×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
0888295265669
$16.44
$17.99
Save 9%
Current price is $16.44, Original price is $17.99. You Save 9%.
View All Available Formats & Editions

CD
Members save with free shipping everyday!
See details
See details
16.44
In Stock
Overview
John Mayall, the pioneering octogenarian British bluesman, has been on a late-career tear. Last year's A Special Life received wide approval from fans and critics alike, while its supporting tour found him playing well-attended shows. Find a Way to Care, his second date for Forty Below Records, is again produced by Eric Corne and features the same band that's been with Mayall for years: guitarist Rocky Athas, bassist Greg Rzab, and drummer Jay Davenport. A horn section also augments select tracks. The material, as usual, is divided between originals and covers. This is a Mayall album that -- uncharacteristically -- focuses on his keyboard skills: he manhandles B-3, Wurlitzer, piano, and clavinet (and also plays harmonica and some guitar). His hard-grooving Hammond on Percy Mayfield's "The River's Invitation" seamlessly weaves roadhouse blues and vintage R&B. Mayall's grimy Wurlitzer fuels a thorough reinvention of Lightnin' Hopkins' "I Feel So Bad," with meaty fills interacting with the horns. His 12-bar piano progressions and chord voicings on Don Robey's "Mother-in-Law Blues" are fat and greasy. Athas gets plenty of playing time too. His stinging leads pierce through swaggering horns and Wurlitzer on the title number. The B-3 and clavinet on "Ain't No Guarantees" are meaty and tight, underscored by breaks from Davenport and a deeply funky bassline from Rzab. Lee Baker, Jr.'s "I Want All My Money Back" finds the band in a house-rocking groove. "Ropes and Chains," co-written with Rzab, places the clavinet and bass (the latter played like a lead guitar) way up-front in the mix. Chicago blues frames the tune, but skittering cadences and deep down-home funk add a new textural palette. "Crazy Lady" is a solo piece for vocals and piano that displays Mayall's ample knowledge of the New Orleans piano tradition, nodding to both Professor Longhair and Fats Domino. Mayall also gives props to British blues guitarist Matt Schofield and co-writer Dorothy Whittick in a moody, steamy reading of "War We Wage," with a great solo by Athas. Mayall's voice is beginning to show its age (on the slow tunes in particular), but he can still sing and shout clearly. Find a Way to Care doesn't break new ground, but it is exploratory. Mayall is still actively seeking the depths of the music he's been playing for nearly 70 years. His vast experience as a bandleader has made him hungrier; he still pursues the music with the fervor of a man less than half his age. If you're a fan, you need to grab this one.
Product Details
Release Date: | 09/04/2015 |
---|---|
Label: | Forty Below |
UPC: | 0888295265669 |
catalogNumber: | 11 |
Rank: | 113873 |
Related Subjects
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
Delta blues legend Fred McDowell was one of the most celebrated of the early-'60s folk-blues ...
Delta blues legend Fred McDowell was one of the most celebrated of the early-'60s folk-blues
movement. His spare albums perfectly captured the traditions, storytelling, and beautiful anguish of the Southern blues. This compilation combines 1966's Amazing Grace and My Home ...
In March 1977, Muddy Waters, Johnny Winter, and James Cotton did a concert tour together ...
In March 1977, Muddy Waters, Johnny Winter, and James Cotton did a concert tour together
in support of Waters' then-recent Hard Again LP, on which Winter had played guitar (as well as produced) and Cotton had played harmonica. This CD, ...
Originally released on LP format in 1971 with a cloth burlap cover,Gooduns is the second
album by Richard King Biscuit Boy Newell. After the success Official Music the year before, Gooduns was more of the same style with a few ...
Four Chicago harmonica greats, one eminently solid album. Teamed with Junior Wells, Billy Branch, and ...
Four Chicago harmonica greats, one eminently solid album. Teamed with Junior Wells, Billy Branch, and
Carey Bell, Cotton sings Willie Love's Delta classic Little Car Blues and Charles Brown's Black Night. Wells trades harp solos and vocals, standing front and ...
John Mayall's debut album, recorded live in December 1964, is a little unjustly overlooked, as ...
John Mayall's debut album, recorded live in December 1964, is a little unjustly overlooked, as
it was recorded shortly before the first of the famous guitarists schooled in the Bluesbreakers (Eric Clapton) joined the band. With Roger Dean on guitar ...
If you were to trim Waters' enormous contribution to the blues down to bare bones ...
If you were to trim Waters' enormous contribution to the blues down to bare bones
essentials, this 11-track best-of, part of MCA's 20th Century Masters Millennium Collection would make a nice representative package. The usual suspects (Long Distance Call, I'm ...
You Gotta Move is an excellent 19-track compilation of Mississippi Fred McDowells best-known work, spotlighting ...
You Gotta Move is an excellent 19-track compilation of Mississippi Fred McDowells best-known work, spotlighting
his Mississippi Delta slide guitar virtuosity, as well as his superior songwriting skills; perhaps most familiar to many listeners is the title track, which inspired ...
This interesting release re-creates the look and contents of the 1964 Kent Records LP called ...
This interesting release re-creates the look and contents of the 1964 Kent Records LP called
Original Folk Blues of John Lee Hooker right down to the original sleeve art, and ups the ante by including a previously unreleased version of ...