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Big Iron World.


BIG IRON WORLD Old Crow Medicine Show (Nettwerk, 2006)

Old Crow Medicine Show (OCMS OCMS Old Crow Medicine Show (band)
OCMS Oracle Communication and Mobility Server
OCMS Offshore Chemical Management System
OCMS Oracle Cluster Management Services
 for short) consists of five twenty-something white guys who play banjos, fiddles, and other acoustic string instruments. So, you're thinking, here come the next bluegrass bluegrass, any species of the large and widely distributed genus Poa, chiefly range and pasture grasses of economic importance in temperate and cool regions. In general, bluegrasses are perennial with fine-leaved foliage that is bluish green in some species.  prodigies, chasing Alison Krauss and Nickel Creek. Wrong.

OCMS plays music older and funkier than bluegrass. They go back to the jug bands that played on street corners in the days before recordings. Unlike bluegrass, this tradition is biracial bi·ra·cial  
adj.
1. Of, for, or consisting of members of two races.

2. Having parents of two different races.



bi·ra
; the Mississippi Sheiks areas important as Appalachian banjo basher Uncle Dave Macon. In fact, OCMS makes us remember that the banjo was originally an African instrument and a staple of early African American jazz bands.

On Big Iron World, OCMS plays a string band version of the rhythm and blues rhythm and blues (R&B)

Any of several closely related musical styles developed by African American artists. The various styles were based on a mingling of European influences with jazz rhythms and tonal inflections, particularly syncopation and the flatted blues chords.
 classic "Down Home Girl" and a couple of traditional jug band songs. But their originals are just as deeply rooted as the covers. They play Woody Guthrie's "Union Maid" and they wrote a song called "James River Blues" about a Virginia boatman put out of work by the railroad (the "big iron" of the title). And both songs make perfect sense in this post-industrial Wal-Mart century.

Traditional American music has always wrestled with injustice, and with sin and redemption. OCMS has that covered, too. There's an original gospel tune called "God's Got It" But the high point of the album is "I Hear Them All," a Whitmanesque incantation incantation, set formula, spoken or sung, for the purpose of working magic. An incantation is normally an invocation to beneficent supernatural spirits for aid, protection, or inspiration. It may also serve as a charm or spell to ward off the effects of evil spirits.  in which the singer hears "the lowliest gathered in their stalls ... the flowers growing in the rubble of the towers ... the lamb of Judah sleeping at the feet of Buddha"--and pulls them all together in a mystic vision of unity.

Listen to Big Iron World a few times, and you'll start to wonder if perhaps the best rock 'n' roll rock 'n' roll: see rock music.  band in America today plays without a drummer.--Danny Duncan Collum
COPYRIGHT 2006 Claretian Publications
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Collum, Danny Duncan
Publication:U.S. Catholic
Article Type:Brief article
Date:Nov 1, 2006
Words:308
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