Album Reviews
Yellow Fever is about as good as Hot Tuna gets, an LP that lies schematically somewhere between their earlier acoustic work, which was folk-influenced, good-time music, and the live-wired, guitar/bass dialogues of later albums. The only throwaway track is a ponderous treatment of Jimmy Reed's "Baby What You Want Me to Do"; Hot Tuna adds nothing to the other hundred-odd versions available. This is offset, however, by a delightful reworking of another folk blues classic, "Hot Jelly Roll Blues." The rest of the tracks are originals, the best of which ("Song for the Fire Maiden," "Bar Room Crystal Ball") neatly combine Hot Tuna's greatest strengths: Jorma Kakounen's unselfconscious, entertaining vocals and his knife-edged guitar work, and Jack Casady's sensitive, expertly woven bass lines.
As an entity unto itself, Hot Tuna is a relaxing little group. But when I hear the breath-taking finale to "Somebody to Love" or the solo in "Volunteers," I realize that each successive Hot Tuna album simply marks time for two gifted musicians who said it a lot more interestingly the first time around. (RS 203)
BILLY ALTMAN
(Posted: Jan 1, 1976)
Click the play button.
Register or enter your username and password.
Let the music play!
It's FREE.
- Baby What You Want Me To Do
- Hot Jelly Roll Blues
- Free Rein
- Sunrise Dance With the Devil
- Song for the Fire Maiden
- Bar Room Crystal Ball
- Half/Time Saturation
- Surphase Tension
![]() |
Your Turn
Advertisement
Hear it Now
View
Email
Stumble
AIM
Del.icio.us
DiggThis
Fark It!



- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.