In the late '70s, bluegrass singer/songwriter and banjo picker
Dave Evans recorded two albums for Vetco, Dave Evans and River Bend and Call Me Long Gone. While
Evans had honed his banjo chops and vocals with
Larry Sparks and
the Boys from Indiana, the 21 cuts he recorded for Vetco were his first work as a leader. Now Rebel, the label where
Evans recorded most of his subsequent work, has attained these earlier tapes and issued 15 cuts on
The Best of the Vetco Years.
Evans work here is fresh, vital, and recorded well, and includes energetic cuts like "Highway 52" and the bluesy "99 Years Is Almost for Life" (the first two cuts). This body of work is interesting for a couple reasons. First, these tracks sparkle because of
Evans' and company's first-rate performances, delivering classics like "Barbara Allen" and "White House Blues" as though they meant every word. Secondly, these tracks are deeply invested in tradition and, in the late '70s, ran counter to the active new grass scene that had developed in the 1970s. These recordings showed that the style coined by
Bill Monroe and
Flatt & Scruggs had life in it yet. Smartly, these songs were recorded "straight" without much echo or other distracting studio additions, allowing
Evans voice and the banjos, guitars, fiddles, and dobros to come to the forefront.
Evans work on
The Best of the Vetco Years will probably cause D.I.W. (dyed in the wool) bluegrass lovers and pickers to crank up the stereo to rock & roll levels.
–
Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr., Rovi