21.5.17

The Forty-Fives - High Life High Volume (2004)

High Life High Volume is an early vote-getter for Best Album Title of the Year. But it's also the Forty-Fives' strongest statement yet. Like that old Mono Men stuff, or any of the trashy garage types associated with Memphis' Shangri-La Records, the Forty-Fives carry their influences in a beer cozy holster. But on cuts like "Who Do You Think You Are?," "Bad Reputation," and "Junkfood Heaven," the Atlanta quartet put enough of themselves in there to make it a whole new drink. Bryan Malone's vocals are as gritty as ever, and Trey Tidwell's keys are a constant highlight. The band gets all soulful and broken mannish with the Stones-style "Too Many Miles" (nice horn section!), and tosses out a great, loosey-goosey instrumental with the sax and keys-flavored "Backstage at Juanita's." Recording High Life with Jim Diamond in Detroit gave them access to the city's rockers, with Dirtbomb Mick Collins contributing some harmonica and Siren Deanne Iovan in a brassy duet with Malone on "Daddy Rolling Stone." "C'mon Now Love Me" is your standard bottle-shattering-against-chicken-wire rave-up, and "Bicycle Thief" is a mildly country slide guitar workout. High Life High Volume won't change the world, but it'll get you through the week til the next Saturday night. It's a well-done, sonically varied album in a genre that too often sticks to what's drunk or unimaginative. Recommended. by Johnny Loftus
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17.3.17

Ryan Adams - Prisoner (2017)

Picking up the thread left hanging from 2014's eponymous album -- in retrospect, his 2015 cover of Taylor Swift's 1989 seems even more of a detour -- Ryan Adams winds up diving ever deeper into early-'80s sounds and sensibilities on Prisoner. Such supple sounds are carefully constructed with producer Don Was, a professional who helps Adams articulate the AOR ideals he initially essayed in 2014. Prisoner sounds warm, open, and inviting, its welcoming vibes contradicting how it's an album born out of pain, a record written in the aftermath of Adams' divorce from Mandy Moore. Sadness haunts the corners of Prisoner -- it's there in the very song titles, beginning with the opener "Do You Still Love Me" and running through its aching closer, "We Disappear" -- but it's not a sorrowful record, not with its smooth edges and warm center. All of this is an outgrowth of the aesthetic Adams pioneered in 2014, one that he lent to Jenny Lewis' The Voyager, and the reconstituted soft rock suits him well: it’s a salute to the past and Adams always respected tradition. If the songs on Prisoner follow a conventional path of heartbreak -- a man sorting through the remnants of a broken romance -- the sound helps give the album an identity. Adams largely relies on cinematic classic rock tricks, a move underscored by how "Outbound Train" seems like an answer to Bruce Springsteen's "Downbound Train" -- toward the end of the record he starts to thread in a few spare acoustic confessionals, songs that play like subdued nods to his Americana past -- and that's the charm of Prisoner: it's not a record that wallows in hurt, it's an album that functions as balm for bad times.  by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

22.2.17

Big Joe Turner - The Real Boss Of The Blues (vinyl 1969)

  The premier blues shouter of the postwar era, Big Joe Turner's roar could rattle the very foundation of any gin joint he sang within -- and that's without a microphone. Turner was a resilient figure in the history of blues -- he effortlessly spanned boogie-woogie, jump blues, even the first wave of rock & roll, enjoying great success in each genre.

Turner, whose powerful physique certainly matched his vocal might, was a product of the swinging, wide-open Kansas City scene. Even in his teens, the big-boned Turner looked entirely mature enough to gain entry to various K.C. niteries. He ended up simultaneously tending bar and singing the blues before hooking up with boogie piano master Pete Johnson during the early '30s. Theirs was a partnership that would endure for 13 years.

The pair initially traveled to New York at John Hammond's behest in 1936. On December 23, 1938, they appeared on the fabled Spirituals to Swing concert at Carnegie Hall on a bill with Big Bill Broonzy, Sonny Terry, the Golden Gate Quartet, and Count Basie. Turner and Johnson performed "Low Down Dog" and "It's All Right, Baby" on the historic show, kicking off a boogie-woogie craze that landed them a long-running slot at the Cafe Society (along with piano giants Meade Lux Lewis and Albert Ammons).

As 1938 came to a close, Turner and Johnson waxed the thundering "Roll 'Em Pete" for Vocalion. It was a thrilling up-tempo number anchored by Johnson's crashing 88s, and Turner would re-record it many times over the decades. Turner and Johnson waxed their seminal blues "Cherry Red" the next year for Vocalion with trumpeter Hot Lips Page and a full combo in support. In 1940, the massive shouter moved over to Decca and cut "Piney Brown Blues" with Johnson rippling the ivories. But not all of Turner's Decca sides teamed him with Johnson; Willie "The Lion" Smith accompanied him on the mournful "Careless Love," while Freddie Slack's Trio provided backing for "Rocks in My Bed" in 1941.

Turner ventured out to the West Coast during the war years, building quite a following while ensconced on the L.A. circuit. In 1945, he signed on with National Records and cut some fine small combo platters under Herb Abramson's supervision. Turner remained with National through 1947, belting an exuberant "My Gal's a Jockey" that became his first national R&B smash. Contracts didn't stop him from waxing an incredibly risqu矇 two-part "Around the Clock" for the aptly named Stag imprint (as Big Vernon!) in 1947. There were also solid sessions for Aladdin that year that included a wild vocal duel with one of Turner's principal rivals, Wynonie Harris, on the ribald two-part "Battle of the Blues."

Few West Coast indie labels of the late '40s didn't boast at least one or two Turner titles in their catalogs. The shouter bounced from RPM to Down Beat/Swing Time to MGM (all those dates were anchored by Johnson's piano) to Texas-based Freedom (which moved some of their masters to Specialty) to Imperial in 1950 (his New Orleans backing crew there included a young Fats Domino on piano). But apart from the 1950 Freedom 78, "Still in the Dark," none of Turner's records were selling particularly well. When Atlantic Records bosses Abramson and Ahmet Ertegun fortuitously dropped by the Apollo Theater to check out Count Basie's band one day, they discovered that Turner had temporarily replaced Jimmy Rushing as the Basie band's frontman, and he was having a tough go of it. Atlantic picked up his spirits by picking up his recording contract, and Turner's heyday was about to commence.

At Turner's first Atlantic date in April of 1951, he imparted a gorgeously world-weary reading to the moving blues ballad "Chains of Love" (co-penned by Ertegun and pianist Harry Van Walls) that restored him to the uppermost reaches of the R&B charts. From there, the hits came in droves: "Chill Is On," "Sweet Sixteen" (yeah, the same downbeat blues B.B. King's usually associated with; Turner did it first), and "Don't You Cry" were all done in New York, and all hit big.

Turner had no problem whatsoever adapting his prodigious pipes to whatever regional setting he was in. In 1953, he cut his first R&B chart-topper, the storming rocker "Honey Hush" (later covered by Johnny Burnette and Jerry Lee Lewis), in New Orleans, with trombonist Pluma Davis and tenor saxman Lee Allen in rip-roaring support. Before the year was through, he stopped off in Chicago to record with slide guitarist Elmore James' considerably rougher-edged combo and hit again with the salacious "T.V. Mama."

