August 1999
The product of this circuitous musical route is Acres of Heartache, with 11 Dilks originals among its 15 tracks. Dilks' songs are uniformly excellent and stylistically varied. "Comin on Thru" is a someone-took-my-cheatin-woman song with kick-ass attitude -- literally -- while "The Checks in the Mail" preserves country musics birthright of discussing the sad facts of everyday life, often with wry humor. "One Foot in the Grave" shows off some plaintive Cajun fiddling, and "Lose that Woman Blues" showcases Dilks yodeling, and man can he yodel. The collection is as uniform in quality as it is varied in its influences -- Hank Williams, Bob Wills, even a sprinkling of Buck Owens -- not an easy balancing act to pull off. The sound is a little thin and peaky, but clear and spacious overall. The music on Acres of Heartache may not appeal to everyone, but it will interest those who admire well-crafted retro country with none of Nashville's wretched star-making bent. Its great stuff, the kind of music you hear once and then hum all day. And if you get a hankerin to try and yodel, well, consider this your warning. GO BACK TO: |