Cape Breton Post

Pop icon John Oates dives deep into American roots

- BY SCOTT STROUD

John Oates, “Arkansas’’ (Thirty Tigers).

The less celebrated half of the pop duo Hall & Oates has tapped into a rich vein of American roots music on his latest offering, an album that demonstrat­es his seriousnes­s about the musicmakin­g craft.

No, “Arkansas’’ probably won’t let John Oates live down a legacy in which the mere mention of a song title can leave its melody rattling around your head for hours.

The duo, during its heyday, combined a string of catchy-tocloying singles (“Private Eyes’’) with soulful ballads that held up better over time (“Sara Smile’’).

But Oates, a Philadelph­ia native, has lately been exploring earthier sounds in and around Nashville. His search led him to “Arkansas,’’ a project that began as a tribute to Mississipp­i John Hurt and evolved into a deeper exploratio­n of traditiona­l themes.

Oates describes the result as “Dixieland dipped in bluegrass and salted with Delta blues.’’ He smartly enlisted A-list Nashville players to help, including mandolin wizard Sam Bush and guitarist Guthrie Trapp. Their playing on songs by Jimmie Rodgers, Hurt, Blind Blake and other legends elevates them considerab­ly, and the Oates originals mixed in are good fits.

On one original, the title cut, Oates blends warm descriptio­n of the delta landscape with a stirring melody and gravel-dust vocals.

None of that makes him a native son. It does produce an honest record, one that proves Oates isn’t content to rest on past glory.

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