Prolific Atlantic house writer Jesse Stone was the source of Turner's biggest smash of all, "Shake, Rattle and Roll," which proved his second chart-topper in 1954. With the Atlantic braintrust reportedly chiming in on the chorus behind Turner's rumbling lead, the song sported enough pop possibilities to merit a considerably cleaned-up cover by Bill Haley & the Comets (and a subsequent version by Elvis Presley that came a lot closer to the original leering intent).

Suddenly, at the age of 43, Turner was a rock star. His jumping follow-ups -- "Well All Right," "Flip Flop and Fly," "Hide and Seek," "Morning, Noon and Night," "The Chicken and the Hawk" -- all mined the same good-time groove as "Shake, Rattle and Roll," with crisp backing from New York's top session aces and typically superb production by Ertegun and Jerry Wexler.

Turner turned up on a couple episodes of the groundbreaking TV program Showtime at the Apollo during the mid-'50s, commanding center stage with a joyous rendition of "Shake, Rattle and Roll" in front of saxman Paul "Hucklebuck" Williams' band. Nor was the silver screen immune to his considerable charms: Turner mimed a couple of numbers in the 1957 film Shake Rattle & Rock (Fats Domino and Mike "Mannix" Connors also starred in the flick).

Updating the pre-war number "Corrine Corrina" was an inspired notion that provided Turner with another massive seller in 1956. But after the two-sided hit "Rock a While"/"Lipstick Powder and Paint" later that year, his Atlantic output swiftly faded from commercial acceptance. Atlantic's recording strategy wisely involved recording Turner in a jazzier setting for the adult-oriented album market; to that end, a Kansas City-styled set (with his former partner Johnson at the piano stool) was laid down in 1956 and remains a linchpin of his legacy.

Turner stayed on at Atlantic into 1959, but nobody bought his violin-enriched remake of "Chains of Love" (on the other hand, a revival of "Honey Hush" with King Curtis blowing a scorching sax break from the same session was a gem in its own right). The '60s didn't produce too much of lasting substance for the shouter -- he actually cut an album with longtime admirer Haley and his latest batch of Comets in Mexico City in 1966!

Blues Train
But by the tail end of the decade, Turner's essential contributions to blues history were beginning to receive proper recognition; he cut LPs for BluesWay and Blues Time. During the '70s and '80s, Turner recorded prolifically for Norman Granz's jazz-oriented Pablo label. These were super-relaxed impromptu sessions that often paired the allegedly illiterate shouter with various jazz luminaries in what amounted to loosely run jam sessions. Turner contentedly roared the familiar lyrics of one or another of his hits, then sat back while somebody took a lengthy solo. Other notable album projects included a 1983 collaboration with Roomful of Blues, Blues Train, for Muse. Although health problems and the size of his humongous frame forced him to sit down during his latter-day performances, Turner continued to tour until shortly before his death in 1985. They called him the Boss of the Blues, and the appellation was truly a fitting one: when Turner shouted a lyric, you were definitely at his beck and call. by Bill Dahl


16.2.17

Jellyfish - Live At Bogart's (2012)

 Recorded on February 21, 1991, at the now defunct Bogart's nightclub in Long Beach, California, the appropriately titled Live at Bogart's captures a moment in time from one of the most beloved power pop/underground/bubblegum alt-rock outfits of the early '90s. Recorded when Jellyfish were touring in support of 1990's Bellybutton, the set, a large portion of which appeared on B-sides as well as 2002's sprawling four-disc box set of all unreleased and/or hard-to-find material, Fan Club relies almost solely on material from that album. The previously unissued cuts, "The King Is Half-Undressed," "I Wanna Stay Home," "All I Want Is Everything," a dead-on cover of Badfinger's "No Matter What," and an early version of Spilt Milk's "Bye Bye Bye," are as fluid, flawless, and lovingly detailed as their predecessors, and the band, which at the time featured Andy Sturmer, Roger Manning, Jason Falkner, and Chris Manning, was firing on all cylinders, despite the ensuing exhaustion and creative differences that would eventually cause Falkner and Chris Manning to leave the fold after the tour. Between the arsenal of should-have-been-massive AOR radio hits like "Baby's Coming Back" and "I Wanna Stay Home" and the decision to bookend their shows with an Argent song ("Hold Your Head Up") and a Wings tune ("Let 'Em In"), the latter of which dissolves effortlessly into Bellybutton highlight "That Is Why," Live at Bogart's offers up 13 very good reasons why Jellyfish retain the kind of fervent fan base that's usually relegated to groups with a much deeper discography.
by James Christopher Monger



27.1.17

Porcelain Hill - See It Now (2016)

Good Stuff A Friend Turned Me On To This Last Week.

Originally a two piece from Pomona CA, Porcelain Hill has evolved into a wildly entertaining three-piece Rock & Roll band. They wield a punchy, air-tight blend of old school and new school that invites new listeners and nostalgic ones alike. Through a natural charisma and an honest love of music, their performances are sure to inspire crowd participation. Self-made and ready to expand their reach, they will embark on their very first US tour this summer.(woodlandsatnight.com)

“My favorite blues rock album for 2016 is an album called See It Now by the band, Porcelain Hill. Before you say anything, the answer is “no” you have not heard of it, which means you need to look it up.  Porcelain Hill is a Southern California based band whose debut album, in my opinion, carries a quality not easily obtained in most phono records. The quality I am talking about is somewhat indescribable yet you know it when you hear it. I am not referring to the high audio quality or fidelity of the album, which is easy to find in many albums. The quality I am referring to is far rarer. It goes beyond what you hear and directly to what you feel. So many albums today have the highest quality of production and musicianship, yet, tend to miss the most important aspect of not only making an album, but making music– the way the music makes the listener feel. Think of the time you first heard a Stevie Ray Vaughan or Jimi Hendrix song, and had to stop and listen because of the impact the music was having on you; how it made you feel. That is the most important and yet too often the most difficult part of making a record.

Darnell Cole, Porcelain Hill lead vocalist writer and guitarist, pours out his soul on this album taking everyone on his journey of happiness, pride, sorrow and anger, in ways that I haven’t heard on most records from the last twenty years. Beyond that, he and his band put on high energy, main stage worthy live performances that conjure up images of Vintage Trouble. While you may not have heard of Porcelain Hill yet, this band and this album are worthy of your attention. I can’t wait to see what’s next for Porcelain Hill.” – Chase Walker (bluesrockreview.com)

14.1.17

The Brew - Shake The Tree (2016)

A common saying is “the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree!” Well it is the case with father and son partnership an s part of the trio that is The Brew. Here it is about control and rhythm of Smiths Bass & Drums, Father Tim on bass and Kurtis on drums. This is the trampoline that has the movement to act as the springboard for the charismatic, full on rock blues guitar phenomenon that is Jason Berwick.

Shake The Tree the fifth studio album building on the momentum of Control, continuing the fruitful collaboration with producer Toby Jepson and Vale Studios. This is rock full of the blues the sound is loud, hot and ferocious but the music is not shaken but stirred with control. The ten tracks change shape and move through the album with the sinuous mesmerizing form of a snake, sometimes threatening then back in control and relaxing in the blue halo of the rock fuelled music.

