Showing posts with label Gerry Jablonski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gerry Jablonski. Show all posts

Monday, January 28, 2019

Gerry Jablonski & The Electric Band - Live At The Blue Note

Size: 99,8 MB
Time: 43:00
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Sherry Dee (Live) (6:09)
02. Soul Sister (Live) (5:12)
03. Two Time Lover (Live) (6:16)
04. Black Rain (Live) (7:10)
05. Fork Fed Dog (Live) (4:26)
06. Anglel Of Love (Live) (4:54)
07. Broken Heart (Live) (8:51)

With the release of Live at the Blue Note, Gerry Jablonski and his Electric Band have finally released a collection that fully showcases the energy, commotion and emotion of the band’s live shows.

Previous attempts at live recordings haven’t quite captured that elusive “locked-but-loose” band vibe that this collection of solid musicians is capable of. They nailed it this time.

UK Blues Awards 2018 nominees, Gerry Jablonski and The Electric Band are dynamic and brawling right out of the gate with “Sherry Dee” for an audience that sounds like they know what is in store for them, but likely found their expectations exceeded by the time the first chorus rolls around. There is a little more swing in “Soul Sister,” which is designed with plenty of room for funky interplay between harmonica and Jablonski’s guitar before his extended, gritty guitar solo powers you through to the big finish.

There is a bit of an SRV-goes-uptown strut on “Two Time Lover,” with plenty of room for punctuation, and a pretty powerful lead break, from Peter Narojczyk’s harmonica, while Grigor Leslie’s bass holds down the rhythm along with Lewis Fraser’s focused yet reactive-to-the-moment drumming. This all, of course, sets the table for another scorching big finish from Jablonski’s guitar.

Album standout track “Black Rain” is a powerful song and clearly a band favorite as they all lean hardinto the groove on this one and seem to be racing each other back to “the One” in every bar. There is room for everyone to shine on this seven minute ode to that kind of bad love the Blues was invented for.

“Fork Fed Dog” is more of a quick-paced, light-hearted and scrambling appreciation of that kind of girl who makes you re-evaluate everything you thought you knew. This is a driving beast of a tune, once again custom made for another harmonica and guitar duel in which everyone wins, especially the listeners. Next up “Angel of Love” opens a little more soulfully, with a clean bell-toned intro that effortlessly slides into scuttle-buttin’ tale of a lovesick, or perhaps just lust-struck, guy who pays the price when he gets blindsided by his idea of Heaven on Earth. By the time we get to the multi-part instrumental break, the band is burning at full intensity and everyone gets to have their say while the barn, already fully engulfed in flames, burns to the ground. The album closes with “Broken Heart” a full-power raver that looks at healing a broken heart from another angle while giving you one last taste of pull-out-all-the-stops guitar and harmonica interplay that really highlights the whole point of “live in concert” albums.

The studio might let you go back and fix the occasional beefed note, or off-kilter syllable. The studio might help you capture nuance and passing notes that would otherwise be lost in the mix, but the trade-off is the loss of spontaneity and the possibility of capturing some magic moment in time. In a live recording like this one, which is as well-engineered as it is well-played, you hear both the wild abandon of musicians who know they can really cut loose because they trust each other, combined with the respect, reaction and focus required to listen and respond to each other, the audience and the vibe in the room, in that particular moment in time. That’s always where the Blues truly reveals its power to move people and stir souls.

Take this ride. ~Martine Ehrenclou

Live At The Blue Note

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Gerry Jablonski & The Electric Band - Life At Captain Tom's

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:17
Size: 170.0 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[5:39] 1. Higher They Climb
[4:03] 2. Sherry Dee
[4:27] 3. Koss
[6:02] 4. Hard To Make A Living
[7:22] 5. High On You
[5:59] 6. Merchants Of Soul
[2:57] 7. Hot
[3:22] 8. Slow Down
[4:21] 9. Anybody
[5:19] 10. Virgil Cane
[5:17] 11. When The Fire Is Gone
[4:52] 12. Getting Better
[6:06] 13. Skinny Blue Eyed Boy
[3:43] 14. Prog
[4:41] 15. Broke My Heart

Please allow me to introduce to you Gerry Jablonski and the Electric Band. A four piece blues rock powerhouse that never fails to win over their audience as they take them on a rollercoaster ride of original music that pays tribute to the blues rock classics that have influenced this band.

In the five years they have been together the band have released 3 albums, included in Classic Rock blues magazine top albums of the year and have enjoyed airplay on BBC Radio 2 Paul Jones Blues Show. With a work ethic second to none the band have clocked up 4 extensive and successful Polish tours, tours in Holland, Germany and Norway and played all the major UK blues festivals.

The band take no prisoners, reeling in the audience and giving off so much energy the crowd have no choice but to bathe in the reflected glory of four musicians letting it rip and giving their heart and soul to the performance. There are no airs or graces or niceties – gutsy rock n roll and with memorable melodies, sweet harmonies and a powerhouse rhythm section – an absolutely refreshing and life affirming experience that only a truly phenomenal performance can bring. Do yourself a favor – check out the best band you never heard of before the rest of the world catches on and they all want some.

