RICK SHEA & PATTY BOOKER
Our Shangri-LA
Not since the duet recordings
of Buck Owens and Rose Maddox or Merle Haggard and Bonnie Owens have two voices
come together so magnificently to showcase California Country.
--Dave Alvin
“Our Shangri-La”,
the new album of duets from veteran Southern California country singers Rick
Shea and Patty Booker not only exemplifies the West Coast's once vibrant honky-tonk
tradition, it damn well resurrects a free-wheeling artistic spirit that is in
danger of extinction. Recorded with an ace band and produced by Rick Shea, a
longtime member of Dave Alvin’s Guilty Men, the album mixes brand new
originals with a couple of choice old favorites into a complex and
rewarding series of emotional and psychological statements - not to mention
more than a few moments of smoldering erotic tension. “Our Shangri-La”
draws from the Wynn Stewart-Jan Howard/Buck Owens-Rose Maddox school of California
pairings even as it drives contemporary expression dramatically forward, the
classic blend of standard approach and chance taking that has always characterized
California country.
The two singers boast ideal pedigrees. Booker, offspring of blue-collar
Okies, was born for the job: "Some people went to church on Sundays--we
went to Cal's Corral." She said, referring to used car mogul Worthington's
regular three-hour, live package shows. "I used to sit there at the end
of the stage and look up at those people and think 'I'm going to do this someday."
When she started working the clubs in 1985, performers like Joe Maphis and Billy
Mize were still making
regular appearances, and Booker absorbed all the bandstand essentials as she
developed her own considerable skills. A hard country singer and writer of the
first order who counts Loretta Lynn as her biggest influence and idol, Booker's
knack for biting originals and first rate vocal phrasing qualify her as one
of LA's best.
The same can be said of Rick Shea, a Maryland born, San Bernardino raised
singer-guitarist who came of age working six nights a week, 9 till closing,
in the hardscrabble truck stops and roadhouses of the Inland Empire during the
mid-1970s. "Clyde's, Loretta's, the Fontana Inn," Shea recalled affectionately.
"It was hardcore...truck drivers and working girls... a lot of Merle Haggard
and a lot of George Jones." Winning the approval of those crowds meant
playing it straight and from the heart, a process that has become second nature
to Shea, a man whose musical approach is a low-key
fusion of classic country form, one learned backing heroes such as Johnny Rodriguez
and Fred Maddox.
Together, Booker and Shea evoke a honky-tonk spiritualism that is equal parts
reverence and ribaldry, captured on “Our Shangri-La” in its entire
gritty, down-home splendor. Nothing particularly fancy, nothing at all phony,
just a wall-to-wall showcase for the pair's direct, soulful brand of hard country.
It is a style loaded with authority and appeal, one that only a couple of tenured
saloon troubadours like Booker and Shea could cook.
--Jonny Whiteside,
LA Weekly
Fans of hard country--classic country--music
need look no farther. Rick Shea and Patty Booker have avoided Nashville clichés
and assembled a series of performances as genuine as chrome on a Peterbilt or
a Joe Maphis solo. Combining first-rate original songs such as "Baby That
Ain't True”, "Just a Matter of Time" and "Our Shangri-La"
with classics such as "You Take Me for Granted”, Rick and Patty have
provided a terrific sample of their talent, amply demonstrating honky-tonk roots
and blue-collar sensibilities. Theirs are songs rooted in real experiences,
true to hard-working lives and aspirations. Best of all, perhaps, having developed
mature voices in the Billy Mize-Rose Maddox tradition and phrasing to match,
Rick and Patty provide cut after cut of music as different from contemporary
soft country as it is evocative of the music's classic past. The songs presented
by this accomplished duo are believable, varied and compelling and prove that
gimmicks aren't necessary. Thanks to performers like Shea and Booker,
traditional country is alive and well in California. Thank God.
--Gerald Haslam, author of "Workin’ Man Blues-
Country
Music in California”
The music bizniz is full of tales
of injustice. Rick and Patty have paid their dues in every beer soaked, amphetamine
driven, bruised knuckled, blood bucket honky-tonk in Southern California (and
many more elsewhere) and they are still fighting in the barrooms for the recognition
they richly deserve. Well, this strong CD should help rectify that injustice.
I've been an admirer of their music and their independent spirit for many years
and now it's time for the rest of the world to find out.
--Dave Alvin