Doug Jay—Under The Radar (Crosscut Records).
It’s two years since Doug Jay’s last album, his debut for Crosscut, Jackpot and in the intervening period he has continued to hone the Blue Jays, his European touring band since 2000. The Washington DC singer and harmonica player has an impressive CV that includes gigging with Muddy Waters, BB King, Sunnyland Slim and Bruce Springsteen. The Blue Jays draw their music from many different sources and the eponymous opener is an R&B with Jay’s craggy vocal and accentuated guitar from Jimmy Reiter, touted as one of the finest young blues guitarist around these days. It’s Love is an upbeat rocker with the Reiter’s obligatory snappy guitar and great harp from Jay. Temptation harks back to the hey day of 60s Rock n Roll and has excellent harmony from Reiter. Show Me The Way To Love You stays in the R&R field albeit on the blues fringes. Without Love is slow and uninspiring and Don’t Want Your Love No More seems entrenched in the past. Losing Hand is a down and dirty blues and Lowell Fulson’s Love Grows Cold is an R&R/ blues crossover with the horn section adding welcome depth. Good guitar solo from Reiter and it really sways along.
Poor Me is a slow Chicago blues with top class playing, harp from Jay & piano from Christian Rannenburg and a good vocal too – he can turn his hand to this if he wants to. Up-tempo R&B Poor Me has good harmonies and the band seems to be warming to their task. It’s Easy When You Know How stays with R&B, the highlight of which is Jay’s screeching harp. What A Man Can Do is firmly in the style of Robert Cray – no bad thing, of course and Call Me Back To You is a barrelhouse piano and country blues, played at walking pace. There’s a little whistling from Reiter at the end but thankfully no yodelling. They round things off with Boom-A-Rang, an R&B instrumental guitar thingy. It’s well played but a bit dated methinks.
http://www.dougjay.com/
http://www.crosscut.de/
David Blue.
It’s two years since Doug Jay’s last album, his debut for Crosscut, Jackpot and in the intervening period he has continued to hone the Blue Jays, his European touring band since 2000. The Washington DC singer and harmonica player has an impressive CV that includes gigging with Muddy Waters, BB King, Sunnyland Slim and Bruce Springsteen. The Blue Jays draw their music from many different sources and the eponymous opener is an R&B with Jay’s craggy vocal and accentuated guitar from Jimmy Reiter, touted as one of the finest young blues guitarist around these days. It’s Love is an upbeat rocker with the Reiter’s obligatory snappy guitar and great harp from Jay. Temptation harks back to the hey day of 60s Rock n Roll and has excellent harmony from Reiter. Show Me The Way To Love You stays in the R&R field albeit on the blues fringes. Without Love is slow and uninspiring and Don’t Want Your Love No More seems entrenched in the past. Losing Hand is a down and dirty blues and Lowell Fulson’s Love Grows Cold is an R&R/ blues crossover with the horn section adding welcome depth. Good guitar solo from Reiter and it really sways along.
Poor Me is a slow Chicago blues with top class playing, harp from Jay & piano from Christian Rannenburg and a good vocal too – he can turn his hand to this if he wants to. Up-tempo R&B Poor Me has good harmonies and the band seems to be warming to their task. It’s Easy When You Know How stays with R&B, the highlight of which is Jay’s screeching harp. What A Man Can Do is firmly in the style of Robert Cray – no bad thing, of course and Call Me Back To You is a barrelhouse piano and country blues, played at walking pace. There’s a little whistling from Reiter at the end but thankfully no yodelling. They round things off with Boom-A-Rang, an R&B instrumental guitar thingy. It’s well played but a bit dated methinks.
http://www.dougjay.com/
http://www.crosscut.de/
David Blue.
No comments:
Post a Comment