Views from Western Australia

July 25, 2008

Stevie Winwood - Nine Lives

Filed under: Music Reviews

Steve Winwood was 16 years old when he led the Spencer Davis Group in 1963 and he is an  excellent keyboardist who has remained an in-demand session musician for decades.

With ‘Nine Lives’ Winwood pulls together every style that he’s used since he began his career from old-school R&B to hard rock and jazzy progressive rock to progressive pop-rock to blue-eyed soul- and succeeds with every stylistic turn. The songs build on blues riffs, jazz, funk and folk-rock, all coupled with African and Latin influences. There is precision and style to almost every track on this album, without a single irrelevant note. The guitar has moved to the foreground on this new album, this is possibly influenced by his inclusion at the most recent Crossroads guitar festival (see other review). Winwood has put the guitar at the center of the two most compelling songs on the album, ‘I’m Not Drowning’ and ‘Dirty City’ it features Eric Clapton, and sounds as if it came right out of the Blind Faith era with a dirty guitar sound!. On ‘Fly’ Winwood brings together Brazilian and Celtic influences. ‘Raging Sea’ is a funky bass driven number and ‘Hungry Man’ is an African influenced song that grows on you with each listening.

The more I listen to this assortment of musical genres and grooves, the more I like it. Winwood turned 60 recently, his vocals are as strong and his musical sensee just as steady as it was in his teenage years.

Sony
April 2008

Buddy Guy: Skin Deep

Filed under: Music Reviews

After playing the blues for forty five years blues boss Buddy Guy shows no signs of slowing down.  Now, he has released ‘Skin Deep’, an album of 12 original songs where he is in outstanding form.

Don’t be put off by the fact that it’s yet another album with guest artists. The big differences are that Guy wrote all the material, his guitar and vocals are in top form and the guests don’t crowd the album like so often happens with tribute appearance albums.

The material is remarkable, from the set opening ‘Best Damn Fool’, with its scorching guitar complimented by the Memphis Horns section right through to the closing track ‘I Found Happiness’ with its screaming guitar and funky backbeat.

In between, Guy jams with Clapton on “Every time I Sing the Blues” and duels with Randolph’s fine pedal steel on the red hot ‘That’s My Home’. Possibly the finest moments are when Guy turns introspective on ‘Who’s Gonna Fill Those Shoes’ where he clearly grieves over the passing of the blues greats and when challenges racism on the title track ‘Skin Deep’. They’re both great songs and Guy delivers them with his trademark enthusiasm and grit.

‘Lyin’ Like a Dog’ is pure Guy with plenty of sizzling guitar on one of the best numbers; ‘Show Me the Money’ and ‘Too Many Tears’ have fine guitar work from Trucks and strong soulful vocals from Tedechi.

It’s a great Buddy Guy album and it successfully displays the searing guitar, passion and showmanship that have made Guy a true boss of the blues.  In my view this is his best overall studio set since “Sweet Tea” in 2001.

(Jive/Silvertone)
July 2008

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