Something new from our dear Unky Cliff.
In the world we live in today it is rather easy to assume that there is no 'new' music that could properly be called Blues. Leave it to Unky Cliff to discover one of the few real exceptions!
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It is something of a mystery why Johnny Tucker isn’t better known. He
has been making music professionally since he first moved to Los
Angeles back in 1964, singing in a James Brown tribute act before
joining Philip Walker’s band as the drummer before moving on to play
with the likes of Johnny Otis, Floyd Dixon and Robert Cray. His first
album for HighJohn Records, Why You Lookin’ At Me?, was released in 2006, the same year as the wonderful Floyd Dixon Celebration, Time Brings About A Change.
Tucker turns in engaging performances on both the CD and the DVD
recordings of the two-night gig held to honour the legendary pianist and
singer. He is a talented singer, with a warm, rough-hewn voice that
straddles the border of blues and soul, as well as being a sharp-witted
songwriter – all 15 tracks on Seven Day Blues were composed by him.
For his long-overdue second album on HighJohn, label chief Bob
Auerbach put the singer together with Big Jon Atkinson and a
hand-selected band of musicians. The tactic of pairing a veteran singer
with younger acolytes doesn’t always work, especially when the backing
musicians overwhelm the singer they are meant to support (viz, The Howlin’ Wolf Album). But when it does work, on albums like Nappy Brown’s 2007 Long Time Coming (with superb support from Sean Costello) or on Muddy’s 1977 Hard Again,
the results are magical, with the authority and maturity of the older
singer given a shot of the energy and excitement of youth. Seven Day Blues is very much in this latter category.
The core band comprises Atkinson and Scott Smart (who play both
guitars and bass on different tracks), Troy Sandow on harmonica and
bass, and Malachi Johnson and Marty Dodson and drums. Bob Welch
contributes organ to the Sam Cooke-styled soul of “Love And Appreciation
(To Georgia)” and the jump blues of “Tell You All”, which also features
the guitar talents of Kid Ramos. Bob Corritore also contributes harp to
five tracks. From the opening Howlin’ Wolf-esque, “Talkin’ About You
Baby”, it’s obvious that the musicians understand how to bring the best
out of Tucker’s voice. They know when to step forwards for their solo
spots, but they never get in the way of the song.
Each song on the album was recorded live at Atkinson’s BigTone Studio
in Hayward, CA, with all the players in one room, playing vintage gear
and recorded on vintage equipment, and this commitment to authenticity
comes through on every track. From the uptown Chicago shuffle of “Tired
Of Doing Nothing” to the aching slow blues of the closing “You Can Leave
My House”, via the primeval funk of the title track and the
echo-drenched slide of “Do-Right Man”, each song reeks of deep emotion
and well as a true understanding and appreciation of the way music used
to be made.
Packing 15 songs into 57 minutes, there is no room for filler or fat on Seven Day Blues. Indeed, whilst it is dangerously presumptive to make predictions in January, it is not foolhardy to suggest that Seven Day Blues is an early contender for one of the albums of the year." Blues Blast Magazine
