One of the first things I liked and found amusing about this album was the band’s name: Scrod Pudding. Well, for years I’ve been one of the Marrowbones and I’ve had to endure the endless and sometimes embarrassing jokes people make about the name (everybody wants to be a comedian in this part of the world). I wonder if Scrod Pudding gets the same treatment.
A scrod pudding, in case you were wondering, is a fish custard baked in a hollowed out artichoke, and served hot and spicy. But the Scrod Pudding on this album is a different kettle of fish….they turn out to be a five member band from Bowdoinham, Maine. U.S.A. They play traditional dance music of New England, French Canada and southern Appalachia, and pretty damn good it is too.
I found Food For Your Feet very refreshing to listen to, and true to it’s name it certainly gets your feet tapping. Most of the tracks are instrumentals but there are 3 songs to add a little bit of variety because Contradance music is, as it’s name implies, dance music. I don’t profess to be an authority on Contradance music, but that doesn’t matter if you can just listen and enjoy!
The band are: Greg Anderson on hammered dulcimer — I have to say Greg is one of the best exponents of this instrument I have heard, Pam Weeks on fiddle and Appalachian dulcimer, Eric Weest Johnson on guitar, Jim Joseph on banjo, mandolin, button accordion and Bill Olson on string bass. From these instruments you will begin to get an idea of their sound, and if I say that Contradance rhythms tend to lean towards Bluegrass Old Timey but with a little more zest, you’ll get the picture. The band is very tight and plays extremely well. The polyphony and interplay between the instrument is very good and the switch from the hammered dulcimer, to the button accordion, then the fiddle or banjo, all works very well.
I was delighted to get this album, mainly because I had never heard of Scrod Pudding and as this album was their own release recorded back in 1995, it may be difficult to find. I suspect they never received they notoriety they so rightly deserve. If you can find a copy of this album somewhere and you are into Ceilidh or Contradance music, buy it quick, it is beautifully recorded and you won’t be disappointed.
(Self-released, 1995)
You can find a website for Scrod Pudding here, with details of the Contradances in Bowdionham Town Hall and details of how to get the CD.