Showing posts with label Christian Collin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian Collin. Show all posts

Saturday, May 12, 2018

Christian Collin - American Art

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:09
Size: 112.5 MB
Styles: Americana, Blues
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:51] 1. Day To Day
[5:00] 2. All I Need Is You
[3:53] 3. Call Me
[4:30] 4. Satisfaction Guaranteed
[4:17] 5. Oh My (How Life Passes Us By)
[3:20] 6. Johnny
[5:22] 7. Cold Hard World
[2:53] 8. Don't Tread On Me
[5:04] 9. A Feeling So Strong
[5:17] 10. Way Past Midnight
[4:38] 11. The First Still Burns

The first time I heard singer-songwriter Christian Collin, I had the privilege to review an album of his back when I wrote for Big City Rhythm & Blues. As I recall he had been with a band called Molasses but had recently gone solo with his own brand of no-holes-barred electric blues. It was majestic and contained all the power and glory you want with first class blues rock. But there was more to it as well. This must have been at least 10 years ago. The first time I saw him perform was at a special blues event about five years ago. His performance was far and away the best of the evening. Because it was a blues event, Christian pretty much stuck to the blues, but he has much more in his arsenal as well. I sensed he might have been holding back a bit. I could not help but hear in his work a certain affinity for the work of the great Johnny Winter. Since then Collin has branched out into more of a full bore American Music experience, not just the blues. His new release, American Art, is a real achievement that illustrates the point that this music is still alive and well–and growing. In 11 new tracks of original music, Christian Collin shows himself to be a major force to be reckoned with. His time has come.

Americana, American Music, he’s earned the right to be well within in that tradition. But I like to call it rock ‘n’ roll. If that term works for acts as varied as the Grateful Dead, Bob Dylan, Government Mule, Johny Winter And, and Robin Trower, just to scratch the surface, I’ll include Christian Collin in that same pantheon.Track 3, “Call Me,” is a case and point. Short and sweet, it has all the character of a Chuck Berry tune from his hey day, complete with a Berry-inspired classic guitar break. But the next track, “Satisfaction Guaranteed,” is pure funk with all the brass that style of music requires. Think gritty tenor sax, trumpet and alto sax, and solid charts with room for full expression. It has the tightness of James Brown and the broad appeal of, lets say, the Average White Band or Tower of Power.

There’s a traveling wander lust to many of the tunes. Track 10, “Way Past Midnight” rocks with a quieter and more contemplative sensibility to it that is not unlike an up-tempo Eric Clapton ballad. The final track, “The Fire Still Burns,” has a traditional piano playful quaintness to it, that belies the depth of the lyrics. This is no moon in June music. It’s filled with the self-reflection you get with a mature artist. Collin is around 40 and has enough experience under his belt to create 11 meaningful songs. You even get all the lyrics contained in a elegant package with immaculate artwork. What you get is big life issues, a full heart, and great singing and guitar playing, without a shred of the didactic to weigh it down. It is all universal stuff that will appeal to anybody with discriminating taste who refuses to settle for the ordinary. ~ George Seedorff

American Art mc
American Art zippy

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Christian Collin - Spirit Of The Blues

Size: 121,8 MB
Time: 51:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. One And Only (3:54)
02. Player's Game (3:56)
03. A Woman Like You (4:50)
04. Dance The Blues Away (3:56)
05. Without You (5:04)
06. Spirit Of The Blues (5:14)
07. Highway Song (2:53)
08. Blues For You (4:17)
09. Dead Man Walking (4:13)
10. Old 109 (4:18)
11. The River (Unplugged) (4:11)
12. Forever Friends (5:09)

From the infamous crossroads buried deep in Mississippi to singers like Lightnin’ Hopkins, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and Muddy Waters, the blues genre has collected a ton of icons in its time and turned most into legends. Howlin’ Wolf was a man like any other, with a life to lead and a need to somehow make his time on Earth matter. Every blues musician known by name today was and is the same. What makes them different are the fingerprints each left on the genre, bequeathed for future devotees to study. On his second solo album Spirit of the Blues, out July 10, blues guitarist, singer and songwriter Christian Collin pays tribute to the voices that sang before him.

Collin began playing guitar as a teenager. After spending years on the road and fronting the blues band Molasses, the Chicago-based musician embarked on his first solo project American Art, which was released in 2012. On Spirit of the Blues, Collin comes into his own, producing a slick combination of dance-ready tunes (“One and Only,” “Dance the Blues Away”) with stricken songs about relationships threatened (“Without You,” “A Woman Like You”). Though some of his lyrics fall short (the cliché “Cross my heart now, baby / hope to die” in “One and Only” and recommendation to “score some tail” in “Player’s Game” incite quick eye rolls), the album as a whole reveals an artist with a good handle on the technical and thematic aspects of the blues. The album is fun and real, but tracks like “Dead Man Walking” and “The River (Unplugged)” show that Collin identifies with the genre’s serious side (the same side that dives past a person’s emotional surface into the nitty-gritty struggles of life at its hardest) and finds ways to weave it into his own writing.

When the last chord of the 12th and final track “Forever Friends” fades, “Spirit of the Blues” comes away as the album’s strongest song. Its lyrical content and strong delivery bring Collin’s musical influences to light as he references artists that touched the blues before his time and builds a legend of his own through his retelling. “Forever Friends” reinforces the album’s theme of continuity as Collin sings of holding on to memories despite the persistence of time, a fitting way to close the album. Spirit of the Blues is a lens through which listeners can understand the blues the way Collin does. His interpretation isn’t all-inclusive – how could it be? – but it’s an honest example of the way one style of music can fuel an artist’s way of life. The Review: 7/10 ~Review by Meghan Roos

Spirit Of The Blues