Yes, the instrumentation is solid with great bass riffs, drums that demand attention and guitar licks that excite and add to the tension, all of this would be hollow without vocals and Jason’s just hit the sweet spot every time. The trio has created a sound that has the verve and energy of a live show in the studio, the blues-rock flows full of interest like a storm that would Shake The Tree, then they pull back and there is a momentary respite in the blizzard of notes.

The opening three numbers are loud, fast and intoxicating and definitely will Shake the Trees so that the leaves surround its roots that pull up the blues into the trio’s music, that has guitar breaks that hurl you into a stratosphere of notes, as Hendrix, Paige, Moore and Vaughan collide and are reformed by Berwick. The trio paints a vivid picture reflecting the songs, the title track is an ode to living and listening to the album you are enjoying life to the max.

Phew! Need a moment to reflect, and Black Hole Soul does that as blues takes over with a soulful rush in the intro, this is no slow walk in the park, and no ballads it is how the young energetic guns The Brew take a break with an electric number. There is no acoustic as on the previous album this is electric Rock N Roll from beginning to end.

Rock n Roll Dealer, with deep bass drum the drive is immense and you are drawn deeper into The Brew sound energised and wanting to hear more of the trio from Grimsby. The beat moves on and now we are given an insight into Small Town Faces, is refrained and reflected as they explore the frustrations of experiencing big ideas in a claustrophobic environment trapped by the lack of dreams surrounding you. How do escape through music yes, go on Shake the Tree you will never be sure where the music will fall and take you!

My Juliet, is a calmer and closes the journey The Brew has taken us on with an opening flourish from the drums and guitar lead breaks are full of depths that Jason explores with confidence as the six strings are controlled and shaped to bring blues deep into The Brew’s rock face. There is no doubt that Shake The Tree is accomplished musicianship of the highest standing. (bluesdoodles.com)
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4.1.17

Jaime Brockett - Remember The Wind And The Rain (1971)

Folksinger and composer Jaime Brockett's debut album, Remember the Wind and the Rain (1971), easily demonstrates why readers of Broadside magazine heralded him as Boston, MA's top male performer circa 1968. Brockett's emotive side is revealed on the title track, "Blue Chip," and the hauntingly beautiful "Nowadays," juxtaposed against the anti-authoritarian hippie anthems "Talkin' Green Beret New Super Yellow Hydraulic Banana Teeny Bopper Blues" and the nearly quarter-hour "Legend of the U.S.S Titanic." Even though the latter sounds like an amphetamine-fueled rave, it includes a coded message and some sage advice: if one has the need to partake of recreational combustibles, it should be done "in the privacy of your own home." This is opposed to imbibing on the bow of a ship -- as the narrative blames a pot-tokin' first mate as the responsible party for the vessel's fate. "St. Botolph St. Grey Morning Dulcimer Thing" -- bearing the name of St. Botolph, Boston's patron saint -- is another interesting entry, as it is Brockett's sole original as well as the only instrumental on the disc. The melody contains a few striking resemblances to the Beatles' "Norwegian Wood," and Brockett's prowess on the hammer dulcimer is impressive as the tune ambles and winds up to an accelerated climax and then gently slows for the conclusion. As the spelling might infer, the achingly poignant "Suzzane" isn't a cover of the Leonard Cohen song, but is one of the effort's standouts, thanks in part to Tony Rubino's eloquent acoustic fretwork. The withdrawn intimacy in the reworking of "One Too Many Mornings" sharply contrasts with Bob Dylan's version, offering up an otherwise obscured vantage point in the author's verse. The long-player concludes on a portentous note with "Bag on the Table," a hauntingly noir tale of a life lost and tragically wasted. Although Brockett would go on to record a couple more albums, it is undoubtedly Remember the Wind and the Rain that most folks will recall. by Lindsay Planer

31.12.16

Dan Patlansky - Introvertigo (2016)

Despite a lengthy career, Dan Patlansky only truly arrived on the international scene with 2015’s stunning ‘Dear Silence Thieves’. A stinging retort against those who insist on talking their way through live shows, ‘Dear Silence Thieves was, and is, a masterpiece – a hard rocking, blues-fueled explosion of heavy riffing and memorable melodies. Spawning two singles, ‘backbite’ and ‘fetch your spade’ and a high profile support slot with guitar god Joe Satriani, the album propelled Dan Patlansky’s career deservedly into the stratosphere, and so it is with no small amount of expectation that ‘Introvertigo’ arrived on our doorstep. Described by Dan as his most accomplished album to date, ‘Introvertigo’ does much to capture the chimerical emotions of an artist propelled further into the spotlight than he ever expected and yet, paradoxically, it looks set to push Dan ever-further up the ladder of success with its hard hitting riffs and potent anthems.

Previewed on the last tour, ‘run’ opens the album like a thunderbolt. A raw, brutal blast that perfectly captures Dan’s sweat-soaked live performances, ‘Run’ is everything you’ve come to expect from Dan and more with a carefully restrained verse giving way to a chorus that is as savage an expression of ecstasy as can be found on record. In contrast, ‘Poor old john’ is a trad-blues number that draws upon Dan’s gritty voice and a gnarled guitar riff that is straight out of a Louisiana swamp. With a swinging chorus and a solo that emerges woozily from chiming reverb and fizzing distortion, ‘poor Old John’ is a memorable outing, only for ‘Sonnova faith’ to kick out a loose groove that heads off into Texas for its inspiration. With a huge drum beat underpinning the hotwired riff and Dan’s dusty vocal ringing out clear over it all, ‘Sonnova faith’ is a rock ‘n’ roll gem that sounds like Rival sons jamming on ZZ Top and it flat out rocks. A slower, more introspective piece, ‘loosen up the grip’ is set to a lone piano, Dan building the song gently adding in a guitar solo here or a taut beat there. Arguably the sort of anthem that Kings of Leon always dreamed of writing, ‘loosen up the grip’ is a beautifully arranged song and a reminder of Dan’s versatility. The first side concludes with ‘heartbeat’, an album highlight which sounds like Aerosmith and Guns ‘n’ Roses going head to head with the Allman Brothers. Dark, bluesy and heavy as a sledgehammer, ‘heartbeat’ is surely the album’s next single. (sonicabuse.com)

29.8.16

Stone Axe - S/T Collectors Edition (2011) (no DVD)

Remember when guitar solos mattered? Stone Axe does.

Born in 2007 in Port Orchard, Washington, at the hands of multi-instrumentalist T. Dallas Reed, whose prior outfit Mos Generator was beginning to follow a direction that no longer fit the band, as soon as there was a Stone Axe, there was a purpose, a reason for its being. Seventies rock preservation. Stone Axe was made and continues to flourish solely to honor the forefathers of true heavy rock and roll.

Think of Free, think of Thin Lizzy, the glory days of the power trio. The earliest days of Judas Priest, Ozzy Osbourne, Iron Maiden, Foghat, and AC/DC. Reed brings not only these sounds, but the spirit that birthed them, to life with vibrancy that, quite frankly, makes the current crop of “retro” acts with goofy hair and tight pants look silly.

