The Duffy Bishop Band - Fly The Rocket (1999)
Artist: The Duffy Bishop Band
Title: Fly The Rocket
Year Of Release: 1999
Label: Burnside Records
Genre: Blues, Modern Electric Blues
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 73:19
Total Size: 179/505 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Fly The Rocket
Year Of Release: 1999
Label: Burnside Records
Genre: Blues, Modern Electric Blues
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 73:19
Total Size: 179/505 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Change Your Address (Carlson) 4:09
2. Rockandaheartbreak (Barber) 3:18
3. Wild Women (Don't Have the Blues) (Cox) 4:26
4. Day One 4:21
5. It's a Crime (Bishop, Carlson) 6:19
6. Better Half of What (Bishop) 4:33
7. Just a Whisper (Carlson) 5:05
8. Hey Linda (Bishop, Carlson) 4:16
9. Pain (Bishop, Gahr) 5:29
10. Patience (Barber) 5:09
11. 3x's (Bishop, Carlson) 6:59
12. Each Day 5:05
13. Fly the Rocket (Bishop, Carlson) 6:26
14. Blue Lullaby (Carlson) 7:36
This tight band plays vintage '70s-style R&B with energy and conviction, a staunch mixture of urbanized city blues cross-pollinated with rock & roll, and just a dash of the rural blues that evolved into swing music. This is the horn-driven music prevalent in the small, smoky clubs of the South, music that was about getting dancers out onto the floor to strut their stuff, and as such is slower and more pushing to propel the body on the dance floor. The heartfelt quality of the songs comes shining through off the disc, which stems from the fact that the band, in one aggregation or another, wrote all but one of the songs. One song that truly leaps out is the tortured "Pain," which was co-written by Duffy Bishop and Eddie Gahr, and sung with the conviction of one who has experienced the depths of the emotions they are singing about. The horn charts here stand as a perfect complement to the pain echoed in the voice. Some of the songs are also written with a playful sense of humor; listen to "Fly the Rocket," and the images drawn up fit perfectly with the cover art's sense of kitsch. The backup singing by Duffy Bishop is fuller and richer than her lead vocals. Her singing as lead vocalist at times is a bit thin, not enough fullness of voice to match the intensity of the song. Yet she does get this richness on backup vocals, and on a few of the numbers more toward the end of this disc. She even does a great smoky torch number at the end called "Blue Lullaby," that is a great faux ending to the disc (there is an uncredited, moody psychedelic song that provides the real one). This 14-song, 73-minute disc is good introduction to this band's work. They apply an energy, tightness and focus to their music that serves them well. A fantastic job on the cover art and the liner notes, which are easy to read.