Gathering
Mike Doughty's 2000 acoustic release
Skittish -- produced by
Kramer (of
Low and
Galaxie 500 fame) and recorded in 1996 -- and his 2003 EP
Rockity Roll, this reissue proves that cruelly overlooked singer/songwriters win out every once in a while. Reviving the formula that made
Soul Coughing's "Circles" so irresistible,
Doughty's love affair with drum programming and bluesy guitar fills on "Ways + Means" are secondary to an unforgettable chorus. More melodic and possibly more alluring, another EP extract, "27 Jennifers," could and should be the singer's mainstream breakthrough. If the technology charged, mid-tempo street ode "Down on the River by the Sugar Plant" broadens
Doughty's scope, it's "40 Grand in the Hole" where he sounds his most natural as a maturing troubadour "standing in line at Teriyaki Boy." If it's possible, the unplugged
Skittish material is even more appealing, as
Doughty medleys a 1992
Mary J. Blige smash with an underground classic by
the Feelies on "Real Love/It's Only Life." Elsewhere, on "The Only Answer," his layered vocals and tracked guitar work is as edgy, urgent and transcendent as bare music has a right to be. The latter gets duplicated -- as one of two bonus tracks recorded at Bonnaroo in 2004 -- alongside a pair of
Skittish outtakes, but the real find for
Doughty disciples who already own most of this material is "Get Along." Recorded for the film Evenhand, with a tact similar to the
Rockity Roll tracks, this solid mid-tempo groove is as magical as anything in
Doughty's canon.
–
John D. Luerssen, Rovi