Because it’s not about fashion. It’s not about over analyzing or trying to follow this or that trend. It’s about the spirit of rock and roll, the spirit of creation. Stone Axe makes organically grown, passionately harvested classic rock and roll. You can hear it in Reed’s guitar, or in the swaggering vocals of singer Dru Brinkerhoff. There’s no irony to anything they do, no wink and nudge to say, “Yeah, look at us, but we don’t really mean it.” They do mean it. Every single time.

And in case you’re wondering, “every single time” comes up quite often. In their short tenure together, Stone Axe have banged out two eponymously titled full-lengths and more splits, singles and EPs than you can keep up with, through labels like their own Music Abuse Records, Roadburn Records, Ripple Music, Hydro-Phonic and RxEvolution Recordings. Reed handles the recording himself and is always writing, so don’t expect them to slow down, either.

The drive isn’t to innovate, but to celebrate. When you listen to Stone Axe, you hear parts that call to mind these heroes of rock and you’re happy. It’s okay to smile. That means you get it. Stone Axe aren’t out to reinvent the wheel, they’re out to keep it round in a world that’s decided it would be better squared off.

But they are looking to the future. With the recent addition of drummer Mykey Haslip and bassist Mike Dupont, Stone Axe is more of a complete band now than they’ve ever been, writing together and working on the next installment of the Stone Axe series.

There are many bands who profess to being in it “for the love.” Many fewer actually are, and fewer even still are bands who are born out of that love, who embody it in sound and mission. In fact, Stone Axe might be it, which is exactly why we need them as badly as we do today.

We live in an age where digital manipulation is so extensive most people can barely tell the difference anymore whether or not someone’s voice has been through a processor, and it’s high time someone came along to remind us that the most important element in creativity is the human element. That’s what Stone Axe has to offer, and if you miss out on it, it’ll be your loss. (ripple-music.com)


1.8.16

The Nerves - One Way Ticket (2008)

The Nerves were a great band with lousy timing -- they were a top-notch power pop trio who emerged on the L.A. rock scene in 1977, just as punk was becoming the next hipster sensation and about 18 months before the hookier end of new wave would have given them a shot at the big time. Peter Case went on to a memorable career fronting the Plimsouls and as a solo act, Paul Collins made a pair of great records as the leader of the Beat, and Jack Lee's tune "Hanging on the Telephone" became a hit for Blondie, making it abundantly clear that the Nerves' potential was very real and all three members could write and sing great songs, but during their all-too-brief existence the band self-released just one 7" EP and supported it with a D.I.Y. tour before falling apart. One Way Ticket is by no means the album the Nerves never got to make, but at least it gathers the scraps the band left behind in one convenient package. The four songs from the legendary Nerves EP are all here, along with two other studio tracks intended for a follow-up single that was never released, another stray studio recording, a pair of home-recorded demos, and seven rough but exciting live tunes from a Nerves gig in Illinois. A Case and Collins living room tape, a pair of relevant post-Nerves tunes by the Jack Lee Band, and an embryonic version of the Plimsouls round out the package. Several of Collins' songs would later appear on the first Beat album, and Case's tunes show the smarts and energy he'd bring to the Plimsouls, but it's Lee's work that's the real standout on this disc, and it makes one wonder how his career fizzled out after just one solo album. The piecemeal nature of One Way Ticket makes this a somewhat uneven listening experience, but the high points are pure, hooky bliss; the first seven songs sound like the first side to a terrific album, and the live recordings confirm that this band knew how to make their music work on-stage. One Way Ticket is a fine tribute to a band that came and went too quickly, and if you love '70s power pop, this is archival stuff that practically demands a place in your library.
Review by Mark Deming

6.1.16

Leo Bud Welch - I Don't Prefer No Blues (2015)

In 2014, 81-year-old Delta guitar wrangler and blues shouter Leo Bud Welch released Sabougla Voices, his debut album. With Welch having spent his adult life playing in church, this collection of raw gospel songs was greeted with excitement on the blues scene. Welch toured the world playing not only clubs but festival stages. Part of his deal with Fat Possum's Big Legal Mess was that if he got to record his Sunday morning gospel album, he'd deliver them its other side: a set of blues tunes from Saturday night's juke joint heart. Produced by label boss Bruce Watson, I Don't Prefer No Blues is woolly, frenetic, jagged, and raucous. That said, one of its finest tracks is the standard "Poor Boy," an outlier musically and lyrically. The lone track produced by Jimbo Mathus (who plays guitar elsewhere) commences with Welch and Sharde' Thomas' mournful twinned moans followed by a snare, an upright bass, and an acoustic guitar backed by a choir to complete the funereal lament. It's the emotional and spiritual bridge to Sabougla Voices. From here on out, that bridge gets all but burned in the hedonistic fire that follows. "Girl in the Holler” is a swampy choogler filled with unspoken desire as Welch and Mathus move back and forth with riffs and fills atop a rattling drum kit. On "I Don't Know Her Name," Mathus adds distortion and a fuzz guitar freakout to his stomping uptempo blues swagger. A Farfisa organ squalls in the backdrop as Welch literally begins to howl his lust like a dog. Other standards, such as the sludgy "Goin' Down Slow" and the manic strut of "Cadillac Baby," are delivered with authority that testifies. "Too Much Wine," played with wah-wah guitar, organ, and clattering snares, is dirty and funky; it's a juke joint floor stomper. While the theme of "Pray On" is gospel, its form is revved-up rock and blasted blues with the band grooving on stun. The set ends with a razor-sharp reading of Robert Nighthawk's classic "Sweet Black Angel." In it, the electric Delta music of R.L Burnside meets the early Chicago sound of Muddy Waters, bringing the tradition as it opens up on rock & roll. I Don't Prefer No Blues is drenched in lineage and history, but refuses to be bound by them. Simply by playing his own interpretation of the music he's been surrounded with all his life, Welch has given us a blues album for the ages. by Thom Jurek

22.12.15

Dirty Streets - White Horse (2015)

You can't kill the boogie, no matter how far we may be from the early '70s, and it's odd but encouraging to think that America is still home to a thriving subculture where Savoy Brown and Ten Years After can be claimed as heroes and role models. The Dirty Streets are a power trio who hail from Memphis, a town with a long, rich history of rock dudes getting caught up in the blues and its various offshoots. On their third album, 2015's White Horse, they once again unleash a fireball of hard boogie-fortified guitar swagger that sounds solidly authentic without giving the uncomfortable feeling that these guys have been practicing in a mirror so they have their moves down. Dirty Streets' guitarist Justin Toland has a natural feel for hip-shaking hard rock, tossing out riffs and laying down lead lines with impressive dexterity, and the fact he can confidently hold down lead vocals at the same time only makes his fiercely strutting attack all the more impressive. Bassist Thomas Storz and drummer Andrew Denham are less flashy but equally effective, lending an impressive throb that keeps the bottom end just tight enough to stay grounded and just loose enough to inspire beer-sodden rooster dancing among the faithful. Like most bands of their ilk, The Dirty Streets aren't trying to redesign the wheel, they just want to make it roll, and White Horse delivers on that score. Sure there are a bunch of other bands who can do this just as well, but The Dirty Streets make it feel as good as it's supposed to be, and White Horse is one album that makes the heavy stomp sound light and easygoing, and that's just the right approach for this music. by Mark Deming

