Reviewing music according to a Spectrum of styles
and discussing the connection to the Christian faith

Monday, December 01, 2008

Let All of the Rock 'n' Roller Chicks Come to Roost at the Feet of Super Chikan

Sum’ Mo’ Chikan begins with “Freddy’s Thang,” a primer in the blues that led to Southern Rock. From there, James “Super Chikan” Johnson leads all the rock ‘n’ roller chicks home to roost at his feet.

I love how Chikan tells stories, especially involving his Mama. On the beginning of “Crystal Ball Eyes,” he talks about not wanting to eat dinner one night as a kid because he was afraid that his Mama had cooked up his rooster. His Wolfman Jack-like version of his Mama’s voice is tremendous. Then there’s “Hookin’ Up” about the young Chikan wanting to yodel. It’s a Bo Diddley rhythm where his Mama tells him to stop trying to yodel like Roy Acuff and instead yodel like John Lee Hooker—“A-haw haw haw haw/Boom boom boom boom.”

The variety of sounds that Chikan gets out of his unique, handmade chik-can-tars spans the electric blues sound—Mississippi, New Orleans, Memphis, and Chicago. It’s a talking guitar; it’s a walking guitar. There’s shuffle steps, and there’s smooth soul. All of this wraps itself into a sound that Super Chikan can call his own—polished, familiar, warm, rich, soulful, and from the core.

Super Chikan
Vizztone