurt somebody/God I hope itโs meโ).
Its lyrical peak shows up in a trio of songs in the middle of the album. โMarried Men and Motel Roomsโ is a story song in the Texas troubadour tradition, while โIโll Shut Up Nowโ laments the disappointing realities of modern life and features a smile-worthy cameo by Willie Nelson.
But the most insightful offering by far has to be โName on My Shirt.โ Songs of pride in the blue-collar lifestyle are everywhere in country music right now, but rarely do they express anything but complete devotion and satisfaction. โName on My Shirtโ doesnโt shy from the idea for many, the lifestyle is not a choice. A young man grows up promising never to be like his dad, only to end up there anyway. Along the way, he discovers his admiration and respect for the old man. Itโs a fresh approach leading to a well known conclusion, and itโs more realistic.
Some of the instrumentation will remind listeners of classic rock radio staples like John Mellencamp and Cheap Trick — more than a little bit, actually — but it feels more like an evolution of what the guys grew up listening to than a grab bag of well-known riffs. Add some tasteful steel guitars and brotherly harmonies, and it deserves a pass.
These songs are refreshing, loud, fun and thoughtful. Plus, they seem to have much contemporary country appeal. Whether they find their way into the hands of country fans is a different matter entirely, but the potential for success is definitely there.