29.11.15

Eli Cook - Ace, Jack & King (2011)

Blues music is something difficult to explain, yet immediately recognizable. Guitar skill is certainly required, but feel is equally as importance as substance. You feel the blues in your in your heart and soul, down to the bone. I remember getting my first BB King LP, and then later my Willie Dixon and Robert Johnson box sets. Real American blues, folk, rock, country or otherwise. If you don't know the blues, you probably don't know how to play rock. I think Keith Richards may have said that.
Eli Cook knows real American blues, something easily understood on his fifth album Ace, Jack & King. The soul of Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Howlin' Wolf, Lightnin' Hopkins and Mississippi John Hurt is channeled through his own music and interpretations of the lesser known Skip James, Charles Brown, Rev. Gary Davis and Nick Drake. This music is unembellished, stripped down, and gritty. Driftin', Death Rattle, Better Man, and Snake Charm, to name a few, drip the blood of blues authenticity and soul. But isn't that the essence of American blues, unpretentious and uncomplicated, tearing at the fabric of your life. You can hear it in Cook's vocals, a mixture of whiskey and winter, and his original fret interpretations. Add Waverly Miller's gritty and anguished harmonica, and Cocaine Blues and Crow Jane will rattle your bones.
On Ace, Jack & King, guitarist Eli Cook offers authentic American blues, pure, simple and entertaining. This is the real deal, and harkens back to the Sixties and Seventies when blues and rock began to converge. Strongly recommended. by Craig Hartranft(dangerdog.com)

18.11.15

Guy Forsyth - Love Songs: For And Against (2005)

At first, erstwhile blues-rocker Guy Forsyth's first solo album in half a decade sounds much closer to Beck than the Fabulous Thunderbirds: opening track "Long Long Time" sets an addictive chorus against an ongoing spoken word rant about the degradations of America's consumer culture, and covers the whole thing with fuzz guitars, distorted vocals, and unexpected touches like producer Mark Addison's bouzouki and harmonium. The rest of the album isn't quite so shocking a departure from Forsyth's earlier, more traditional blues-rock material, but it still expands upon that sound to include different sounds and textures. Combine the varied and engaging arrangements with Forsyth's strongest collection of songs yet and Love Songs: For and Against is clearly his finest solo work. Highlights: "Brand New Day" includes faux tropical elements while managing to avoid sounding like Jimmy Buffett, while "Rise Up" adds a subtle hip-hop beat to an otherwise straightforward urban blues narrative, and the sardonic blues lullaby "Take Advantage" sets some well-aimed political commentary to a piano-based tune strongly reminiscent of Sail Away-era Randy Newman. by Stewart Mason

19.10.15

Datura4 - Demon Blues (2015)

Hailing from Fremantle in Western Australia, DATURA4 is the brainchild of Dom Mariani (frontman of legendary Australian garage rockers The Stems and Power Pop favourites DM3) and Greg Hitchcock (former You Am I and one-time New Christs’ guitarist). In 2011 they joined forces combining a shared passion for full-tilt boogie, psychedelic rock and progressive blues.

Along with drummer Warren Hall who previously played with The Drones and bass player Stu Loasby DATURA4 have been steadily building a reputation in their hometown with their live performances. With a healthy nod to Early 70’s Australian Psych/Blues/Boogie from the likes of Buffalo, Coloured Balls, The Aztecs and latter era Masters Apprentices, Demon Blues represents Mariani & Hitchcock’s love of hard hitting bell-bottom blues. As psyched-out, louder-than-Sabbath blues goes, this record is out there on its own. - The BLUES Magazine 8/10 review Demon Blues” is very 70s rock. There’s also a deftness and pop sensibility in the undertow. It’s a happy marriage of the hard-edged and the hooky.  I-94 BAR 4.5/5 review

Their sound is very much vintage, but for some modern references I can thrown in Swedish acts such as The Nomads and the ace Sewergrooves. If those names mean sh*t to ya, then "Demon Blues" is pretty much satisfaction guaranteed. VIVE LE ROCK 9/10 review (bompstore.com)

17.9.15

Earthless - From The Ages (2013)

I really feel like I’m doing this album a disservice by writing a review despite not once listening to the record whilst under the influence of mind-altering drugs. However, the last time I did that I ended up giving a decidedly three-star electronic album a five-star review*, and I’d rather not invalidate my critical opinion once again. But it really doesn’t matter all that much, because I don’t think any psychotropic drug could make me dig this album anymore. Because this is the kind of shit that melts faces. From The Ages is the third studio recording from Earthless, an instrumental psychedelic rock band from San Diego. It’s the group’s first studio release since 2007’s excellent Rhythms From A Cosmic Sky, but they’ve released several live albums in the meantime, which makes sense because I bet these guys sound fucking amazing live. As I mentioned in my review of the recent re-issue of their last LP, Earthless is a psychedelic rock band in the traditional sense, with a heavy focus on long solos and non-stop driving rhythm. That elevates them above many other “jam” focused bands in my opinion, as they rarely let the tempo slide or the tracks dip into repetitive noodling as they figure out where to take a song next. They’re always on point, and always delivering the jams. This in large part has to do with their guitarist Isaiah Mitchell, whose Hendrixesque shredding rarely lets up once a track starts, and that’s really saying something considering most Earthless songs dwell in the 20 minute range. He always seems to be delivering one amazing solo after another, all epic and jaw-dropping. If it wasn’t 2013 and the world cared about rock music still, this dude would be a household name. He’s that good. by James Eldred (mostly-retro.com)

20.6.15

Hoodoo Rhythm Devils - Barbecue Of Deville (1972)

Formed in San Francisco in 1970, this eclectic band featured several of the city’s best-known musicians. They revolved around Joe Crane (d. 1980; guitar, vocals, keyboards), a veteran of Texas’ thriving blues circuit, and Glenn ‘Hambone’ Walters (harmonica/vocals) while the original line-up was completed by John Rewind (ex-Grootna; guitar), Dexter C. Plates (bass) and Roger Clark (bass). Their early albums, although commercially moribund, contained several excellent songs, notably ‘All Tore Down’ (later recorded by Johnny Winter) and a rousing version of Bobby Fuller’s ‘I Fought The Law’, and featured cameos by the Pointer Sisters and Tower Of Power. The collapse of the Blue Thumb Records label undermined the Hoodoo’s career, but in 1976 Crane and Walters re-emerged with a revised band of Bob Flurie (ex-It’s A Beautiful Day; guitar), Boots Hughston (saxophone), MacCridlin (bass) and Scott Matthews (drums). Misfortune continued to dog their progress - their secretary was murdered in a frenzied axe-attack - and when Crane died of leukaemia in 1980, his partner then formed Glen Walters And The Neptunes. The vocalist resurrected the Hoodoos’ name in 1982, but the ‘new’ band remained low-key, playing local clubs with an ever changing pool of musicians. (allmusic.com)

7.5.15

Laurence Jones - What's It Gonna Be (2015)

