Tuesday, April 01, 2008


Eric Bibb – Get Onboard (Telarc).

Recorded in Nashville, Get Onboard has been on the production line since May 2007 and Bibb says that it has been one of the most exciting projects of his career. He hits the nail on the head when he says “It’s a further exploration into the place where blues meets gospel and soul”. He uses the best session musicians around as well as special guests Bonnie Raitt and Ruthie Foster. The soulful and spiritual Spirit I Am is a great opener and Bibb’s sweet voice will smother you in honey. The Promised Land is bluesy and bouncy and New Beale Street Blues is a jazzy, New Orleans blues. The latter is another tribute to the great city that is still recovering from Katrina. The eponymous title track has a vocal that is so sweet and so clear. It also has great harmonies and he has more soul than heaven itself. If Our Hearts Ain’t In It has Bonnie Raitt on slide guitar and a big production to match. All I can say about Pockets is that it is an Eric Bibb song if there could ever be one. The voice, the gentle approach and the understated instrumentation are his hallmarks.

The gentle acoustic vibes continue with River Blues, which is not, as the title suggests, a blues in the truest meaning of the word. This is followed by Deep In My Soul and that’s where he has rested. Folk, country, gospel it covers so much. Conversation is a slow, precise and heartfelt blues duet with Ruthie Foster and the understated brilliance of God’s Kingdom has, as the title suggests, Gospel overtones Step By Step stays much in the same vein and the final track, Stayed On Freedom, lifts the pace a little with a country blues. This arrangement of the Civil Rights anthem, which in turn was adapted from a traditional spiritual, hits the spot

Eric, and his producer Glen Scott, may just have unleashed a future classic.

http://www.ericbibb.com/

David Blue.

1 comment:

Catherine Todd said...

Dear David, thanks so much for posting this review of Eric Bibb & Bonnie Raitt's "If Our Hearts Ain't In It" on his new CD "Get Onboard."

I've been listening to it non-stop as a download from iTunes; fanstastic. Georgeous for body, mind and soul. It's a real healing path for a soul that was lost and now, just might be found. Thank you all, again and again! Yours, Catherine Todd

P.S. I knew a "David Blue" back in NYC at the Gaslight many years ago, in the early 1970's. I read that he had a heart attack jogging in Central Park, and I thought he had died. If you are him, then it must not be true. If you aren't him, thanks for jogging my memory a little bit about "the good old days!" He was an excellent musician and a very nice guy.