I just received the new release (June 18, 2013); Blind, Crippled And Crazy; From Delbert (McClinton) & Glen (Clark) and it's good rip roaring fun! Opening with the tongue in cheek, Been Around A Long Time, a great lyrical track with a bit of country and a bit of rock, The band is a who's who including Gary Nicholson on guitar, Tom Hambridge on drums, Bob Britt on guitar, Kevin McKendree and Bruce Katz on keys. This track is way sophisticated for "country music" but with a great country swing attitude it really is a fun track! Up tempo 2 stepper, Whoever Said It Was Easy, brings a smile to your face as it is obvious that D&G are having as much fun making this track as I am listening to it. A slick country pickin guitar solo sets off nicely in the middle of the track but this is really all about the singers and this is entertainment. Oughta Know, featuring Anson Funderburgh, has a real Texas lope to it and of course lots of really tasty guitar. This is a great track that happens to feature great guitar licks by the master. World of Hurt has a real solid strut to it and a slick guitar solo accenting a really cool vocal arrangement. Someone To Love You is another great rocker featuring D&G's voices in tandem and hot little guitar riffs sprinkled throughout. Sure Feels Good is a laid back track again showing the magic of D&G's voices together. A nice harp solo by McClinton on this track breaks the duet and leads to individual vocal bridges. Steel guitar work on this track also gives it a bit of a country flair. Peace In The Valley really starts to broach on funk sounding like a Billy Preston track. This is a happy go lucky track with individual lead singing, fat guitar riffs and cool funky piano filler. There is also a short slide solo on this track adding a bit more paint to an already colorful palette. Peace In The Valley is a great country rocker with driving guitar with piano pushing the vocalists to a higher level. I really like this track and rate it among the best on the release. Good As I Feel Today has a distinctive New Orleans sound and the vocal blend is great. I also want to mention that I especially like the piano work on this particular track. The final track on the release, If I Could Be Your Lover, is really different with a Spanish twist. Acoustic guitar backing as well as really nice nylon string guitar soloing played against beautiful violin work makes this a great finish to a really interesting new release.
  
 If you support live Blues acts, up and coming Blues talents and want to learn more about Blues news and Fathers of the Blues,  -  ”LIKE” ---Bman’s Blues Report--- Facebook Page! I’m looking for great talent and trying to grow the audience for your favorite band!
    
