John-Alex Mason –Town And Country (Naked Jaybird Music).
After spending his teenage years listening to blues records and being blown away by live performances by Johnny Winter and James Cotton, it is no surprise that John-Alex Mason took up blues guitar. However, it was after listening to The Complete Recording Of Robert Johnson that his particular love of solo country blues artists began. This is John-Alex Mason’s fifth full length recording but the first to reach my desk. He splits the album roughly in half with original songs and reworkings of classic and traditional tunes. Shake ‘Em On Down (OMB) has a voice that belies his youthful looks on the cover. Electric Delta blues and OMB stands for One Man Band – simple and powerful. Steel Pony Blues is also Delta style but acoustic this time. This is a modern response to Charley Patton’s Pony Blues and proves him to be the real deal. Bury My Boots has him playing acoustic slide and we could have a real rival for current guitar kings such as Joe Bonamassa. Terraplane Blues is a different take on the Robert Johnson classic. He has a clear vocal and this treatment is clinical & professional. The acoustic thread continues with Boll Weevil and this country slide blues is made to sound so easy by a master of his instrument. Chef Menteur is sedate but the feeling behind the song, a tribute to the people of New Orleans and how everyone was touched by what happened to the city, is well meant. Strange Things is played out on the dobro, as are a number of others, and is a bit more urban than its predecessors. Having said that, he is still firmly rooted in the Delta.
Milk Cow Blues is another famous song, well played. He manages to inject some much welcomed emotion into this vocal. There’s a return to electric guitar for Locomotive and I’ve worked out the code on the back of the sleeve. The titles with pale print are electric and those in black are acoustic or, if you like, Town & Country. This is vibrant and he lets it rip on the vocal. What Are You Hungry For? is another pumping tune with drums complimenting perfectly. The drums pound out a heartbeat for Rabbit Song, a pared down electric offering with emotive vocals. Jitterbug Swing has Southern influences throughout and there is a telling introduction of bass about half way through. This is a good arrangement of a traditional song. The Skip James classic Cypress Grove is slow and thought provoking. Mason will be a star of the blues if he continues in this form. There are no big solos, just top class picking and slide. You can’t play an Elmore James song at anything less than 100% and Shake Your Money Maker is no exception. This has been covered by many but I can’t remember any better than Mason’s version. It’s just guitar and drums and is the shortest track on offer but it will get you going. He closes with an acoustic version of the opening track, Shake ‘Em On Down. John-Alex Mason will hold your attention by himself very easily. This is real music for real music lovers.
http://www.johnalexmason.com/
http://www.nakedjaybirdmusic.com/
David Blue.
After spending his teenage years listening to blues records and being blown away by live performances by Johnny Winter and James Cotton, it is no surprise that John-Alex Mason took up blues guitar. However, it was after listening to The Complete Recording Of Robert Johnson that his particular love of solo country blues artists began. This is John-Alex Mason’s fifth full length recording but the first to reach my desk. He splits the album roughly in half with original songs and reworkings of classic and traditional tunes. Shake ‘Em On Down (OMB) has a voice that belies his youthful looks on the cover. Electric Delta blues and OMB stands for One Man Band – simple and powerful. Steel Pony Blues is also Delta style but acoustic this time. This is a modern response to Charley Patton’s Pony Blues and proves him to be the real deal. Bury My Boots has him playing acoustic slide and we could have a real rival for current guitar kings such as Joe Bonamassa. Terraplane Blues is a different take on the Robert Johnson classic. He has a clear vocal and this treatment is clinical & professional. The acoustic thread continues with Boll Weevil and this country slide blues is made to sound so easy by a master of his instrument. Chef Menteur is sedate but the feeling behind the song, a tribute to the people of New Orleans and how everyone was touched by what happened to the city, is well meant. Strange Things is played out on the dobro, as are a number of others, and is a bit more urban than its predecessors. Having said that, he is still firmly rooted in the Delta.
Milk Cow Blues is another famous song, well played. He manages to inject some much welcomed emotion into this vocal. There’s a return to electric guitar for Locomotive and I’ve worked out the code on the back of the sleeve. The titles with pale print are electric and those in black are acoustic or, if you like, Town & Country. This is vibrant and he lets it rip on the vocal. What Are You Hungry For? is another pumping tune with drums complimenting perfectly. The drums pound out a heartbeat for Rabbit Song, a pared down electric offering with emotive vocals. Jitterbug Swing has Southern influences throughout and there is a telling introduction of bass about half way through. This is a good arrangement of a traditional song. The Skip James classic Cypress Grove is slow and thought provoking. Mason will be a star of the blues if he continues in this form. There are no big solos, just top class picking and slide. You can’t play an Elmore James song at anything less than 100% and Shake Your Money Maker is no exception. This has been covered by many but I can’t remember any better than Mason’s version. It’s just guitar and drums and is the shortest track on offer but it will get you going. He closes with an acoustic version of the opening track, Shake ‘Em On Down. John-Alex Mason will hold your attention by himself very easily. This is real music for real music lovers.
http://www.johnalexmason.com/
http://www.nakedjaybirdmusic.com/
David Blue.
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