Artist: James McMurtry
Album: The Black Dog And The Wandering Boy
Label: New West Records, LLC
Link: www.jamesmcmurtry.com
Style: Country, Folk, Rock
James McMurtry was born and spent his early years in Texas before following his parents to Virginia. He received his first guitar at the age of seven from his father, writer Larry McMurtry, and began playing his songs in public while a student at the University of Arizona. He then moved to San Antonio, where he worked odd jobs and pursued his musical activities before winning a folk music contest and meeting John Mellencamp, who would produce his first album, Too Long in the Wasteland, in 1989. Known for his carefully crafted lyrics, he paints an uncompromising portrait of America through songs that are like little stories.
Less politically charged than his early albums, The Black Dog And The Wandering Boy focuses on the artist’s father and the dementia that affected him in the last years of his life. James McMurtry delivers authentic Southern Americana, starting with Jon Dee Graham’s “Laredo,” a rock tune that would have fit right in with ZZ Top’s early recordings. The rest of the album veers toward a more country-folk sound, still electric and mid-tempo, tailor-made for his haunting voice, with the ghost of Johnny Cash seeming to hover over the last part of the record. All this makes for a particularly enjoyable album for lovers of traditional music from the southern United States.
Vocals and plucked guitars or banjos are at the heart of the musical arrangement, without overwhelming the rest of the accompaniment. The rhythm never forces the pace, perfectly matching the singer-narrator’s quiet diction. Harmonica, cello, and electronic organ enrich the harmonies and melodies with great skill. The production envelops the sound with a hint of warmth that leans toward a softness devoid of any aggression, which suits the acoustic instruments elegantly. In correlation, the sibilants of the voice will be noticeable on the most defined systems.