Exclusive Blues Interviews, Blues Reviews, Blues Videos, Top Blues Artists, New Blues Artists.
Pages
- Essential Listening A-L
- Essential Listening M-Z
- About
- Advertising
- Bman's Year In Review 2011-12
- Bman's Picks 2013
- Bman's Picks 2014
- Bman's Picks 2015
- Bman's Picks 2016
- Bman's Picks 2017
- Bman's Picks 2018
- Bman's Picks 2019
- Bman's Picks 2020
- Bman's Picks 2021
- Bman's Picks 2022
- Bman's Picks 2023
- Bman's Picks 2024
- Bman's Picks 2025
CLICK ON TITLE BELOW TO GO TO PURCHASE!!!!
CD submissions accepted!           Guest writers always welcome!!
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!
Please email me at Info@Bmansbluesreport.com
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!
Please email me at Info@Bmansbluesreport.com
Showing posts with label Blind. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blind. Show all posts
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
Delbert McClinton & Glen Clark reunite for album after 40 years, New West Records June 18
Delbert 
& Glen . . .
ROOTS 
MUSIC TITAN DELBERT McCLINTON 
REUNITES 
WITH FELLOW TEXAS TROUBADOUR GLEN CLARK 
FOR 
THEIR FIRST NEW ALBUM IN 40 YEARS
Blind, 
Crippled And Crazy, co-produced by Gary Nicholson, 
due 
out June 18 on New West Records, blends masterful songwriting, 
musical 
maturity and down-home humor
NASHVILLE, 
Tenn. — Three-time Grammy winner Delbert 
McClinton’s 28th album Blind, Crippled and Crazy, set for release 
on June 18 on New West 
Records, blends R&B, country, blues and rock ’n’ roll with humor, heart 
and roadhouse virtuosity. The disc also reunites McClinton with his longtime 
friend and musical running partner Glen Clark, making these 12 songs the first 
time the seminal roots music duo Delbert & Glen have recorded since 
1973.
“We’ve 
always had an amazing rapport as musicians and friends, but we’ve been off 
living our own lives,” McClinton explains. “For the last decade Glen and me have 
been talking about doing another album, and everything fell into place last year 
here in Nashville with my songwriting partner Gary Nicholson.”
Besides 
co-writing several tracks, Nicholson co-produced the LP with McClinton and Clark 
and played guitar alongside drummer Tom Hambridge, fellow six-stringer Bob 
Britt, keyboardists Kevin McKendree and Bruce Katz, and other members of 
McClinton’s touring band as well as blues guitar hero Anson Funderburgh, who 
guests on “Oughta Know,” a hot-licks fest penned by McClinton’s son 
Clay.
Blind, 
Crippled And Crazy’s opening Texas shuffle “Been Around a Long Time” sets a 
reverberating tone of self-deprecating humor, as does the album’s 
title.
“We’re a 
couple guys who started playing together in ragtag bands around Fort Worth in 
the ’60s,” Clark relates, “so we like to poke some fun at ourselves for being 
older now.”
Clark 
picked up the tune’s tag line many years ago from a feisty 102-year-old woman in 
Arkansas, who told him, “Sonny, I ain’t old. I’ve just been around a long time,” 
and the song finally emerged during the disc’s 2011 writing 
sessions.
The 
loping and textured “More and More, Less and Less” resonates similarly as it 
dismisses the excesses of youth, although its acoustic guitar bedrock and the 
yearning timbre of McClinton’s vocal performance and his haunting harmonica solo 
add poignancy, too.
“The 
bottom line is that we’re still bulldogs on a pork chop, but our teeth are 
ground down, so it takes longer to chew that thing up,” Clark says, chuckling a 
bit. “But we still get it right down to the bone.”
That 
also explains the amount of sheer growl in Blind, Crippled And Crazy’s 
grooves. “World of Hurt” is a snarling six-string rocker about biting 
heartbreak, and “Good as I Feel Today” rings like a great lost Little Feat 
number — although McClinton and Clark come by its drawling melody, swaggering 
rhythm and buttery slide guitar via their own assimilation of R&B, blues, 
country and nascent rock in the 1950s and early ’60s.
They 
were schooled by the sounds of Ray Charles, Charles Brown, Little Richard, Bob 
Wills, Elvis Presley and Hank Williams courtesy of the radio and their siblings’ 
record collections. Then they graduated to playing the roadhouses of their 
native Texas.
Musical 
mutual admiration rapidly followed. “Delbert was the first great singer I ever 
saw in person, so he’s always been one of my biggest influences,” Clark relates. 
In turn, McClinton testifies that “Glen is one of the few people I can 
really duet with. Our phrasing just compliments each other, and our 
voices sound great together. I have more fun singing with Glen than anybody 
else.”
Clark 
left Texas in the early ’70s for the lure of Los Angeles’ big-time music 
business, and after a while McClinton followed. Soon the collaborators landed a 
record deal and cut two albums, 1972’s Delbert & Glen and the 
follow-up Subject to Change. Both of these now-hard-to-find classics 
plumbed the same turf as Blind, Crippled And Crazy, albeit in the 
sweeter vocal registers of younger men.
McClinton’s 
“B Movie Box Car Blues” from Delbert & Glen was re-cut six years 
later by the Blues Brothers for the double-platinum-selling Briefcase Full 
of Blues and has become a standard of the genre. In a twist of fate, Clark 
would later play keyboards with the Blues Brothers after becoming music director 
for Jim Belushi in 1997.
Delbert 
and Glen began their four-decade hiatus after both men moved back to Texas 
separately to follow romance and their solo careers. Clark returned to Los 
Angeles in 1977. He became a popular songwriter, authoring tunes for Rita 
Coolidge, Etta James, Loretta Lynn, Wynonna Judd, Kris Kristofferson and many 
others. He also hit the road with his keyboards, touring with Kristofferson, 
Bonnie Raitt and others before beginning his dozen years with Belushi, which 
included nine years as composer for the sitcom According to 
Jim.
Of 
course, McClinton became an international star in the realms of blues and 
traditional country music, cross-pollinating the genres into his own unique 
sound. Since 1980, when his sixth solo album The Jealous Kind sparked 
the top 10 hit “Givin’ It Up for Your Love,” he has remained one of the most 
respected figures in American roots music. In 1992 the man who gave John Lennon 
his first harmonica lesson — when McClinton toured England in the early ’60s as 
part of Bruce Channel’s band — won his first Grammy Award, for the duet “Good 
Man, Good Woman” with Bonnie Raitt. That was followed by a second win in 2003 
for Nothing Personal in the Best Contemporary Blues Album Category. In 
2006, he won a third Grammy for his Cost of Living album. McClinton’s 
songs have also been recorded by a who’s who of country music royalty including 
Vince Gill, Wynonna Judd, Garth Brooks, Emmylou Harris, Martina McBride and 
Trisha Yearwood.
Over the 
decades his blend of soaring blue-eyed soul singing sprinkled with red Texas 
dust, the emotional wealth of his songwriting and his command of virtuoso 
supporting ensembles has built McClinton a wildly avid fan base in the United 
States and Europe. They are nearly like Deadheads in their willingness to travel 
to repeated shows and their level of support. Each January they turn the Delbert 
McClinton & Friends Sandy Beaches Cruise, a weeklong music festival he hosts 
aboard luxury liners, into a sell-out.
“The 
bottom line is, at this point I don’t believe in doing anything that’s not fun,” 
McClinton says, “and recording Blind, Crippled And Crazy was a blast. 
Me and Gary, who I’ve known for 40 years starting back in Texas, handpicked 
every musician on the record and made sure every song was perfect. The title, 
from the old soul tune, is something I’ve wanted to use for years. And singing 
with Glen again — between the way our voices mix and his sense of humor — makes 
me excited about us taking this music out on the road together.
“I’ve 
got a good deal in life,” McClinton continues. “I’ve got a lot of good people 
for fans who support me — although I’ve won over each of them one-by-one on the 
road. I can pick and choose whatever I want to do. And I’ve never had to keep a 
job for long, thank God, because jobs stink. I know. I’ve had a lot of them, and 
I know why I got fired from every one. And believe me, making this album and 
singing these songs with Glen is nothing like a job.”
# # 
#
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

 
