Showing posts with label Eliza Neals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eliza Neals. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Eliza Neals - Badder to the Bone

Size: 103,3 MB - 303 MB
Time: 42:44
File: MP3 @ 320K/s - Flac
Released: 2022
Styles: Blues, rock
Art: Front

1. United We Stand (2:51)
2. Queen of the Nile (6:52)
3. Lockdown Love (4:11)
4. King Kong (3:40)
5. Bucket of Tears (3:25)
6. Got a Gun (2:50)
7. Fueling Me Up (3:40)
8. Heathen (4:59)
9. Can't Find My Way Home (5:35)
10. Queen of the Nile II (4:36)

I was really impressed by this album. Neals always provides lots of energy and power in her music, but this album rose above her others for me in displaying a new level of musical maturity. The songs that she wrote or had a hand in writing were really very solid cuts, and her take on the Winwood song was original and cool. While the pandemic was not a fun time for her and for all of us, this album was a Phoenix of sorts that rose from the ashes of two years of miserable times and shines brightly as a symbol of hope. Kudos to Eliza Neals for producing a fine new CD for all to enjoy! I highly recommend it!

Badder to the Bone MP3
Badder to the Bone FLAC

Thursday, September 3, 2020

Andy Watts - Supergroove

Size: 103,1 MB
Time: 43:53
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Supergroove (3:25)
02. Living Hand To Mouth (4:01)
03. Straight Shooting Woman (5:53)
04. Burning Deep (Feat. Joe Louis Walker) (5:09)
05. Pack It Up (3:58)
06. Blues Of The Month Club (Feat. Eliza Neals) (4:46)
07. Don't Take My Blues Away (4:43)
08. Don't You Let Me Down (3:55)
09. Raw (4:08)
10. Supernatural (3:50)

Any record emanating from acclaimed swamp-blues master Kenny Neal’s Booga Music label is bound to come with high standards attached. Released this September 4th via said company in cooperation with Vizztone Label Group, Supergroove, by premiere blues Israeli guitarist Andy Watts, is an eye-catching addition to the catalogue. Watts is highly regarded in the blues field, having performed with many of the best–Johnny Winter, Lucky Peterson, and Bernard Allison among them. Supergroove also features the talents of veteran blues master and Grammy nominee Joe Louis Walker, singer-songwriter Eliza Neals, soul singer Roy Young, and a host of top-class backing players. Half of the ten tracks presented here are Watts originals, with the balance of compositions by Freddie King, Joe Louis Walker, Coastin’ Hank and others.

Title-track “Supergroove” is a good representation of the album as a whole; a slithering, smoking blues blast, with hot horns, R&B honks and vamping organ. With a large dose of fun and sparkle, this track will put a smile on the face of even the most sullen listener. It breezes along with a good-time slick-sounding vibe. There’s a sunny sheen to the production, which is bright and clear and balanced to perfection. When needed, the brass is cutting and high, but there’s a large amount of subtlety here, which warrants repeated spins. The organ and percussion, for example, are so nicely integrated that it takes some concentration to pick up on how clever the arrangement is.

The star, of course, is Watt’s guitar wizardry. There are shades of the cutting-edge of Hendrix, but Watts’ influences and capabilities are manifold. He can move from super-slick, boiling-under lines to ringing, stinging solos with remarkable ease and conviction.

The same luminous, classic feel runs throughout the album. On slower cuts, such as the winding “Burning Deep,” Watts sounds equally at home, sparking one-notes, stirring embers with fiery backing-riffs and calling out those wild, mournful blues phrases. His playing is never less than eminently appealing. Although a significant portion of each cut is given over to Watts, he is a player with enough generosity to never overburden or unbalance a song. Joe Louis Walker on vocals is equally expressive, soulful.

