Some 30 years ago
the Congos recorded
Heart of the Congos, one of the greatest roots reggae albums ever to come out of Jamaica, with producer
Lee "Scratch" Perry at
Perry's Black Ark Studio in Kingston.
Heart of the Congos was such a complete package that
the Congos have been hard put to come anywhere that near the sun ever since, and while it would be tempting to say that this new album finally puts them back into rarefied air, the truth is that albums like
Heart of the Congos are products of a particular time and place and finding that exact sweet spot again is probably close to impossible. What
Cock Mouth Kill Cock (the title is a Jamaican proverbial saying that essentially means, watch what you say, it could be your undoing) does do, however, is directly embrace
Heart of the Congos' legacy and history, which is probably as close as
the Congos are ever going to get to actually repeating it. The group has essentially been a solo outlet for singer
Cedric Myton for some time now, but here he brings the other original vocalists,
Watty Burnett and
Roy Johnson, back to the fold and the reunited
Congos tackle 14 new songs written in the old roots style over vintage rhythms originally done by producer
Bunny Lee back in the 1970s, and the result of all this deliberate nostalgia connects back to
Heart of the Congos like an almost fitting coda. Almost. When the album with
Perry was recorded in 1977,
Myton was simply one of
the Congos -- albeit the member with the ether-rattling high lead tenor -- and since then he has become
the Congos entire, which means that
Burnett and
Johnson do sing here, but they aren't given a lot to do, and
Cock Mouth Kill Cock falls short of the brilliant ensemble singing that gave
Heart of the Congos such a timeless feel. That
Cock Mouth even echoes and references that feel makes it one of the best
Congos releases in years, however. It's just so darn hard to reach the sun when you're constantly standing in the shadow of a monument. Highlights include the brightly skipping "Grandma Say," the near-majestic "River Beng Come Down" (which sounds like an unfinished outtake from
Heart of the Congos), and the hopeful, buoyant "Chasing Dreams."
–
Steve Leggett, Rovi