Laurence Jones is a 23 year-old singer/guitarist from Stratford-upon-Avon, whose standing has risen exponentially over the past few years. What’s It Gonna be is his third album and it provides substantial testament to his songwriting skills, his maturing vocals and his exceptional talent on the guitar. On this album, which comprises nine original compositions and two covers, he is backed by a top class rhythm section that boasts Roger Inniss on bass guitar and Miri Miettinem on drums with additional contributions from keyboard players Jools Grudgings and Lewis Stephens.
The album opens with three heavy-beating blues-rock numbers, the title track, “Don’t Need No Reason” and “”Evil”, the first two of which significantly enhanced by splendidly lyrical guitar solos. “Touch Your Moonlight” bears shades of Canned Heat before Sandi Thom shares admirable lead vocals on “Don’t Look Back”. “All I Need” is a beautifully delivered, medium-paced love song while “Being Alone” brings a somewhat heavier beat back to the proceedings, with more than a suggestion of Free about it.
The two covers on the album provide a very different but hugely effective version of Leadbelly’s “Good Morning Blues” and a similarly distinctive rendition of Mick Ralph’s Bad Company classic “Can’t Get Enough”, with Dana Fuchs adding brilliantly to the vocal presentation. The collection comes to an energetic conclusion with the excellent “Set It Free” and a fine helping of foot-tapping r’n’b in the form of “Stop Moving The House”, complete with tinkling piano and another portion of guitar-based magic.
The UK is blessed with a plethora of highly talented, young blues-rock exponents and Laurence Jones is very definitely in the leading pack of that cohort. This album showcases his considerable abilities, which, combined with his warm personality, guarantees a crowd-pleasing performance wherever he appears. by Lionel Ross

3.5.15

The Temperance Movement - S/T (2013)

Taking a ’70s-influenced sound and making it relevant is a task easier said than done, but The Temperance Movement could convince you otherwise.  The British rockers’ signature explosive sound captivated music fans when the Pride EP dropped in 2012.  Consider the five-track EP to be a preview for The Temperance Movement’s full-length self-titled debut.  Not surprisingly, all five tracks from Pride find a place on The Temperance Movement’s track list, as well as seven brand new cuts.

What makes The Temperance Movement so strong is each track’s ability to stand simply as a song in its own right.  If you were to strip every song down to nothing but a vocalist and an acoustic guitar, very little would actually be lost.  Listening to this record is not simply listening to a collection of guitar jams – although there’s plenty of that, too.  Instead, The Temperance Movement totes well-crafted songs bursting with emotion and energy.  Phil Campbell barks near-perfect melodies that drip with passion, and Luke Potashnick and Paul Sayer’s dueling guitar mastery provides rich textures for Campbell.  The five-piece keeps you on your toes by throwing unusual chords around here and there, like in the brand new track “Know For Sure” or in the masterfully crafted “Pride,” a blues ballad that shifts into Beatles territory shortly after the four-minute mark. by Richard MacDougall



If You Go To http://bit.ly/TMliveEP  You Can Download Three Live Tracks Gratis

15.3.15

Dirty Streets - Blades Of Grass (2013)

Zeppelin, Black Crowes, Humble Pie, Rolling Stones....it's all here rolled into one complete tight sound and lit up for your approval. Taking in all of the classic rock sound waves flooding from my headphones. Clean production. Lyrics are perfect foil to the lock solid rhythm section. Good guitar sound for the solo. Gibson and marshalls at ten maybe. I'm hearing a lot of bluesy influences.
"Talk", which is the second track hits off like a normal well oiled classic rock machine and then slides into this dementia of soundscaping echoes and trippy 60's era sound effects. Ethereal visions of 60's idealism.

"No Need To Rest"...reminds me of Free and Hendrix in terms of delivery and phrasings. Guitar is out of this world. Exceptional but not over driven or flashy. I'm digging this.

"Try Harder" and "I Believe I found Myself" are two real standout tracks on this album.Production is clear and controlled, creative and crushing.

"Blades Of Grass" builds slowly and kicks you right in the face. Heavy in its own right but tempered to deliver all of the majesty and power of this tune. These guys know how to control this beast of a blues rock caravan they are driving. Simple and powerful, elegant and raw.

Throughout the listening I found myself raising the volume higher and higher. Finally I just took my headphones off and opened all the windows. This is a band that needs to be heard and played loud. My only request would be more distorted lead work but all in all a damn good album. "I believe I found Myself" is one awesome track....gov't mule, Cream....it's all here. This band is rock solid. The atmosphere surrounding these tunes is inviting. The sound they are producing is not new but it has a new spin, a new taste to the classic rock recipe.

7 horns up

--MetalRising

14.3.15

Bobby Messano - Holdin' Ground (2003)

Bobby Messano has more than 35 recordings to his credit, including work with Lou Gramm,Steve Winwood and Clarence Clemmons. The 45-minute set here opens with a title track that features blazing guitar over a slow groove. The bottlenecked dobro in Hard World makes way for an overdriven and drum-heavy ride. While Get Up & Dance (With The Blues) sounds like an Earth,Wind and Fire outtake. The disc’s best moments come in Dominion Roads whereMessano fires off rapid clusters of scorching guitar over a thick bottom. As a vocalist, he’s workmanlike at times and gripping at others. Solid Blues Rock. by Craig Ruskey

7.3.15

Clifton Chenier - Live At Grant Street (2000) - Re-up

Clifton Chenier recorded this 73-minute performance in Lafayette, LA, on April 28, 1981, backed by the Red Hot Louisiana Band. That group featured Cleveland Chenier on rub board, C.J. Chenier on alto sax, and Robert Peter on drums; oddly, the guitar and bass players for this specific gig remain unidentified. No surprises here -- just a good energetic set by the king of zydeco, with a full-sounding band and pretty good fidelity. As usual, he varied the set between traditional-sounding zydeco and numbers with a heavier soul and blues flavor (on which the saxophone comes much more to the fore), including a cover of the old Chuck Willis hit "What Am I Living For." by Richie Unterberger



1. Mon Fait Mon l'Ide (I Made up My Mind)
2. Introduction and You Got Me Crying
3. Wrap It Up, Baby
4. What Am I Living For?
5. My Dog Jumped a Rabbit (RockHouse)
6. All the Things I Did for You
7. Zydeco Rock
8. I'm Back Home
9. Ay-Ye-Tie-Zydeco
10. You Don't Have to Go
11. Mardi Gras Zydeco
12. I Got the Blues
13. Johnny Can't Dance
14. Tout Chacun Apres Parler (Everyone Is Talking and Good Night!)
15. 'Tit Mama's Zydeco

1.3.15

Chris Spedding - Pearls - 2014

Chris Spedding’s new album, ‘Pearls’, appears with the warning on its sleeve: “Some of these tracks may contain jazz, rock, Americana and/or other less well-defined genres.”

Spedding, who is now 67, is possibly Britain’s best known session guitarist. In a professional career that has expanded fifty years, he has worked with musicians such as Jack Bruce, Harry Nilsson, Tom Waits, Joan Armatrading, Paul McCartney, Roy Harper, Bryan Ferry and John Cale. He has also worked regularly as a producer, most famously producing the Sex Pistols’ first demos in 1976. Alongside this he has played in various bands including 1970’s cult rock ‘n’ roll outfit Sharks and run a sporadic, but eventful solo career, which gave him a Top 20 hit with ‘Motorbikin’ in 1975 and has seen him release over fifteen albums.

