This Week's Reader Favorite Post
I just had the opportunity to review the most recent release, Live , from Zac Harmon & The Drive and it's super! Opening with soulful, NTRO , Nate Robinson on bass and Gino Iglehart on drums set a solid foundation, with Corey Lacy building on keys and lush guitar work by Zac Harmon and Kingston Livingston really setting the bar. Terrific opener. Blue Pill Thrill has super movement and soulful vocals by Harmon. Lacy on keys works the rhythm with Robinson and Iglehart and Livingston and and Harmon play stinging riffs on guitar really giving this track some kick. Deep blues track, Feet Back On The Ground features Albert King like stinging riffs and super soulful vocals by Harmon. Keeping the music floor low allows Harmon plenty of space to go dynamically from soft to wow quickly adding real emotion to the track. Excellent! Boogie Down is a strong jam with a firm piano base by Lacy giving Harmon plenty of headroom for vocal corralling. Lacy lays in some real tasty keyboar...
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I started a quest to find terrific blues music and incredible musicianship when I was just a little kid. I also have a tremendous appreciation of fine musical instruments and equipment. One of my greatest joys all of my life was sharing my finds with my friends. I'm now publishing my journey. I hope that you come along!
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FEB. 24 rel-JOSH HYDE (w/Sonny Landreth) "The Call of the Night"
"A gifted native son, Josh Hyde is one of
my favorite artists from Louisiana. Funky, atmospheric and soulful, his new
album, "The Call of the Night", was a pleasure to work
on." (Sonny Landreth)
https://soundcloud.com/user-45065947/sets/josh-hyde-the-call-of-the/s-CTNFD
Recorded at the iconic Dockside Studio in Maurice, LA, on the banks of the
Vermillion Bayou in the heart of Cajun Country, "The Call of the
Night" was produced by Joe V. McMahan (who has helmed projects by
Webb Wilder, Mike Farris, Kevin Gordon and Sarah Potenza, among many others).
Hyde (guitars & vocals) was joined in the studio by Joe V. McMahan
(guitar), Ron Eoff (bass), Jamey Bell (drums), Bryan Owings (percussion) and
John Gros (keyboards). Special guests on "The Call of the Night"
include Sonny Landreth, Buddy Flett, Tony Daigle, James Westfall and Laura
Mayo.
From the slippery title track with its indelible image of "a slow heart
attack, your smile shining thru me," and the pleading "It's Not Too
Late," to the French Quarter funk of "Need a Little More"
or the enigmatic tale of infidelity, "Offshore," each of the nine
original tracks peels back another layer of the singer-songwriter's lyrical
depth, while at the same time providing a showcase for his engrossing
vocals and skillful playing. The finely etched songs throughout the album
resonate with depth and darkness (his mother's death, a 2014 divorce), yet
they remain melodic, celebratory and accessible.
Hyde's childhood was spent mainly in – yet not limited to – Louisiana's two
biggest cities. Born in Baton Rouge, he was barely seven years old when his
family moved to New Orleans for a time. "I only lived there for three
or four years but even though I was that young, it left an imprint on me,"
he acknowledges. By that time, he had also already written his first song.
In the late '70s, Hyde penned "Mississippi Bridge," which is included
on the album. The musings of a child of divorce, from the wide-eyed perspective
of a youngster who traveled unaccompanied on a Greyhound bus from
Alexandria, where he was living with his mother, to Baton Rouge every other
weekend, where he would visit his father. The tune is at once simple and
poignant but also astonishingly honest and devastatingly mature. He was 11
years old when he wrote it. "It's just a picture of the world
inside that bus," he explains. "People don't ride buses anymore, so
it's kind of like a throwback piece now. For a 10- or 11-year-old it was a
little bit scary but it was also an adventure. I got to know the bus
driver, he was a nice guy. We would stop at every little town between
Alexandria and Baton Rouge.
Hyde's precocious nature at around that same age extended to live performance
as well. During a family trip to Mexico, he witnessed a band playing and
approached the drummer, asking him if he could get up and perform with
them. He had started playing guitar at just 10 years old and began writing
songs not long after, immersing himself in the blues at one of Baton
Rouge's most renowned nightspots. "They had a place called Tabby's Blues
Box, where a lot of real-deal blues guys played. Tabby Thomas owned the
place. As soon as I could drive, when I turned 15, I would head down to Tabby's
Blues Box. I started to play there on jam night."
In his early 20s, Hyde quickly became a popular fixture on the festival circuit
throughout Louisiana, while at the same time began honing his songwriting,
developing the distinctive New Orleans influence he retains to this day.
In his late 20s, he fell in love with slide guitar after hearing Sonny
Landreth, the supremely skilled guitarist who lifts the deliciously
enigmatic "Offshore" to chill-inducing levels with his unmistakable
playing.
"I met him at a few different shows and we got to know each other,"
Hyde says. "Offshore," which is kind of a song about 'high
infidelity,' was the perfect South Louisiana song for Sonny to play on. He
has a very unique style to his slide guitar. It's an open tuning and he has a
very violin-like way of playing. I had been talking to him about this song
for a long time."
The song's reference to the mysterious, mythical figure of "Jody" may
be lost on some, but men who work the offshore oil rigs off the Louisiana coast
may find it eerily familiar. "In Louisiana, a great deal of the men
work offshore, working 14 days on 14 days off," Hyde notes. "There's
kind of a mythological character in the offshore world and his name is
Jody. Jody is the guy that's having an affair with your girlfriend or your wife
while you're out on the oil rig. 'Jody is creeping around your house.' When I
play that song live, especially if there's somebody in the audience that
works offshore, they always come and talk to me about it."
Josh Hyde works on stage and in the studio the way another gifted native son of
Louisiana, Chef Paul Prudhomme, worked in the kitchen. His recipe for musical
success found in seasoning gorgeously seductive tunes with a flavorful
blend of American roots, blues and soul. Hyde's slinky, sensual tunes can
bubble over with the exuberance of a New Orleans street parade, or stew in
a hypnotic, laid-back vibe. Yet, while the framework of "The Call of the
Night" is quintessential Louisiana, Hyde's distinctive approach
to songwriting, performing and recording propels it beyond its deep
Southern origins and into the wider realm of Americana.
In the same way its varied, distinctive cuisine has defined and enriched its
people, music remains one of the Bayou State's most important natural
resources. "Music is just everywhere in Louisiana. It's part of our
culture, from the crawfish festivals to the funky clubs to the jazz trios.
There is a raw energy to it. It's just the air you breathe," Hyde says.
If music is the food of love, heartbreak, celebration and redemption, Josh
Hyde's "The Call of the Night" is one of the most flavorful recipes
Louisiana has ever produced.
www.joshhyde.com
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