Joe Bonamassa - Black Rock (2010) [Vinyl]

  • 19 Jun, 07:28
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Black Rock
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Provogue / J&R Adventures
Genre: Blues Rock
Quality: WavPack (image + .cue, artwork) [192kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 53:09 min
Total Size: 2.06 GB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

A1 Steal Your Heart Away
A2 I Know A Place
A3 When The Fire Hits The Sea
A4 Quarryman's Lament
A5 Spanish Boots
A6 Bird On A Wire
A7 Three Times A Fool

B1 Night Life
B2 Wandering Earth
B3 Look Over Yonders Wall
B4 Athens To Athens
B5 Blue And Evil
B6 Baby You Gotta Change Your Mind

It’s a sign of Joe Bonamassa’s increasing profile that he got blues legend B.B. King to guest on his eighth album Black Rock -- and if what you’re doing is good enough to rope B.B. in, there’s not much reason to change, so Bonamassa doesn’t tinker with his formula here, retaining a little of the folky undertow of The Ballad of John Henry, but with its remaining roots in a thick, heavy blues-rock more redolent of ‘60s London than the ‘50s Delta. Of course, Bonamassa has never shied away from his love of Brit-blues, even underscoring it with a good streamlined cover of Jeff Beck’s “Spanish Boots,” but he retains a healthy respect for all manners of classic blues, kicking out a Chicago groove on a cover of Otis Rush’s “Three Times a Fool,” reaching back to Blind Boy Fuller for “Baby You Gotta Change Your Mind” and ably replicating B.B.’s latter-day soul groove on a horn-smacked cover of Willie Nelson’s “Night Life.” Bonamassa has an ear for non-blues writers too, cherrypicking Leonard Cohen’s “Bird on a Wire” and John Hiatt’s “I Know a Place,” tying it all together with beefy lead lines, but the provocative moments on Black Rock are all self-penned, whether it’s the clattering stomp “When the Fire Hits the Sea,” the British folk lilt of “Quarryman’s Lament” and “Athens to Athens,” or the droning dramatic epic “Blue and Evil.” These are easily the most intriguing songs here, suggesting Bonamassa realizes that the familiar covers allow him to stretch out elsewhere, and while it might be interesting hearing him follow this path for a full album, what’s here on Black Rock is both satisfying and admirably, if reservedly, ambitious. -- Stephen Thomas Erlewine