Corey Stevens - Bring on the Blues (2003)

Artist: Corey Stevens
Title: Bring on the Blues
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Fuel 2000 Records 302 061 312 2
Genre: Modern Electric Blues
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 55'17
Total Size: 379 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Bring on the Blues
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Fuel 2000 Records 302 061 312 2
Genre: Modern Electric Blues
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 55'17
Total Size: 379 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Lonesome Road Blues [Broonzy, Christian, Stevens] (4:16)
2. Hang On [Stevens] (4:14)
3. Real Love [Brannon, Devaney, Malloy, Morris…] (5:43)
4. You're So Evil [Stevens] (4:56)
5. Crazy and Blue [Stevens] (5:21)
6. My Love for You Has Died [Stevens] (5:15)
7. Triple Jack [Miller, Stevens] (4:07)
8. My Blues Are Turning Red [Stevens] (8:10)
9. Something I Can't Do [Duke, Stevens] (4:11)
10. You're Gonna Miss Me [Curtis, Stevens] (4:35)
11. Getaway [Stevens] (4:25)
Corey Stevens - Guitar, Vocals
Danny Grenier, Dallas Hodge, John Paulus - Guitar
Will MacGregor, Mike Riojas - Bass
Adolfo de la Parra, David Salinas - Drums
Glen Gerard - Keyboards
Gary Hoey - Percussion
Stanley Behrens - Harmonica
Guitarist, composer, and singer Corey Stevens has formal training in classical guitar, but on the opening track of his fourth album he really sounds as if he majored in Stevie Ray Vaughan -- everything is there, from the distinctively adenoidal singing style to the heavyweight Texas-style blues licks. By the second track he's cutting his own path, though, with a highly satisfying slab of roots rock entitled "Hang On" (and, interestingly, a completely different vocal approach). And he continues to explore subtly different modes of expression throughout the album, never going anywhere that a fan of eclectic blues wouldn't be willing to follow, but never settling into a completely predictable groove, either. "Crazy and Blue" features a guitar solo that sounds like Robert Fripp channeling Freddie King; "You're Gonna Miss Me" reminds listeners how fun 12/8 time can be; and the album's emotional centerpiece, "Something I Can't Do," is both despairing and defiant, in a heartbreaking sort of way: "In my darkest hour, I could never do the things you do," Stevens sings, and there's something about the way that common sentiment is phrased that just catches you off guard. Nice stuff.
