Showing posts with label Dennis Brennan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dennis Brennan. Show all posts

Friday, July 10, 2020

Anthony Geraci & Dennis Brennan - Daysreams In Blues

Size: 113,4 MB
Time: 48:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Full

01. Love Changes Everything (4:52)
02. Tomorrow May Never Come (4:11)
03. No One Hears My Prayers (4:37)
04. Daydreams Of A Broken Fool (3:26)
05. Mister (5:09)
06. Tutti Frutti Booty (3:09)
07. Jelly, Jelly (6:27)
08. Dead Man's Shoes (4:00)
09. Hard To Say I Love You (3:22)
10. Living In The Shadow Of The Blues (3:25)
11. Crazy Blues/Mississippi Woman (4:32)
12. Ode To Todd, Ella And Mike Ledbetter (1:11)

This past Fall, relatively recent in terms of live music shows given this health pandemic, this writer saw Boston-based pianist/composer/bandleader Anthony Geraci deliver a sizzling show with his core band that plays on this, Geraci’s third and best CD as a leader, Daydreams in Blue. Geraci, a long-time sideman in the New England blues scene as a key member of both Sugar Ray & the Blue-Tones and Ronnie Earl and the Broadcasters, has come into his own in recent years as a bandleader. And, he’s been noticed with BMA nominations for Pinetop Perkins Piano Award for five consecutive years in addition to many other nominations from prestigious outlets. Geraci has appeared on over 50 recordings from both vintage and contemporary blues artists.

Geraci’s core band features Boston favorite Dennis Brennan on lead vocals and harmonica (Brennan has several albums under his own name) and Boston-area stalwarts Michael Mudcat Ward (acoustic bass), Troy Gonyea (guitar) and Jeff Armstrong (drums). For this date, Geraci called on special friends – his bandmate with Sugar Ray & the Blue-Tones, the blazing guitarist Monster Mike Welch who graces eight of the dozen tracks, blues-rock icon Walter Trout who ignites “No One Hears My Prayers” along with Peter Ward on rhythm guitar, all abetted by the horn tandem of trumpeter/arranger Scott Arruda and saxophonist Mark Early. Ten are Geraci originals with covers of Earl Hines and Billy Eckstine’s “Jelly, Jelly” and Brennan’s “Dead Man’s Shoes.”

As much as Geraci likes to play a Hammond B-3 organ, he sticks to his core instrument, the acoustic piano, and it’s his exceptional piano playing that stiches consistency throughout. The album opens with “Love Changes Everything,” a smoker marked by Geraci’s bright playing, strong horn parts, Brennan’s passion, and Welch’s incendiary solo. “Tomorrow May Never Come” is an infectious soul tune again with the same cast, and strong horn ensemble parts. Trout blows the roof off on the gutsy, deep “No One Hears My Prayers” against a thick, blaring horns backdrop. The requisite calm follows in Geraci’s wonderful lyrical piano into to “Daydream of a Broken Fool” before the band takes the syncopated tune into raucous territory, making way for both Geraci’s percussive attack and Welch’s searing lines.

”Mister” has Brennan blowing his blues harp as the tune struts along behind Geraci’s barrelhouse piano, a standout pure blues track, setting the stage for an outstanding four song sequence. The blistering boogie, rapid tempo “Tutti Frutti Booty” rather obviously nods to the late Little Richard, who was still alive when the tune was recorded. This is the only turn for Geraci on vocals. Brennan delivers “Jelly, Jelly” in his own style, knowing that it wouldn’t be wise to mimic Eckstine’s vocal, buoyed by Welch’s axe, and Geraci’s spot-on piano, as stellar blues piano as you’ll ever hear. Brennan’s “Dead Man’s Shoes’ is a dramatic tune – “What kind of man would wear those shoes?”- just keeps ringing indelibly.

The mood lightens with the shuffle “Hard to Say I Love You,” a showcase for Geraci, who is the only soloist, spurred on by Brennan’s emotive vocal and Armstrong’s beats. “Living in the Shadow of the Blues” is a piano-driven NOLA influenced tune. “Crazy Blues/Mississippi Women” is an old school approach with Geraci’s piano clearly prominent and rollicking in true blues fashion when Welch makes a rather surprise signature entrance. “Ode to Todd, Ella, and Mike Ledbettter” is Geraci in trio format for a brief nod, remembering family and friends.

Expect Geraci to garner more nominations with this one, and, better yet, a long deserved win. This is clearly in the higher echelon of blues albums this year. ~Jim Hynes

Daysreams In Blues MP3
Daysreams In Blues FLAC

Friday, March 15, 2019

Dennis Brennan & The White Owls - Live At Electric Andyland

Size: 105,1 MB
Time: 44:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Soul
Art: Front

01. Cuttin' In (Live) (2:57)
02. Nothin' But Love (Live) (2:56)
03. Yes I'm Loving You (Live) (2:03)
04. End Of The Blues (Live) (4:31)
05. Good Lover (Live) (3:28)
06. The (New) Call Of The Freaks (Live) (3:44)
07. Tangle (Live) (4:50)
08. Three Kind Of Blues (Live) (4:55)
09. I Live The Life I Love (Live) (3:33)
10. Foolkiller (Live) (3:14)
11. I'm On My Last Go Round (Live) (3:22)
12. No Expectations (Live) (5:09)

Dennis Brennan has been acclaimed as one of Boston’s best singer-songwriters for longer than most locals can remember. The music on Brennan’s many albums falls loosely into the Roots Rock/Americana category, but his songs have always been clearly influenced by his deep and esoteric love and knowledge of Blues and Soul music. For a few years now Brennan has held down a weekly dive-bar residency with a brilliant band of simpatico players dubbed “Dennis Brennan and the White Owls,” just to celebrate and explore their take on the blues. Their debut album, “Live at Electric Andyland,” captures the sound and feel of the band at their edgy, live best, featuring songs from the likes of Johnny Guitar Watson, Mose Allison, Willie Dixon, Jimmy Reed, Bo Jenkins, Big Al Downing, and the Rolling Stones, as well as original compositions by Dennis and the band. This is a deeply satisfying album, one that some of us have been waiting for for a very long time.

Live At Electric Andyland