The assembled musicians sound as organically united as any you will hear. Horns, organ, bass; they all commit to the groove, calling to mind the total blues-soul of Curtis Mayfield or Isaac Hayes on funky cuts such as “Blues Of The Month Club.” Indeed, the conga-backed “Don’t You Let Me Down” sounds for all the world like a potent mix of Hot Buttered Soul-era Hayes with English blues-rockers The Who. With its rolling drum-breaks, Latin beat, background harmonizing and simple, cutting lyrics, this is a stand-out track on what is a very solid album.

Blues records have a pleasing habit of utilizing straightforward statements of intent for their titles. Supergroove follows that time-honoured fashion and fully lives up to its name. The variety of vocals add much to the listener’s interest. Joe Louis Walker, Eliza Neals, soul-man Roy Young, plus Israeli singers Danny Shoshan and Gadi Altman do a fine job with very different approaches.

Watts and Kenny Neal have conjured here an intriguing and superbly enjoyable set. It’s clear that the Israeli guitarist draws inspiration from a wide canvas and possesses the ability to bring those varied elements together to produce something, that while reminiscent of a host of classic recordings, remains wholly original in and of itself. Whenever I hear such music, my first thought is that I would love to browse through that musician’s record collection. If you are a fan of modern blues, you should certainly consider adding Supergroove to your own. ~Chris Wheatley

Supergroove MP3
Supergroove FLAC

Saturday, May 9, 2020

Eliza Neals - Black Crow Moan

Size: 101,0 MB
Time: 44:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. Don't Judge The Blues (2:32)
02. Why You Ooglin' Me (4:11)
03. The Devil Don't Love You (Feat. Joe Louis Walker) (4:39)
04. Watch Me Fly (4:17)
05. River Is Rising (5:54)
06. Run Sugar Run (4:32)
07. Black Crow Moan (Feat. Joe Louis Walker) (4:24)
08. Never Stray (Feat. Derek St. Holmes) (3:56)
09. Ball And Chain (Feat. Derek St. Holmes) (6:15)
10. Hey, Take Your Pants Off (3:01)

The Detroit Diva brings her A-game on Black Crow Moan. She also brings a small army of seasoned and extremely talented musicians to join in. Her special guests on this record are Blues Hall of Famer Joe Louis Walker, and rock guitar virtuoso Derek St. Holmes (Ted Nugent) who also wrote songs for Koko Taylor and Ivan Neville, to name a few. Other artist contributions include Howard Glazer on guitar, Mike Puwal (Kenny Wayne Shepherd, ICP) on guitar and bass, Lenny Bradford (Bo Diddley) on bass, tambourine and backing vocals, Jason Kott (Robert Randolph), John Abraham and Chuck Bartels (Sturgill Simpson) on bass. Bruce Bears (Duke Robillard), and Jim Alfredson (Janiva Magness) add some extra lift on Hammond B3. John Medeiros Jr., Skeeto Valdez (King Konga), Demarcus Sumpter, Jeffrey “Shakey” Fowlkes (Too Slim and the Taildraggers), and Brian Clune keep the clock on drums. Motor City songstress Kymberli Wright (Straight Ahead), and Eliza’s sister Valerie Taylor add soaring backing vocals.

Let’s get to the music. It all kicks off with “Don’t Judge the Blues.” This foot-stomping, hand-clapping attention-getter is Saturday night fish fry meets Sunday morning tent revival. Neals’ gritty, powerful vocals come out strong, accompanied by ass-kicking resonator slide guitar. At one point she sings through a green bullet mic, adding that vintage touch. “Why You Ooglin’ Me?” switches the tempo to a mighty Chicago style slow grind. We catch on quickly that Eliza’s songwriting skills have matured as much as her delivery. All the songs on Black Crow Moan were written (or co-written) by Neals save one, and we’ll discuss that later.

