LUTHER DICKINSON/SONS OF MUDBOY
ONWARD AND UPWARD
Surely there is light beyond the darkness as there is dawn after the night.
I will not be gone as long as the music lingers.
I have gladly given my life to Memphis music and it has given me back a hundredfold.
from “The Last Words of James Luther Dickinson”
Just three days after the death of his father, Memphis (and Muscle Shoals and Miami) music legend Jim Dickinson, Luther Dickinson opened the doors to the family’s Zebra Ranch studio in Independence, Mississippi and recorded Onward and Upward, an album of gospel songs and hymns over the course of a few hours. Luther, one third of the North Mississippi All-Stars and now a member of The Black Crowes, was joined by an ad hoc group dubbed “The Sons of Mudboy” (an homage to his late father’s influential rock band Mudboy and the Neutrons) who were all close to Dickinson the elder and wished to address his loss in a musical way. The Sons of Mudboy include two veterans of the original Mudboy: Sid Selvidge (guitar, vocals) and Jimmy Crosthwait (washboard, vocals). Also on the session were Jimbo Mathus (guitar, mandolin, banjo, vocals) formerly of the Squirrel Nut Zippers and of the South Memphis String Band, Steve Selvidge (guitar, dobro, vocals) and Paul Taylor (washtub bass) as well as vocalist Shannon McNally.
Inspired by Dickinson pater familias, Luther and company duplicated the sound of mid-Century era reel-to-reel filed recordings, using only two microphones plugged directly into a two-track ½ inch tape recorder: no mixing after the fact. Ardent’s John Fry mastered the tracks directly from the two track to the mother stamper from which (vinyl) pressings were sourced. Most of the songs were nailed in just one take with just a few exceptions and those were completed in no more than three takes. “That’s just how we do it,“ Luther muses.
Onward and Upward will be released on November 10 by Memphis International, the label for which Jim Dickinson, as his performing alter ego James Luther Dickinson, released his last three album, Jungle Jim and the Voodoo Tiger (2006), Killers From Space
(2007) and this year’s Dinosaurs Run in Circles
.
The songs are part of Luther’s musical heritage. He grew up hearing “Softly and Tenderly” and “Leaning on the Everlasting Arms” at the Second Avenue Baptist Church in Memphis where his paternal grandmother played piano. He learned “His Eye Is On The Sparrow” from a hymnal that his father shared with him – his mom, Mary Lindsay Dickinson, actually sang it to him in the hospital where her husband was being treated during his last days. Mississippi Fred McDowell’s album “Amazing Grace” is the source of both “Back Back Train” and “Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning” and Luther had been known to perform them with the late Otha Turner who closed every show with “Glory Glory,” also included on Onward and Upward. “Let It Roll” is an original that sprang to Luther’s mind at the moment he was loading in the analog tape machine on the day of the recordings. Another original, “Up Over Yonder” was written the day Luther’s grandmother passed away.
The inspiration for the album’s title came from the legendary Sam Phillips who wrote a heartfelt ode to Luther’s dad a while back:
“Shade of anticipation is the ever present glint in Jim D’s eye.
Hearing strange noises that others let pass by.
Music that make you shout walk the backs of gospel benches,
Makes you moan yes, even cry
it be could – it may be
it is Jim D’s soul of sound bouncing off the sky.”
Onward and Upward tracklisting
- Let It Roll
- His Eye Is On The Sparrow
- Learning On the Everlasting Arms
- Up Over Yonder
- Softy and Tenderly
- Back Back Train
- Angel Band
- Where the Soul of A Man Never Dies
- You Got To Walk That Lonesome Valley
- In The Garden
- Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning
- Glory Glory
Submitted by Bob Merlis

I love this cd. It takes me back. I hear echos of hymns hummed in my youth, and spiritual celebrations with smiling/happy dancing at music festivals. It is a celebration of life, captured on tape. I bought two copies for myself (in case something happens to one, I want to have a spare), then I went back and ordered four more for presents. It’s going to be a Mudboy Christmas!!
i love this record too. his eye is on the sparrow is one of the best. if i did not know better i would think son house was playing on this record.
[...] Onward and upward is the first record after quite a long time that really moved me. It’s as simple as the Bristol Recordings the Carter Family did, but it doesn’t lack anything. Dickinson takes care about the songs and each second you feel why he did record this album. In that way it reminds me of Cash’s American Recordings. Dickinson is assisted by the two Mudboys (his father’s legendary band) Sid Selvidge and Jim Crosthwait and others. Btw. Dickinson and Crosthwait relased their first single in 1962, when drummer Crosthwait was only 16, but earned two dollars more cause he had to carry more equipment. It’s these stories and the old songs on this record that reach deep into american music’s roots. I’m not good in explaining music so you should listen to it. Have excerpts by Amazon and buy it from Zebra Ranch. There are some reviews on Zebra Ranch as well. Another review is from Dirty Linen. [...]