‘Pearls’, which was recorded in Spedding’s own home studio, features contributions from well-known session players, bassist Herbie Flowers (T. Rex, Sky, David Bowie, Lou Reed and George Harrison) and drummer Andy Newmark (John Lennon, Sly and the Family Stone, Pink Floyd, Steve Winwood), and also multi-instrumentalist Charlotte Glasson, who fronts her own jazz outfit the Charlotte Glasson Band.

Tracks such as the opening number, Ry Cooder-style anti-love song ‘No Love’, and the title track will be familiar to fans of Spedding’s last three Americana blues-influenced albums, ‘One Step Ahead of the Blues’ (2002), ‘Click Clack’ (2005) and ‘It’s Now or Never’ (2007). Several songs on ‘Pearls’ are co- or solo writes by Sharks’ former frontman “Snips” (Steve Parsons), and numbers such as the meandering pop of ‘Temple Heath’ and the sleazy garage rock ‘n’ roll of ‘Abuse’ maintain that band’s reputation for edginess and lyrical viciousness.

Other tracks are more of a radical departure, and find Spedding returning to his early roots for the first time since the last 1950s and early 1960s when, as a young guitarist, he fronted his own jazz group, the Chris Spedding Trio. There are three covers of Muddy Waters’ ‘Louisiana Blues’, Gerry Mulligan‘s ‘Cherry’ and the Jimmy Giuffre 3’s ‘The Train and the River’, the latter two of which are instrumental jazz classics. Some of Spedding’s own compositions such as ‘Air Guitar Woogie’ and ‘Dripping’s’, both of which are also again instrumental, and vocal track ‘Rhumba’ are also traditionally jazz-influenced and in a similar vein. (pennyblackmusic.co.uk)

2.2.15

Stoney Curtis Band - Halo Of Dark Matter (2013)

Blues rock record may not be a common genre that are being offered in this current era, but that obviously isn’t stopping veteran name in the genre such as Stoney Curtis in changing his lane as through his latest outing under Stoney Curtis Band, the guitarist/singer released an interesting record titled “Halo Of Dark Matter. This album brought that energetic vibe which could bring both blues and classic rock lovers back into that sensational 70s rocking stadium guitar heroes scenes as Curtis crafted tons of jams-oriented guitar playing for his follow up to the 2012 live double CD/DVD outing.

For this latest record, Stoney Curtis tabbed Barry Barnes on bass along with Jeff Tortora (drums) to craft that enchanting blues rock music pieces on that album, released under Shrapnel Records’ Blues Bureau International. Starting out the blues rock experience on “Halo of Dark Matter” is a track called ‘Pure Greed’ that provides that energizing riffs and pretty catchy verse part, a pretty suitable choice indeed for a track opener. Although majority of the tunes are being presented in that energetic blues-rock style, but Curtis still add other elements such as a slower or ballad kind of bluesy feel in several tracks such as ‘Deja Vu’, ‘Halo of Dark Matter and also ‘In The Shadows’.

It’s basically a musical eargasm for those blues-rock maniacs, who have been longing to check out some interesting new songs that can potentially be their life theme. Being filled with exciting riffs, exciting solos, and lovely melodic pieces, music fans should really spent a bit of their time and even dime to check out “Halo Of Dark Matter” from Stoney Curtis, especially those who enjoyed those classic blues-rock themes from the old days. There’s about 12 well arrange tracks in this album, which is more than enough to entertain all music lovers from all around the globe. (rock-expert.com)

7.11.14

Gary Moore - Scars (Re-up)

After spending over a decade churning out electrified blues, Gary Moore partially returns to his hard rock beginnings in Scars. Reminiscent of '60s power trios such as Cream and especially the Jimi Hendrix Experience ("World of Confusion" is practically a rewrite of "Manic Depression" and "Ball and Chain" borrows the riff from "Voodoo Child"), Moore hasn't abandoned the blues, he's just pumped it up with blustery retro roots rock. With all the genre's limitations, the guitarist is so obviously inspired in this format that the album is a success on its own terms, even though it breaks little new ground. "Wasn't Born in Chicago" infuses jazzy drums and slight electronics to enhance the basic three-piece assault, resulting in the album's most unique and arguably best performance. Moore's pacing also helps as he softens his attack on ballads like "Just Can't Let You Go" and the closing "Who Knows (What Tomorrow May Bring)?" He effectively shifts from tender to tense to explosive in seconds and, even on the nearly 13-minute "Ball and Chain," keeps the listener involved through a combination of six-string talent, full-bodied vocals, and a sense of dynamics. Occupying a well-worn space with a potent fusion of blues power and hard rock, Scars shows Gary Moore comfortable in his skin. It's a rugged if not terribly original fusion that succeeds due to his talent, enthusiasm, and no-frills approach. by Hal Horowitz

2.11.14

Gary Moore - Blues For Greeny (Re-up)

Gary Moore's tribute to Fleetwood Mac guitarist Peter Green, Blues for Greeny, is more of a showcase for Moore's skills than Green's songwriting. After all, Green was more famous for his technique than his writing. Consequently, Moore uses Green's songs as a starting point, taking them into new territory with his own style. And Moore positively burns throughout Blues for Greeny, tearing off licks with ferocious intensity. If anything, the album proves that Moore is at his best when interpreting other people's material -- it easily ranks as one of his finest albums. by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

25.10.14

Robert Gordon - Red Hot 1977-1981

For a time back in the late '70s, Robert Gordon was in an extraordinary position for a solo rock artist. The singer, then just over 30 years old, suddenly found himself leading what amounted to a rediscovery (he hates the word "revival") of authentic 1950s-style rockabilly music, two decades out of its own time. The rediscovery didn't quite lead to a revival, which probably suited Gordon just fine -- he never defined himself as a revivalist -- and his records didn't sell the way his label hoped, but Gordon ended up a celebrated figure among open-minded oldies buffs, rock & roll enthusiasts, and, generally, anyone with ears, whether they liked rockabilly music or not.

Gordon was born in 1947 and grew up in Bethesda, MD, just outside of Washington, D.C. At the age of nine, he heard Elvis Presley's debut RCA single, "Heartbreak Hotel" -- a life-changing moment that persuaded him that a career in music was what he wanted for himself. The world of rock & roll opened up for him and he went on to discover Gene Vincent through "Be-Bop-A-Lula" and Eddie Cochran through "Twenty-Flight Rock," and such performers as Jack Scott and Billy Lee Riley. He began playing and singing over the next few years, and made his professional entry to music at 17, leading a band called the Confidentials, who actually managed to record a few sides. That was also the year of the British Invasion, to which Gordon never really resonated -- he kept his head down musically for the next few years, joining the National Guard to avoid being sent to Vietnam in the second half of the 1960s. He never lost sight of his goal of a music career, but he also realized that if he were ever to succeed, he would have to get out of D.C. to someplace where the music business was centered.