“The Devil Don’t Love You,” co-written by and featuring Joe Louis Walker, is a swanky, funky cautionary tale. It’s an old blues story told in modern, jazzy form, with Walker’s gritty vocals and killer guitar adding that new blues touch. The first moaning we hear on Black Crow Moan comes on “I Can Fly.” A blues-rock ballad of epic proportions, Glazer’s guitar takes second fiddle only to Neals’ lofty voice with Wright and Taylor kicking it up 12 notches. “River is Rising,” comes in with Glazer’s spot-on guitar adding to the haunting lyrics and Eliza’s riveting vocal delivery.

The title track is a soulful, self-examining, call-and-response once again with JLW. The lyrics give us the feeling that Neals had insight to the current state of the world. The isolation, and loneliness and desperation it causes are laid bare. “The solo feeling everyone has right now is like solitary confinement,” she told me. “I think we will connect. We’re all naked in some way.”

It’s not all about the ballads though. On “Run Sugar Run,” Neals piano starts off a song that is pure American rock and roll. It’s Bruce Springsteen meets Billy Joel jamming in a Detroit bar with Puwal sitting in on guitar. The dark story line gives way to good advice from one woman to another. You’ll get it when you hear it.

Derek St. Holmes makes his first appearance on “Never Stray.” A promising love ballad, St. Holmes adds nice, crunchy lead runs. Neals puts a short leash on her usually powerhouse vocal delivery, showing us a softer side. St. Holmes also adds awesome guitar to the only cover song on the album, the Big Mama Thornton classic, “Ball and Chain.” Neals delivers this her own way. Slower and more deliberate than Thornton’s original, but without the primal screams of Janis Joplin’s famous cover. That’s not to say Neals doesn’t deliver. She does, in spades, tearing our hearts out along the way. Singing like a woman possessed, she throws so much of herself into this blues standard that one may think she wrote it herself. I’m not crying. You’re crying. Bravissimo!

The final track is a guilty pleasure for me. My friend, and former producer/bandmate Shawn Ames wrote a song several years ago called “There’s a Party in My Pants,” that was a crowd favorite at live shows. Neals does something very similar here with “Hey, Take Your Pants Off.” This is a fun shuffle for fun’s sake and is sure to pack any dance floor. It’s the perfect palate cleanser and leaves us the way it should – wanting more.

Black Crow Moan is Eliza Neals’ crowning achievement to date. She took some advice from fellow blues artists, brought in some top flight hired guns, created an album of almost entirely original music, and is making it available at a time we need it most. “This album is going to be more sentimental – a lot of stuff coming from way, way back,” Neals said in a recent interview with Gary Schwind. “I think it’s more heartfelt. More like a confessional. That’s different.”

If Black Crow Moan is a confessional, then bless me Father, for I want to sin again. ~JD Nash

Originally posted on 04-08-2020. Updated, CD Rip with full covers.

Black Crow Moan MP3
Black Crow Moan FLAC

Thursday, July 4, 2019

Eliza Neals - Sweet Or Mean

Size: 58.9 MB
Time: 25:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Pawn Shop Blues (Feat. Popa Chubby, Ian Hendrickson-Smith & Michael Leonhart) (4:00)
02. Blackish Gray (5:40)
03. Bitten By The Blues (Feat. Popa Chubby) (4:22)
04. Living With Yo Mama (Feat. Popa Chubby & Dave Keyes) (5:50)
05. Knock Knock Knockin' (2:19)
06. Pawn Shop Blues (Roadhouse) (Feat. Popa Chubby & Dave Keyes) (3:22)

Gritty voiced Eliza Neals belts out the boogie blues with the juke jointing team of guitarist Popa Chubby, keyboarder Dave Keyes, bassist Chris Gambaro-Vega and drummer John Medieros Jr on this full fisted ep. A horn section supports the shuffling “Pawn Shop Blues” that has Neals growling like a hungry lioness, while Keyes’ dark organ oozes ominious moods while Neal years on the thunderous “Blackish Grey.” The team drives like a Mack Truck as they run through a brick wall on “”Bitten By The Blues” and Chubby makes the strings cry for mercy on “ Livin With Yo Mama.” A trip down the dusty roads on the acoustic “Knock Knock Knockin” has Neals rasping through her last breath. Gotta see this band in concert, if my hubcaps aren’t ripped off in the parking lot!

