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John Fogerty's RevivalTries to Hard to Sound like John Fogerty of Old

By El Bicho, published Oct 15, 2007
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Back in the 1960s, John Fogerty and his band Creedence Clearwater Revival churned out an incredible series of swampy blues and folk songs so convincingly rootsy that a lot of people still think the band hailed from somewhere in the deep south. Of course, the band was actually part of San Francisco's psychedelic rock movement and none of its members had even been south of the Mason Dixon Line when they got famous. But what made Creedence truly genius was John Fogerty's epic lyrics.

In anthems like "Effigy," "Bad Moon Rising," "Fortunate Son," and "Who'll Stop the Rain?" - Fogerty captured the turbulence sweeping America without once singing the words "Vietnam," "Richard Nixon," or "flower power."

Oh what a difference four decades makes. Now, 40 years after the Summer of Love, Fogerty has released his best solo album to date, a straight-forward collection of electric blues and rockabilly-inspired tunes that sounds a lot like Creedence in its heyday. A lot of Revival sounds like pure nostalgia. "Lookin' out across this town/ kinda makes me wonder how/ all the things that made us great/ got left so far behind," Fogerty sings in "Gunslinger."

A few songs later, in a song called - groan - "Summer of Love," Fogerty seems to be trying to say something important about the decade that shook the world, but it's not clear what. "It was the Summer of Love/ so many people on the move/ flower children lookin' for the truth/ will they find it or just excuse."

Huh? Just excuse what? Fogerty never really explains, and instead moves on to more current events in songs like "Long Dark Night." "Georgie's in the jungle/ knockin' on the door/ come to get your children/ wants to have a war." The rest of the song references Hurricane Katrina - "Brownie's in the outhouse/ Katrina's on the line/ Gulf is a disaster/ but Georgie says its fine" - and rips on Bush's cabinet - "Rummie's in the kitchen/ messin' with the pans/ Dickie's in the back/ stealin' everything he can."

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I found "Creedence Song" to be very tongue-in-cheek (along with the album's title, "Revival"). I agree that he was much more clever with his lyrics back then (e.g., is "Bad Moon Rising" about bad weather, the war, or the racial unrest in the U.S.?), but the man hasn't lost his ability to rock at the age of 62.

Posted on 10/16/2007 at 7:10:00 PM

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