Life At Captain Tom's mc
Life At Captain Tom's zippy

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Gerry Jablonski & The Electric Band - Trouble With The Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:16
Size: 101.4 MB
Styles: Rockin blues
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[3:46] 1. Trouble With The Blues
[6:03] 2. Down To The Ground
[4:28] 3. The Curse
[4:59] 4. The Well
[4:34] 5. Anybody
[5:22] 6. Rich Or Poor
[4:04] 7. Lady & I
[4:15] 8. Fork Fed Dog
[3:21] 9. Big Bad World
[3:20] 10. I Confess

Gerry Jablonski-guit/vox; Peter Narojczyk-Harmonica; Grigor Leslie-Bass guit; Lewis Fraser-Drums.

Gerry Jablonski and The Electric Band is a high energy outfit from Scotland that blend blues roots with influences of classic rock. According to Classic Rock magazine, "Jablonski has the blues under his fingernails" and last year they certainly created quite a stir at the Colne Great British Rhythm and Blues Festival!

Anyone who has never seen Gerry and The Electric Band on stage is truly missing an incredible energetic, visually exciting and ear pleasing performance. With a past appearance at Jools Hollands Jamhouse for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, being voted Best Solo Act at two festivals and a presence at numerous other festivals across the UK and Europe, this is a band not to miss!

The guitar maestro from across the Northern border was influenced by trail blazing masters like Jimmy Page, Johnny Winter, John Martyn, Bowie and Jeff Beck as well as the highest calibre of blues/rock outfits which include Led Zeppelin, Cream and The Who.

Trouble With The Blues mc
Trouble With The Blues zippy

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Gerry Jablonski & The Electric Band - Twist Of Fate

Size: 107,4 MB
Time: 46:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Slave To The Rhythm (4:33)
02. Turn It Up (5:02)
03. Taste Of Paradise (3:50)
04. Liar (5:09)
05. Twist Of Fate (4:53)
06. The Dance (5:45)
07. The Preacher (4:23)
08. Son Of Mine (4:39)
09. Dave Says (3:09)
10. Suzi Sunshine (4:47)

Right now Gerry Jablonski And the Electric Band is one of Scotland’s best rock blues bands. ‘Twist of Fate’ is full of great songs, tight arrangements, passionate playing and real spark. And even if Dave Innes’s ill health has given the album title some unwanted irony, it hasn’t hampered their mission to produce a rip roaring, riff-led, blues rock album of the highest order.

Much like Blues ‘n’ Trouble 25 odd years before them, The Electric Band has had to work that little bit harder to get noticed outside of their native Scotland and Poland, but this album should help immeasurably.

Led by guitarist Gerry Jablonski and powered by the deep toned effervescent harp playing of Pete Narojczyk, ‘Twist of Fate’ takes no prisoners. From the mighty riff powered opening double lines of ‘Slave To The Rhythm’ via the catchy hook of ‘Liar’ to the closing slide harp-led celebratory roller coaster of Suzi Sunshine’, this is an album that rocks with the same kind of intensity and well crafted harmonies that the band brings to its live shows.

Ultimately ‘Twist of Fate’ is all about the quality and wide variety of the material. Everything somehow subtly fits together and flows elegantly on the back of a bristling ‘live in the studio’ approach, which brings an essential vitality to an often tired genre.

Jablonki’s is equally good on a variety of inspired solos – shifting from a resonant tone, to wah-wah inflected crunch and slide – as he is on expressive vocals, while harp player Narojczyk never overplays, but fills the space beautifully with some deep toned phrasing. And when the two coalesce seamlessly as on ‘Taste of Paradise’ the band soars magnificently over a fluid rhythm section.

However, it’s not all fire and brimstone as evidenced by the piano-led, slow blues of the title track. Gerry’s emotive vocal is perfectly counter balanced by a beautifully toned harp and a poignant hook: ‘So why did you throw it all away, there’s no one left to cry for you today, no more joy left in your heart, success always comes too late, we call that a twist of fate’.

The Electric Band is inspired and versatile in equal portions, slipping into the tightly wrought groove of ‘The Dance’ with its ‘yeah yeah’ Beatles style refrain and Gerry’s wah-wah guitar, before the muscular Trower style guitar riff of The Preacher’. The latter is a perfect example of how they successfully build their songs from a riff led base.

There’s still time for a funky instrumental ‘Dave Says’, which drummer Dave Innes nails with with a crisp, stop-time shuffle rhythm, as Pete and Gerry trade solo’s over Grigor Leslie’s walking bass line. It’s the stuff of a classy road tested band that has finally penned the sort of quality material to match their stellar chops.

‘Twist of Fate’ might not offer anything radically new but it breathes fresh life into a hoary old genre, and if tightly arranged, kick ass blues-rock is your bag, then this album comes highly recommended. **** ~Review by Pete Feenstra

Twist Of Fate