The clue is in the title: Country For Old Men is John Scofield's take on country music. He may have tackled pieces of the genre before, but this is his first album dedicated to country.
Whilst he may be paying homage to some of his influences, he is by no means in thrall to them. Some of the tunes he takes pretty straight - such as the opener, George Jones' Mr Fool - others are country through a jazz prism, and the jazz wins through.
The result can be slightly disconcerting, though not unpleasantly. With Steve Swallow on bass, Larry Goldings (organ and piano) and his regular drummer Bill Stewart, Sco makes the tunes his own. So whilst the opening chorus of Dolly Parton's Jolene might make one hesitate, the quartet settle down into an upbeat waltz, Goldings taking a fine piano solo which grows and grows before its resolution.
Goldings' atmospheric organ on Bartenders' Blues emphasises the tune's gospel roots. His piano playing helps bring out the blues on the traditional Wayfaring Stranger. On both these Scofield plays the theme with a typical country "twang", reverting to his more usual sound for the solos.
Elsewhere, the tunes sound pure jazz. Hank Williams' I'm So Lonely I Could Cry is barely recognisable: taken at a cracking pace, Swallow's walking bass and Stewart's energetic, swinging drumming pushing the tune along.
Jazz has long appropriated other genres' material and made them its own. Most jazz standards were old show tunes; Coltrane took My Favourite Things and recast it to his needs. Hearing Scofield do the same for country is both enjoyable and illuminating.
01. Mr. Fool
02. I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry
03. Bartender Blues
04. Wildwood Flower
05. Wayfaring Stranger
06. Mama Tried
07. Jolene
08. Faded Love
09. Just a Girl I Used to Know
10. Red River Valley
11. You're Still the One
12. I'm an Old Cowhand
Steve Swallow: bass
Larry Goldings: piano (1, 5-6); Hammond organ (2-4, 7-11)
Bill Stewart: drums