Sweet Or Mean

Monday, February 20, 2017

Eliza Neals - 10,000 Feet Below

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:22
Size: 106.2 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[2:34] 1. Cleotus
[4:53] 2. Another Lifetime
[4:21] 3. Burn The Tent Down
[3:27] 4. 10,000 Feet Below
[4:24] 5. You Ain't My Dog No More
[5:05] 6. Cold Cold Night
[4:10] 7. Hard Killing Floor
[3:37] 8. Call Me Moonshine
[4:06] 9. Down Hill On A Rocket
[3:13] 10. Merle Dixon
[6:29] 11. At The Crossroads

“10,000 Feet Below,” is spelunking the new depths of the Blues with Eliza Neals as your fearless guide. Cavern’s of sound well up through Eliza’s supernatural voice and piano driven songs, as Howard Glazer’s guitar pierces the echo with honest tone. Breaking and entering an abandoned temple of blues-rock left long ago, descending each rung carefully to uplift your musical soul. Producer Eliza Neals rigged the journey, surveyed then mapped the suffocating walls, while finding soulful keys through narrow fissures of sound.

Cascading guest guitarists Paul Nelson (Johnny Winter, Grammy 2015) and Billy Davis (Jimi Hendrix, Rock n Roll HOF) cast light on adventurous dark paths. Colossal drummers Skeeto Valdez (Les Clay Pool), Demarcus Sumter, Brian Clune, Rubin Nizri and John Medeiros supply a profound rumble to orientate your feet. As the ceiling drops, blasting bassists Paul Randolph, Johnny Abraham, Mike Griot (SMIBF founder) and Lenny Bradford (Joe Louis Walker) resonate through the crawlspace. Eliza Neals unflinchingly dives headfirst to underwater eyelets that only a skilled writer can reach. Falling lower to get washed up on golden grotto beaches, a new entrance to blues once left undiscovered, 10,000 Feet Below…

Produced by Eliza Neals on a 1937 Hardman grand piano, which spent most of it’s existence in a Baptist church, plus last twenty in a old music club, pours out it’s resting tuned soul for Eliza. Searching for a new underground modern blues sound cultivated on the road, touring from Maine to Florida across the pond to the United Kingdom and back. Eliza’s songs happen after playing stages, listening to the audience and respecting the greats.

10,000 Feet Below mc
10,000 Feet Below zippy

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Eliza Neals - Breaking And Entering

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:46
Size: 116.2 MB
Styles: Rockin blues
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[3:03] 1. Detroit Drive
[7:03] 2. Breaking And Entering
[4:12] 3. Jekyll And A Hound
[4:00] 4. Goo Goo Glass
[5:38] 5. You
[3:15] 6. Pretty Gritty
[3:47] 7. Southern Comfort Dreams
[4:19] 8. Windshield Wipers
[4:05] 9. Sugar Daddy
[3:24] 10. I'm The Girl
[3:25] 11. Spinning
[4:30] 12. Breaking And Entering (Radio Edit)

Busting down the backdoor is Detroit’s Eliza Neals with “Breaking and Entering,” the blues-rock pry bar to her award winning album “messin with a fool.” Prowling with Detroit’s blazing blues guitarist Howard Glazer (EL 34’s) + hit producer Mike Puwal (CannonBall Records, ICP) these housebreaker’s know how to sneak their way to your crown jewels.

A team of safecracker musicians, with featured guest guitarist Kenny Olson (Kid Rock) plus Gabe Gonzelez (George Clinton) on drums drills open a pandemonium of grit-grime and gris-gris from power bluesy vocalist, musician, songwriter and producer Eliza Neals.

Breaking And Entering mc
Breaking And Entering zippy