Showing posts with label Al Gamble. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Al Gamble. Show all posts

Saturday, October 1, 2022

#578 > Herman Hitson - Let the Gods Sing (PhillyCheezeBlues.Blogspot.com)



2022 – Big Legal Mess Records

By Phillip Smith; Oct.1, 2022

Original source : phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com

 

The tale of Herman Hitson’s nearly eighty-year-old life would make for an intriging documentary.  Born in Philadelphia, and raised in Georgia, his past is a ripe forest of juicy stories.  Hitson shared an apartment with Jimi Hendrix and was key in persuading him to sing.  He toured the chitlin circuit with James Brown, The Drifters, Wilson Pickett, Jackie Wilson, Joe Tex, and Bobby Womack.  After going through some rough patches and serving time, Hitson picked up a job in Florida, working the sugar cane fields with a flame-thrower as a snake-clearer.    With Let the Gods Sing, Hitson breathes a new life into several of his most familiar R&B songs and throws in a few brilliant covers as well.  Recorded and mixed at Bruce Watson’s Delta-Sonic Sound in Memphis, Tennessee, this funky and psychedelic nine-track treasure is co-produced by Watson and Will Sexton.  Behind Hitson on vocals and guitar is The Sacred Soul Sound Section comprised of Sexton on guitar, Mark Edgar Stuart on bass, Will McCarley on drums and percussion, and Al Gamble on organ.

Wafts of psychedelia gently roll in for the title-track as preparations are laid out for a grand spiritual rock-and-roll ceremony.  Spacy guitar licks and swirling chords from the organ set the stage for Hitson, in the guise of a musical medicine-man, to stare past the clouds and fearlessly command the Gods to sing.  Hitson’s voice seems to bluntly speak from experience as he covers Willie Dixon’s “Back Door Man”.  Gamble tackles this one like Ray Manzarek of the Doors and peppers this classic blues song with a smidge of the Sixties LA rock.  “Feast of Ants” is a trippy five-and-a-half-minute-long instrumental.  Written by Hitson and The Sacred Soul Sound Section, this delicious jam is drenched in a funky groove and splattered with mind-altered sounds.  The buttery rhythm of “Suspicious” greases up the speakers as Hitson breaks loose on this intoxicating jam often credited to Hendrix by mistake.  “Yampertown Funk” brings this shindig to a close.  This glorious R&B instrumental is soaked in the sounds of Memphis Stax and laced with amazing electric six-string.  

Let the Gods Sing grabbed my attention from the first listen and has not released its grip yet.  Hitson steps up to each and every song with the energy of a young and robust James Brown, as he guides this tight-knit band skyward. 

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 For more information about Herman Hitson, visit this website : https://hermanhitson.com

For more information about Music Maker Foundation, visit this website : https://musicmaker.org

 

Sunday, April 4, 2021

#494 : Elizabeth King - Living in the Last Days

 


2021 – Bible & Tire

By Phillip Smith; April 4, 2021

It’s been forty-five years since Elizabeth King walked away from the recording business to raise her fifteen children.  King has returned to the studio to share her dynamic voice with a brand-new album of uplifting sacred soul called Living in the Last Days.   With Bruce Watson producing, King is backed by The Sacred Soul Sound Section comprised of guitarists Will Sexton (Dale Watson, Nicki Bluhm, Amy LaVere) and Matt Ross-Spang (Al Green, Jason Isbell, John Prine), bassist Mark Stuart (Alvin Youngbood Hart), and drummer/percussionist George Sluppick (Albert King, Chris Robinson Brotherhood).  Also appearing on this record are The Vaughn Sisters Vocals, The D-Vine Spiritualettes Vocals, organists Al Gamble (St. Paul & the Broken Bones), and Rick Steff, vocalists Chris and Courtney Barnes, with Art Edmaiston and Jim Spike on horns, and William Graves on vocals and Wurlitzer electric piano.

This eleven-track album leads off with “No Ways Tired”.  King’s steadfast vocals are accented with a deep buttery bass, and a sweet twangy guitar.  I love the title-track “Living in the Last Days”.  Complete with hand-clapping and beefy organ accompaniment, it becomes quite the glory-hallelujah hymn.  “Call on Him” is an exquisite taste of Sixties soul wrapped around southern gospel.  It’s musical gold.  Drenched in a swampy Mississippi blues, “You’ve Got to Move” brings the album to a close.  With a superb performance, King expresses just how closely the musical paths are between the blues and church music.                   

The world could use more music like the ones Elizabeth Kings brings to Living in the Last Days.

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For more information about the artist, visit this website : www.bibleandtire.com


Saturday, February 16, 2019

#376 : Willie Farmer - The Man From the Hill



2019 – Big Legal Mess Records

Release Date : March 1,2019



By Phillip Smith; Feb. 16, 2019



Willie Farmer, an auto mechanic from Duck Hill, Mississippi, who’s owned his own shop for over forty years, scores huge with his splendid new blues album, The Man From the Hill. Recorded at Delta Sonic Sound in Memphis, Farmer enlists top-tier talent to back him, like Jimbo Mathus (Squirrel Nut Zippers), Will Sexton, Mark Edgar Stuart, and Al Gamble ( St.Paul and the Broken Bones). 



I love that rolling rhythm embedded into Farmer’s songs.  On Junior Kimbrough’s “Feel So Bad”, which leads the album off, the riff is unavoidably hypnotic and alluring.  He also rolls out a hearty cover of “Shake It”, originally from Jessie Mae Hemphill.   “I am the Lightning”, is also heavily soaked in the North Mississippi hill country waters.  It just pulls me right on in.  This track in particular also appears on an upcoming release called Blue Muse, a various artist collection from the Music Maker Relief Foundation.  

An avid churchgoer who still plays every Friday, Farmer also represents the sweet sounds of old-school gospel music with The Sensational Nightengales’ “At the Meeting”.    Farmer has a special way of bringing the listener right into the songs he sings.  When he sings “Daddy Was Right”, it’s an absolute heart-breaker.



This is definitely an album to keep an eye out for.  I can’t get enough of it.


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