Great idea on paper -- invite rock's
Van Morrison, his then-organ/vocal-sidekick
Georgie Fame, singer/pianist/producer
Ben Sidran, and
Mose Allison himself to compile a celebration of one of the most delightfully idiosyncratic songwriters of our time. And these are serious
Allison buffs indeed, for they chose tunes from the back catalog that
Mose rarely performed live in the '90s, with hardly a well-known
Allison standard in the batch (the exception being "I Don't Want Much"). The hang-up is that
Allison's own performances over the decades are so unique and right for their material that they pose a creative problem for anyone who wants to give these songs a different slant. Accordingly, with one exception, these guys fall back upon imitating the master, bowing low and not really saying anything new.
Sidran is an outright
Allison vocal clone -- he's got all of the slides, accents, and hip attitudes down pat -- though his piano doesn't sound anything like
Allison's.
Fame is not quite as literal, and he seems a bit stodgier by comparison. Meanwhile, Van the Man just does his own thing, paying little mind to the
Mose manner, bending these tunes to his will, and pulling it off in style.
Mose's participation consists of a couple of loose, chummy duets with
Morrison on "I Don't Want Much" and "Perfect Moment." The band is a small combo that you can imagine playing in an English pub, with saxophonist
Pee Wee Ellis and trumpeter
Guy Barker giving the sound an R&B flavor. It's a good record actually, but it makes you aware of why there hadn't been many
Mose tributes before. How can one compete when the creator is still alive and swinging?
–
Richard S. Ginell, Rovi