Following an invitation from the
Grateful Dead's sound guru to appear on a 1990 New Year's Eve broadcast,
Ken Nordine hooked up with head Deadhead
Jerry Garcia and his longtime musical accomplice
David Grisman, which resulted in his first studio release in five years. It's an interesting move for
Nordine, who swaps his traditional jazzy backing for
Garcia and
Grisman's more free-form acoustic approach; thankfully, this new arrangement works quite well.
Nordine is starting to show his age here: his voice is a bit deeper and takes on a slightly nastier edge in several places. He also seems to be hemming himself in somewhat -- either consciously or unconsciously -- with the increased reliance on rhyme. Either way, his easygoing storytelling is less in evidence here, and it's certainly missed. The unlikely collaboration of
Nordine and
Garcia aside, what should have been of even more interest on
Devout Catalyst is the collaboration between
Nordine and
Tom Waits on two tracks. Both artists are masters of the wonko dialogue and though their musical styles had very rarely overlapped much, there was still a certain underlying sensibility that the two shared. "Thousand Bing Bangs" features the two artists taking turns at the microphone, hammering out fairly evenly cut pieces of two different dialogues and the track, which consequently never gels, winds up far less interesting than one would hope. A bit better is their second track together, "The Movie," which is a discussion of a movie that
Nordine wants to make, with
Waits mostly agreeing and saying "yeah." Despite the album's many other good points, these two collaborations are quite disappointing and even the most forgiving fans may leave
Devout Catalyst with an aftertaste of wasted opportunity.
–
Sean Carruthers, Rovi