Oli Brown – Open Road (Ruf Records).
Oli Brown has taken in the influences of the great British blues players of the past and those of his contemporaries such as Aynsley Lister to take up the baton for the 21st century. He has already shared a stage with greats such as Koko Taylor, Walter Trout, John Mayall & Buddy Guy and is ready to take his place in the spotlight. Psycho is a contemporary blues played by a power trio. The rhythm section of Fred Hollis on bass and Simon Dring on drums ably backs Brown’s guitar in its quest for the elusive note. The eponymous title track is a mid-paced grinder with nothing out of the ordinary in the voice. Stone Cold (Roxanne) is a shuffling blues in the Kansas City style and there is no doubting his credentials as he lets it rip on the chorus. The first cover, Can’t Get Next To You has him not really out of first gear yet and this needs a bit of pace injected. It’s another contemporary blues rock with the introduction of Govert Van Der Kolm on organ. Shade Of Grey is slow again and has a spoken vocal intro. It does build a little and turns to the funky side.
All The Kings Horses has a heavy intro and highlights Brown as one of many playing this type of blues at the moment, and he’s certainly not the worst by any manners of means. This has his best guitar work yet and the pounding drums from Billy McLelan breathe life into it as it builds to a fantastic crescendo. Black Betty (yes it is the Ram Jam song) has a drawled vocal and although essentially the same as the Ram Jam cover of Leadbelly’s song, Oli does let himself go -- short and sweet. Missing You is a slow, uncomplicated blues with incisive guitar bursts -- this will be a great live track. New Groove is a beefed up Robert Cray style strolling blues in parts but we have had to wait until Played By The Devil before we get any genuine pace and this is a highlight as he shows how good he really is. Complicated is slowed down again but I’d have rather had him sprinting for the finish although this 21st century blues is a good finish to an intriguing album.
http://www.olibrownband.co.uk/
http://www.rufrecords.de/
David Blue
Oli Brown has taken in the influences of the great British blues players of the past and those of his contemporaries such as Aynsley Lister to take up the baton for the 21st century. He has already shared a stage with greats such as Koko Taylor, Walter Trout, John Mayall & Buddy Guy and is ready to take his place in the spotlight. Psycho is a contemporary blues played by a power trio. The rhythm section of Fred Hollis on bass and Simon Dring on drums ably backs Brown’s guitar in its quest for the elusive note. The eponymous title track is a mid-paced grinder with nothing out of the ordinary in the voice. Stone Cold (Roxanne) is a shuffling blues in the Kansas City style and there is no doubting his credentials as he lets it rip on the chorus. The first cover, Can’t Get Next To You has him not really out of first gear yet and this needs a bit of pace injected. It’s another contemporary blues rock with the introduction of Govert Van Der Kolm on organ. Shade Of Grey is slow again and has a spoken vocal intro. It does build a little and turns to the funky side.
All The Kings Horses has a heavy intro and highlights Brown as one of many playing this type of blues at the moment, and he’s certainly not the worst by any manners of means. This has his best guitar work yet and the pounding drums from Billy McLelan breathe life into it as it builds to a fantastic crescendo. Black Betty (yes it is the Ram Jam song) has a drawled vocal and although essentially the same as the Ram Jam cover of Leadbelly’s song, Oli does let himself go -- short and sweet. Missing You is a slow, uncomplicated blues with incisive guitar bursts -- this will be a great live track. New Groove is a beefed up Robert Cray style strolling blues in parts but we have had to wait until Played By The Devil before we get any genuine pace and this is a highlight as he shows how good he really is. Complicated is slowed down again but I’d have rather had him sprinting for the finish although this 21st century blues is a good finish to an intriguing album.
http://www.olibrownband.co.uk/
http://www.rufrecords.de/
David Blue
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