Showing posts with label Clarence Spady. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clarence Spady. Show all posts

Thursday, May 20, 2021

Clarence Spady - Surrender

Size: 108.6 MB
Time: 46:41
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2021
Styles: Blues Soul
Art: Full

01. If My Life Was A Book ( 3:20)
02. Good Conversation ( 5:20)
03. When My Blood Runs Cold ( 4:01)
04. K-Man ( 3:56)
05. Surrender ( 4:12)
06. Down Home Blues ( 6:41)
07. Addiction Game ( 4:31)
08. Jones Falls Expressway (10:31)
09. Pick Me Up ( 4:05)

It is perfectly poignant that veteran bluesman Clarence Spady chose to include his version of Z.Z.Hill’shit song “Down Home Blues,” on his new album Surrender,as the Pennsylvaniaguitarist has followed the footsteps of the soul-blues pioneer, who createda combination of blues and contemporary soul styling that helped to restore the blues to modern black consciousness. This is the first release for Spady since 2008 and it is a profession of faith and declaration of determined recovery from an artist whose life has been full of dramatic ups, downs, and sidetracks since breaking into the scene in the mid-90’s and receiving his first W.C. Handy award nomination in 1997.

The very personal collection of nine tracks includes seven original songs and three previously unreleased recordings from 1999 captured at the River St.Jazz Café in Plains, PA. The songs written and recorded over a 20-year period include collaborations with William “Wes” Weller and new mentor Andy Pace, as well as his protégé Adam Schultz. The album also features material and performances from lost friends, Lucky Peterson and drummer Shorty Parham, and a special song he wrote for his son, whose life was cut short at only 25, creating a highly emotional landscape.

Two shimmering notes from Spady’s Stratocaster bring us into the Memphis soul opener “If My Life Was A Book,“ setting the tone of introspection and reminiscence on a musical life. He then hands over the guitar duties to up-and-coming phenom Adam Schultz, who wrote and plays lead on “Good Conversation,“ a super smooth track with soulful vocals and jazzy flavors of tasty horns from Tom Hamilton and keyboards from Scott Brown and Bob O’Connell on organ. Spady demonstrates the breadth of his theatrical abilities on the slow burning blues “When My Blood Runs Cold.” The show stopping number penned by Lucky Peterson is the perfect vehicle for his masterful vocal and guitar skills.

It has often been said that singing the blues will make you feel better, relieving your pain into something lighter when the music, through lyrics and melodies, allow one to make sense of tragic realities. Spady shows us this in the straight-ahead blues shuffle “K-Man,” a song he wrote for his son Khalique, as a cathartic memorial of a child taken too soon, who he thinks of every day. Spadywears his heart on his sleeve during the emotional title track, “Surrender,” laying his soul to bare in a penitent testimony of gospel blues. The aforementioned Z.Z.Hill standard is given an acoustic treatment for the album marking a fresh approach to the oft recorded and much loved “DownHome Blues.”

The first of three live tracks from 1999,“Addiction Game,“ find Spady in his element digging deep into his guitar and vocals while the band provides deep funk groove full of fiery chops. Mark Hamza propels the quartet along on Hammond organ and pedal bass, while Spady trades blazing solos with saxophonist Tom Hamilton on the courageous instrumental “Jones Falls Expressway.” Shorty Parham sings with Spady on the finale “Pick Me Up,” an easygoing plea to a lover from a contrite and humbled man.

Remarkably, Surrender is only Clarence Spady’s third release in a quarter century. Hopefully the strong album will garner him overdue attention and support so we won’t have to wait that long for the next one.~Rick J Bowen

Surrender MP3
Surrender FLAC

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Clarence Spady - Just Between Us

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:39
Size: 111.4 MB
Styles: Modern electric blues
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[4:53] 1. I'll Never Sell You Out
[4:07] 2. Enough Of You
[4:55] 3. Just Between Us
[3:47] 4. King Of Hearts
[3:43] 5. Won't Be This Way Always
[4:36] 6. I'll Go
[3:29] 7. Cut Them Loose
[5:39] 8. Be Your Enough
[4:03] 9. 24 7 Luv
[6:05] 10. E-Mail
[3:18] 11. Candy

Clarence Spady returns with the release of "Just Between Us" on Severn Records, his first recording in over 10 years. Once described as "the future of the blues" by Bill Dahl (Chicago Tribune), his sound has matured and is now even more distinguishable. Clarence plays with a depth and sensitivity that can't be taught, effortlessly combining blues, jazz, funk and rock into his own unique sound. As a songwriter Clarence writes 11 brand new originals never being afraid to turn his most private moments into stories that we all can relate to.

Just Between Us mc
Just Between Us zippy

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Clarence Spady - Nature Of The Beast

Size: 123,8 MB
Time: 52:58
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1996
Styles: Modern Electric Blues
Art: Full

01. Baby Baby Baby (5:56)
02. Answer To The Man (2:54)
03. Change My Way Of Living (4:21)
04. Nature Of The Beast (7:38)
05. Bad Axe (4:46)
06. Built For Comfort (5:07)
07. Picture Of Love (5:29)
08. Hi Heeled Sneakers (3:16)
09. A Good Fool Is Hard To Find (5:49)
10. Blues Walk (4:31)
11. Gospel Blues (3:05)

Let's see, a debut album on a respected but still second-tier label by a new generation bluesman from that fabled blues center of Scranton, Pennsylvania? Tell me that don't have journeyman and formula written all over it. But the nature of the beast that is Clarence Spady's debut album is that while you can't really zoom in on any one element that makes it work, the music moves and grooves and most definitely works.

Spady is a good singer with a raspy growl that falls close to Johnny Copeland territory. As a guitarist, he's a capable yet not breathtaking soloist but genuinely funky in his rhythm comping, probably since he was playing in R&B showbands on the East Coast casino/resort circuit for most of the ‘80s. The four songs he contributed here show he's a solid songwriter, the lyrics taken from personal experience more than blues archetypes, but nothing to stamp him as a true original in that department.

What is distinctive is that the group is an organ trio (Mark Hamza supplies bass via pedals) with extra sax integrated into the group sound (Tom "T-Bone" Hamilton plays a lot more than the usual section parts and solos). Spady does have a good eye for stepping outside the usual blues repertoire for tunes by Raful Neal, Son Seals, and hard bopper Clifford Brown. Even his take on "Hi Heeled Sneakers" goes by way of Chuck Berry's "Memphis" to show off a repertoire of country licks.

In fact, the most lukewarm cuts are the basic boogie of "Built For Comfort" and the overly smoothed-out "Picture of Love" co-written by Robben Ford. But what sticks is the chicken-scratch comping and funky grooving of "Baby Baby Baby" or "A Good Fool Is Hard To Find," the ska tinge to the shuffle "Answer To The Man," or guitar-sax-organ trade-offs that are so tight on "Change My Way Of Livin'" and "Blues Walk" the players sound they're finishing off each other's lines.

You could say Spady's song choices get a little too grab-bag diverse or that Hamza's fills are a little too florid or the mix gets cluttered because Hamilton plays a little too much. But you also get the very real sensation these musicians genuinely enjoy playing with each other and feel free to toss in embellishments when they feel like it rather than just sticking to the parts. It sounds like a band playing music that matters to them more than anything, and that's what makes Nature Of The Beast work. ~by Don Snowden

Nature Of The Beast