Billy Gibbons: Treat Her Right (Official Music Video)
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FROM "PERFECTAMUNDO"
THE DEBUT
SOLO ALBUM BY
ZZ TOP GUITARIST/VOCALIST AND
ROCK AND ROLL
HALL OF
FAME INDUCTEE BILLY GIBBONS
Concord Records is releasing
Perfectamundo on
November 6,
2015.
It’s the debut solo
album from
Billy Gibbons,
ZZ Top guitarist/vocalist and
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, who is backed by a handpicked group of musicians dubbed
The BFG’s on this unique outing. As the title may suggest, the album takes on a bit of an Afro-Cuban flavor that may come as a surprise to some Gibbons fans and followers.
Even before the blues-rock/hard-rock great’s first recordings back in
1967 with the
Moving Sidewalks, his legendary pre-ZZ Top
Houston psyche-punk garage band, Gibbons studied
Latin percussion in
Manhattan with none other than its preeminent virtuoso, “
Mambo King”
Tito Puente, a friend of Billy’s bandleader dad.
Puente taught the young Gibbons the essential
Latin rhythms via conga, bongo, maracas and, most importantly, timbales. “Banging away on ‘em came back like riding on a lost bicycle,” Gibbons relates of his return to the genre by way of Perfectamundo.
But the concept for Perfectamundo, which was produced by Gibbons and
Joe Hardy and recorded in Houston,
Los Angeles,
Austin and
Pontevedra, Spain, originated with Gibbons’ invitation to perform at the 2014
Havana Jazz Festival, delivered by his Argentine-born, Puerto Rico-raised friend and musical collaborator
Martin Guigui. While he was unable to make it to
Cuba, Billy did commence exploring the potential for an Afro-Cuban inflected album project at his Houston studio.
Soon after presenting his engineering crew with a business card from a newly opened Cuban eatery called Sal Y
Pimienta (salt and pepper), the first track finished for Perfectamundo took its title from that card.
He followed this with a “
Spanglish” version of
Louisiana swamp blues maestro
Slim Harpo’s classic “
Got Love If You Want It” and an Afro-Cubanized take on the
Lightnin’ Hopkins blues staple “
Baby Please Don’t Go,” thereby fully merging Gibbons innate Houston blues tradition with Cuban rhythms. With the first three tracks ready to go, he sought further guidance from Guigui as well as
Chino Pons, a Cuban friend who heads his own quartet in
New York. “Chino, so to speak, sprinkled holy water on our efforts and expressed confidence that we were headed in the right direction—and that bit of affirmation gave us the impetus for more forward motion,” says Gibbons.