Live at CBGB's [Atlantic] In 1970 he moved to New York City. At the time, the city was one of two centers of the recording business (the other being Los Angeles), and the place was buzzing with music of almost every kind, and there was enough press in those days so that almost anyone might be discovered, given the opportunity and a few breaks. There just wasn't a lot of activity in the areas that concerned Gordon, and eventually he gravitated to the budding underground punk scene as a member of the Tuff Darts. There wasn't much, aside from the energy, that he appreciated about punk rock, however, and he didn't last in the Tuff Darts too long, though he was represented on their contribution to a legendary compilation called Live at CBGB's. He also found his way into the Amos Poe movie Unmade Beds, but that was as far as he got into the punk/new wave firmament of those years.
His tenure with the Tuff Darts, however, allowed him to cross paths with Richard Gottehrer, a producer and songwriter (and an ex-member of the Strangeloves). Gottehrer -- whose songwriting credits began with the Bo Diddley homage "I Want Candy" -- had never lost his own love of '50s rock & roll, and he and Gordon found themselves on just about the same page in terms of the records the latter wanted to make. What's more, in Gordon, Gottehrer found a refreshingly real article; there were lots of rock & roll "revivalists" running around in the early to mid-'70s, aping and burlesquing the music of the 1950s (the group Sha Na Na -- whom Gordon couldn't abide -- had sold millions of records and gotten a nationally syndicated television show doing precisely that), but Gordon was a true connoisseur of the music. "Heartbreak Hotel" had been his entr矇e to Elvis Presley, but he knew the difference between it, what followed, and what had come before, and the difference between Elvis as the nationally hyped "King of Rock & Roll" and his earlier incarnation as "the Hillbilly Cat" and "the Memphis Flash." Gordon knew the importance of Elvis' Sun Records sides, even some of the least-recognized Sun songs, from a time before scholars had begun probing and annotating every note of Presley's early output -- and he stacked Gene Vincent's "Woman Love" right up alongside the much better-known "Be-Bop-A-Lula." As much as anyone in 1975, Gordon knew his way around the music, and what parts of the music were really important. What's more, he appreciated '50s rock & roll on a level that most of the revivalists -- many of whom had begun trafficking in it as a reaction to the music styles and social upheavals of the late '60s, as a rejection of radicalism and generational uprising -- didn't, as the true music of rebellion.

Robert Gordon with Link Wray When Gordon resumed his career in 1976, he decided to push in the direction that he wanted, toward the rockabilly sounds that he loved. Gottehrer got him paired up musically with Link Wray, the North Carolina-born rockabilly guitarist (whose own background in rock & roll went back to a time before there was such a thing, playing with Gene Vincent all the way back in 1949), and the two inspired each other; Gordon was thrilled to be working with Wray, a rockabilly legend, and Wray found in Gordon a kindred spirit a half-generation younger. Soon they had the interest of Private Stock Records, a New York-based company headed by former Bell Records chief Larry Uttal. Gordon was an odd fit at a label best known for artists such as David Soul, Samantha Sang, and Rupert Holmes, but then, he would have been an odd fit almost anywhere at the time. His debut album, Robert Gordon with Link Wray, released in the spring of 1977, was well received critically and started to sell in decent numbers. And then, just a few weeks later, Elvis Presley died at the age of 42. Gordon's album and the single "Red Hot" all began attracting attention from radio programmers who were suddenly interested in early rock & roll, and all of these events put '50s-style rockabilly music onto the mainstream airwaves for the first time in two decades, with Gordon as its living, breathing representative. A second album, Fresh Fish Special, released in 1978, was also favorably received by the press and the public.
Gordon's credibility was enhanced by the presence of Bruce Springsteen -- then still ascending to the peak of his superstar status -- at one New York gig, jamming with the band, and his contribution of a song called "Fire" to the second Gordon/Wray album only added to the mystique of the man and the band (though his chance to score a hit with it was taken away by a rival version recorded by the Pointer Sisters). The presence on the same album of the Jordanaires, the gospel trio best remembered as the backup singers of many of Elvis' RCA recordings, seemed to pull several strands out of rock & roll history together at once. Among the other classics out of the past that Gordon restored to the popular culture in new, riveting versions was "Black Slacks," an old hit by the Sparkletones, and "Sea Cruise" and "Bad Boy." Even if the record sales weren't what anyone hoped for, Gordon's work was sufficiently popular (especially in Europe) to help secure reissues of the original recordings by many of the artists who influenced him.

Rock Billy Boogie The association with Link Wray ended in 1978, and he was replaced by British guitarist Chris Spedding, who was of Gordon's generation and loved the music the same way he did. At the same time, Private Stock's financial picture had begun crumbling, and the label was closed down soon after the release of the second album -- but executives at RCA, which had distributed Private Stock, were sufficiently impressed by Gordon's potential to sign him directly to the label. The picture, in some ways, was now complete, as Gordon was recording for the company that had helped make Elvis Presley a star. Three RCA albums followed, Rock Billy Boogie, Bad Boy, and Are You Gonna Be the One. Alas, RCA wasn't the same label in 1979 that it had been in 1956, in terms of market reach or merchandising muscle, and Gordon's sales only declined over the course of those three albums.
Greetings from New York City His star never rose much higher than the point it reached with Fresh Fish Special, as the rockabilly boomlet proved to be just that, a cult phenomenon loosely associated with the garage punk underground movement and the oldies circuit (which Gordon abhorred). He ceased most recording after the start of the 1980s, but the constant release of bootlegged and poorly recorded live sets prompted him to release his own live album, 1991's Greetings from New York City. All for the Love of Rock 'n' Roll, a mix of soundtrack work, re-recorded material, and assorted outtakes, appeared in 1994, followed by a new studio album, simply called Robert Gordon, on Llist in 1997. Another new collection, Satisfied Mind, came out on Jungle in 2004. In 2007 Gordon reunited with Chris Spedding for a Rykodisc release called It's Now or Never, which also featured the Jordanaires. In 2009, Gordon licensed 25 cuts to Universal's Fuel imprint. Issued as a double-disc set, Live Fast, Love Hard features two live discs; the first pairs the singer with guitarist Wray playing tracks from their two LPs together, and the second with Spedding on tour during the RCA period. by Bruce Eder

24.9.14

Plankton - Meanwhile, Downstairs

"I can’t stress enough about the tonal nuances and unique ambiences the music projects. It’s groove oriented instrumental ingenuity and melody at it’s finest."
Brian D. Holland, Modern Guitars


"Jimi's smiling down on these guys – somebody finally got it right. With a presentative format that is familiar yet totally original and innovative to the highest degree, PLANKTON is a cut above ANY and ALL comers. They are in a league of their own, as well they should be...they've set a marvelous and intimidating precedent in modern guitar music for everything else that's yet to come in the wake of their brilliance. Rare? Indeed."
Jimmy Ryan, Truthsquad


"There is a major difference between PLANKTON and nearly 99% of the so-called "guitar heroes" of the day: these guys are one serious freaking band and they approach it that way."
Ray Dorsey, Chaos Realm


"A remarkable band and without a doubt one of the best outfits Sweden has to offer nowadays."
BigRedMachine, Rockprog.com