An amazing piece of work - a massive eight-disc boxed set that contains every one of Fats Domino's 1949-1962 Imperial waxings. That's a tremendous load of one artist, but the legacy of Domino and his partner Dave Bartholomew is so consistently innovative and infectious that it never grows tiresome for a second. From the clarion call of "The Fat Man," Domino's 1949 debut, to the storming "Dance with Mr. Domino" in 1962, he typified everything charming about Crescent City R&B, his Creole patois and boogie-based piano a non-threatening vehicle for the rise of rock & roll.
Released in conjunction in 2002 with the four-disc box set Walking to New Orleans, as well as three other titles in EMI/Capitol's Crescent City Soul series, The Fats Domino Jukebox: 20 Greatest Hits the Way You Originally Heard Them becomes the definitive single-disc Fats collection on the market nearly by default – it's remastered, it's the one in print, and it has a flawless selection of songs. It's not markedly better than, say, the '90s' definitive Fats compilation, My Blue Heaven, since it has essentially the same track selection and even if the tapes were restored to their originally running speed, the difference is not enough for most ears to notice, but it's still a great collection of some of the greatest music of its time, and it summarizes Domino's peaks excellently. So, if you don't already have a Fats Domino collection, this surely is the one to get.
DOMINO DRIVE from Sweden and their massively keyboard-dominated AOR and melodic rock are great stuff. "Smoke And Mirrors", their debut album, is able to rock, though, too. Powerful guitars and roaring vocals are the key here. Frontman Jonas Tyskhagen (v/g WINDING ROAD) does a great job in all respects. Almost no weak composition and at least two highlight songs ("Starlet Queen" and "The Girl Who Never Was") can be found as well as a fine production. A few guest appearances by e.g. JJ Marsh (g, GLENN HUGHES) or Fredrik Folkare (g, UNLEASHED) complete the picture here in a very pleasant way.