One
Dime Band
Side Hustle
2024 – Toneblanket
Records
By Phillip Smith; Mar. 9, 2024
Original source : phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com
One Dime Band from Boston, Massachusetts has caught my full
attention with their third and latest album Side Hustle. In serving up thirteen
all-original tracks, the band delivers a savory bowl of musical gumbo made from
assorted blues sub-genres gathered along the Mississippi River from St.
Louis, through Memphis, and down to the Big Easy.
The core of the band is an acoustic
duo comprised of John Brauchler on guitars, resonator, and banjo and Paul
Gallucci on vocals, harmonica, percussion, and rhythm guitar. In 2022 they were
winners of the Boston Blues Society Blues Challenge in the solo/duo
category. In 2023 they were winners of
the Granite State Blues Society Challenge in the same category. In 2024, they entered the International
Blues Challenge in Memphis and made it to the Semi-Finals. Their backing band
consists of Romeo Dubois on drums, Paul Kochanski on upright bass
and electric bass, Alizon Lissance on piano, organ, and accordion, Ilana
Katz Katz on fiddle, Holly Harris on percussion, Johnny Blue Horn
on trumpet, Mario Perrett on saxophone, with Robin Hathaway and Tim
Curry on backing vocals.
A blast of horns and a buttery
Stax-fueled groove kicks the door in with a fist-full of funk on title-track
“Side Hustle”. I absolutely love this one. Visions of cypress trees wading in
the swampy waters of Mississippi come to my mind with each listen of “Blackfoot
Sun”. Powered by Brauchler on resonator and, Gallucci on harp, this
favorite is topped with a delectable fiddle performance by Katz. I’m
drawn in to Kochanski’s crawling, infectious bassline on “Dr. Shine”. It remarkably creates an ominous feeling of
impending doom in this brilliant blues song about escaping reality. “Soul to
Keep”, a slow-cooked blues duet with the lovely Robin Hathaway, sweeps
me off my feet. Brauchler digs his
heels in deep and releases some gorgeous tones on this one. The smell of late
Sixties funk wafts through the air on the instrumental “Rib Grease”. An intoxicating rhythm, blasts of brass, and a
groovy riff all adds up to a fabulous listen.
Loaded with musical twists
and turns, Side Hustle is terrific from beginning to end.
I wouldn’t say that review
number 666 is a milestone, but the number does have some significance to some. In
order to establish the connection to this review, I will share this story. When
I first saw the cd cover featuring a pool table with red and green neon-lettered
windows behind, a wave of familiarity washed over. I knew I had played on at
that table before, I just wasn’t immediately sure where. I then made it a mission to figure this out. The
letters on the windows in reverse order were the first three letters of a place
I have frequented occasionally on Beale Street in Memphis, Tennessee
called The Absinthe Room. Once I located photos of The Absinthe Room
on Google, I was able to verify that the cover photo was in fact taken
from the inside of that exact establishment.
This is where the synchronicity
begins. A piece of blues historical trivia I know about this place is that at one
time this was Hooks Brothers Photography Studio. Hooks Brothers took
the only known studio photo of the legendary blues player Robert Johnson.
And for those who don’t know, Johnson allegedly sold his soul to the
devil at the crossroads to achieve his guitar mastery. And that’s the tie-in to
review #666.
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These photos featuring the Absinthe Room on Beale Street are ones I took
of this location myself on two different visits to Memphis.
· * Photos by Phillip Smith