Michael Hann 

Hurray for the Riff Raff: Small Town Heroes review – improbably playful Americana

The New Orleans outfit's twists on classic American genre material are postmodern and warm at the same time, writes Michael Hann
  
  


Can southern gothic be playful? That's one question raised by the fifth album from Alynda Lee Segarra's troupe. Small Town Heroes places at its centre The Body Electric, a song that takes the template of the murder ballad – "He shot her down, put her body in the river" – then asks why the killing of women becomes a fit subject for entertainment, "while the whole world sings/ sings it like a song". The playfulness, too, is apparent in the way Small Town Heroes flits across genres, but without seeming to be Americana on Ritalin. The opening Blue Ridge Mountains posits it as a respectful nod to old-time music, yet as the album plays, with barely changing acoustic instrumentation, doo wop and early R&B start to make their presence felt. You might call it a postmodern take on 20th-century American music, but it's so warm and welcoming that it never feels like an exercise in technique or a mere demonstration of knowledge.

 

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