Blues The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/5052.html Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:33:53 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb Billy Gibbons - The Big Bad Blues (2018) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/5052-billy-gibbons/24378-billy-gibbons-the-big-bad-blues-2018.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/5052-billy-gibbons/24378-billy-gibbons-the-big-bad-blues-2018.html Billy Gibbons - The Big Bad Blues (2018)

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1 	Missin' Yo' Kissin" 	
2 	My Baby She Rocks 	
3 	Second Line 	
4 	Standing Around Crying 	
5 	Let The Left Hand Know 	
6 	Bring It To Jerome 	
7 	Thats What She Said 	
8 	Mo' Slower Blues 	
9 	Hollywood 151 	
10 	Rollin' And Tumblin' 	
11 	Crackin' Up

Bass Guitar – Joe Hardy
Drums – Greg Morrow, Matt Sorum
Guitar – Billy Gibbons, Elwood Francis
Harmonica – Elwood Francis, James Harman
Keyboards – Mike Flanigin 

 

Whenever you go and watch ZZ Top there’s a moment (and probably two or three) where Billy F. Gibbons looks at the crowd from behind his beard, his shades and the suit that you simply have to be a rock star to pull off and says: “Are we having a good time now?”

We are, of course, because ZZ Top are the best little ol’ band from Texas, but these solo records always seem to be the equivalent for the man himself.

If that is the case – and I am prepared to wager Billy’s top hat that it is – then “Big Bad Blues” sounds like it was a real blast.

“BFG meets the blues giants” is how he dubs it himself, but working with Producer Joe Henry (who released an album with Billy Bragg a year or so back and who was superb when I saw him live) and an all-star cast, this collection of old and new is just about as greasy and real as it gets.

Brilliantly, it matters very little which are covers and which are not – because frankly it all sounds like Billy Gibbons of ZZ top playing the blues with his mates. “Missin’ Yo Kissin” is the filthiest boogie you can imagine, but oddly, perhaps, as much as this is about Gibbons returning to his roots, then the record seems as much driven by Mike ‘The Drifter’ Flanigin’s harmonica as it is by the guitar. His stamp is all over “My Baby She Rocks” which is as basic as the very day that Robert Johnson went to the crossroads.

The timeless “Second Line”, bursts out with a knowing double entendre, and an incessant lick to become particularly special, while such an aficionado of the genre as Gibbons has very little trouble adding his own stamp on the classic Muddy Waters tune “Standing Around Crying” just as one of the new ones (I think – I can’t find any reference to it anywhere else) “Let The Left Hand Know” sounds just as steeped in the history, as well as having a real nose for trouble.

“Bring It To Jerome” might be Bo Diddly’s but here it belongs to BFG, while “That’s What She Said” would sound perfect played in a ZZ Top show right after “Gotsta To Get Paid”. “Mo Slower Blues” is built around a piano tinkle from Flanigin and it is notable just what a quality line up Gibbons has got here – Matt Sorum is one of the drummers, the aforementioned Hardy is on bass and there are a couple of real gunslinging guitarists.

“Hollywood 151”is a glorious, gleeful 12 bar shuffle, and whilst to be honest I don’t know if George Thorogood has ever recorded “Rollin’ And Tumblin’” but if he did, it absolutely would sound like this.

As it ends with the Latin tinged on “Crackin’ Up” – about the only time on this album things aren’t turned up to the max, and wherein it sounds like its summer every day The irony is not lost that in “….Blues” there’s a line that goes – and its gruffly spoken as only Billy F. Gibbons could: “I went to see a musical band on Tuesday – and they weren’t very loud. That’s not the case here.

After his last solo record, “Perfectamundo” doused itself in hot sauce and got all Cajun, then “The Big Bad Blues” is as perfect as it is perfectly named. A very Texan take on the blues, it could have only come from one man – and it is wonderful.

And yeah, a good time? That’s a given. ---Andy Thorley, maximumvolumemusic.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Billy Gibbons Wed, 14 Nov 2018 15:09:20 +0000
Billy Gibbons & The BFG’s - Perfectamundo (2015) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/5052-billy-gibbons/18862-billy-gibbons-a-the-bfgs-perfectamundo-2015.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/5052-billy-gibbons/18862-billy-gibbons-a-the-bfgs-perfectamundo-2015.html Billy Gibbons & The BFG’s - Perfectamundo (2015)

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01. Got Love If You Want It
02. Treat Her Right
03. You're What's Happenin', Baby
04. Sal Y Pimiento
05. Pickin' Up Chicks On Dowling Street
06. Hombre Sin Nombre
07. Quiero Mas Dinero
08. Baby Please Don't Go
09. Piedras Negras
10. Perfectamundo
11. Q-Vo

Billy Gibbons - Guitar, Guitar (Bass), Hammond B3, Piano, Vocals
Mike Flanigin - Hammond B3
Alx "Guitarzza" Garza - Guitar (Bass), Vocals
Martine "G. G." Guigui  - Hammond B3, Piano
Joe Hardy - Guitar, Guitar (Bass), Keyboards, Vocals
G.L. Moon - Guitar
Greg Morrow - Drums

 

ZZ Top's 2012 album La Futura -- their first in nearly a decade -- was widely acclaimed for bringing back the group's grimy '70s boogie, so what did Billy Gibbons choose to do for a follow-up? Naturally, he decided to leave his little old band behind so he could record Perfectamundo with a new group called the BFG's. Perfectamundo allows Gibbons to not only indulge a newfound love of Cuban rhythms -- an infatuation assisted by pianist Martin Guigui, who provides an anchor in the BFG's -- but also all the studio trickery he left behind as he worked with Rick Rubin on La Futura. Certainly, percolating Cuban rhythms lie at the foundation of Perfectamundo, but Gibbons can't resist setting everything to tightly controlled drum machines, then hauling out a bunch of studio effects, including a vocoder that pushes his gravelly croak into something slippery and sly. All this flair is a welcome reminder that, for all his vaunted blues purism, Gibbons remains something of a futurist, happily blurring the lines between the present and past along with obliterating the lines between cultures. True, some of this playfulness can result in moments that are decidedly dorky, like the opening gambit of oldies covers ("Got Love if You Want It," "Treat Her Right"), which feel stiff. "Hombre Sin Nombre" seems constructed to house every synthesized sound Gibbons ever imagined, "Quiero Mas Dinero" boasts a rap that would've seemed old-fashioned in 1989, and the chants of "baby shake that ass" on the title track are the furthest thing from sexy -- but this isn’t a bug, it's a feature.

As good as it was, La Futura felt somewhat constrained by the concept of ZZ Top's classicism, whereas this record thrives on freedom, including the freedom to be ridiculous. The very fact that Perfectamundo gets silly makes it appealing: Gibbons enjoys playing with this Cuban-blues hybrid so much, he lets down his guard, allowing himself to spin out some slick, greasy solos, ride out some infectious vamps, and act like the cheerful dirty old man he is. --- Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Billy Gibbons Fri, 04 Dec 2015 17:04:40 +0000