Koko Taylor, keenly aware of the realities of the contemporary music market, completely revamps her overall sound… Read More
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Jump for Joy. Rather than laying out her patented blues-shouter vocals over a straight blues accompaniment, she treats her listeners to thoroughly modern music full of textures and layers. Songs like "It's a Dirty Job," a duet with label mate Lonnie Brooks, "Jump for Joy," which echoes Taylor's first hit, "Wang Dang Doodle," and "I Don't Want No Leftovers," the album's closer, feature blues lyrics on top of funk rhythms, with rock-based guitar fills and lines punctuated by a fat horn section. Unfortunately, muddied arrangements and unbalanced mixing break down this approach in a number of songs on the album.
Etta James is a little further along in her effort to come up with a more contemporary sound. Stickin' to My Guns pays homage to James's roots in that the lyrics are highly personal and blues oriented, but the accompaniment is completely contemporary. We're talking about a nonstop dance party filled with house rockers like "Love to Burn" and turn-the-lights-down-low, slow-grind numbers like "Your Good Thing (Is About to End)." But to say that this album is blues, in the traditional sense of the word, is a bit of a stretch. If you're looking for the Etta James of the Chess years, you're bound to be disappointed. But if you check your preconceived notions at the door, you're gonna have a good time.
Unlike Taylor and James, veteran British bluesman John Mayall looks back to the past in his latest work, A Sense of Place; he explores the gamut of blues styles Delta, Louisiana, Chicago, retro-Sixties as well as delivers contemporary-sounding numbers like "Sensitive Kind" and "Black Cat Moan." The contemporary tunes sound best hearing Mayall struggle with tunes like the Jimmy Reed sound-alike "Without Her" is a bit hard to take. Overall, the arrangements and mixing are exceptional; they leave lots of room for Mayall's distinctive vocals and for instrumental solos, unlike most contemporary blues. Mayall does a great job of capturing the early Chess feel in this recording while still managing both to update the sound and to put even greater emphasis on an ensemble approach to the music.
Though more a documentary than a blues record, Blues in the Mississippi Night provides the perfect counterpoint to the three previous records. The album is an Alan Lomax "field recording" of the first-generation blues artists Memphis Slim, Big Bil