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notes Davis Coen, who hails from South Carolina, characterizes his sound -- a mix of Southern rural styles, folk-revival, skeletal rock 'n' roll and stripped-down r&b -- as "juke-joint meets folkie." That seems close enough. On Ill Disposition it's himself, his guitar and harmonica, and drummer Joe Izzo, with four different bass players showing up separately on most of the rest of the cuts. As the singer-songwriter era passes (after, I might add, a long-overstayed welcome), Coen is liberated from the obligation to load his album with originals. His own compositions comprise five songs, fewer than half, and I'm relieved to report that all of them do him credit, perhaps none more so than "Good Conversation" with its utterly irresistible drawled reading of the tag line "Last call to see my baby doll." You'd swear the man is singing with marbles in his mouth, but the line as delivered is both funny and sweet -- a love song without a single cliche, a little jewel of writing craft. Elsewhere, Coen transforms Lieber/Stoller's much-recorded "Kansas City" (first recorded as "K.C. Lovin'" by Little Willie Littlefield in 1952 but better known from the 1959 hit by Wilbert Harrison under its current title) into a driving acoustic slide-guitar blues which -- to what should be the delight of any discerning listener -- causes the song to feel decades older than it is. His immersion in musical roots buries him deeply enough to take him to more arcane material, including Chuck Berry's "L
Busker's Blues
Davis Coen
Something At My Feet
Davis Coen
Freight Train
Davis Coen
Got to Hold Out
Davis Coen
Yes We Can Can
Davis Coen
Two-timer's Blues
Davis Coen
Mambo Chillun
Davis Coen
Good Conversation
Davis Coen
Kansas City
Davis Coen
Lay Me a Pallet On Your Floor
Davis Coen
Let It Rock
Davis Coen
I'm in Love With You
Davis Coen
Rooster Blues
Davis Coen