Written by Sarah Jaffe Friday, 10 December 2004 00:00
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From the mad-poet twang of "Riverboat Blues" to the blues-drenched lament of "The Carnival," the bluegrass picking of "Take Me Home" to the two-stepping honky-tonk dance number "Gamblin' Man," Vistic proves that you don't have to be from Nashville to make credible country music with soul. It’s a testament to the authenticity of this record that it sounds utterly anachronistic when he refers to "the oilfields of Iraq" in one lyric.
The John E. Vistic Experience varies between a two to ten-piece band, but obviously the salient feature is John himself. One can picture him leaning on a microphone in a smoky bar in New Orleans, drinking Jack Daniel’s at two in the morning, and then sauntering off to walk along the banks of the Mississippi ‘til dawn. Not bad for a lad from Bristol.
www.sonicbids.com/johnevisticexperience
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