Tab Benoit - Brother To The Blues (2006/2020)

Artist: Tab Benoit
Title: Brother To The Blues
Year Of Release: 2006/2020
Label: Telarc
Genre: Blues Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:54:38
Total Size: 126 mb | 308 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Pack It Up [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux]Title: Brother To The Blues
Year Of Release: 2006/2020
Label: Telarc
Genre: Blues Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:54:38
Total Size: 126 mb | 308 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
02. Bring It On Home To Me [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux]
03. Brother To The Blues [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux]
04. Why Are People Like That? [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux]
05. I'm On Your Side [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux]
06. I Heard That Lonesome Whistle [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux & Jim Lauderdale]
07. If You Love Me Like You Say [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux]
08. Comin' On Strong [feat. Billy Joe Shaver & Waylon Thibodeaux]
09. So High [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux]
10. Grace's Song [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux & Jim Lauderdale]
11. Moon Coming Over The Hill [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux & Jim Lauderdale]
12. Somehow [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux]
13. Can't Do One More Two-Step [feat. Louisiana's LeRoux]
Tab Benoit has been doing his brand of bayou-fed blues-rock for some time now, and while it is tempting to call Brother to the Blues a departure, it is really only a subtle one, straying as it does to the country side of things, but again, only a little bit, and there is probably little-to-no-chance that Benoit will turn into a hat act with a big belt buckle anytime soon. True, he covers Hank Williams here ("I Heard That Lonesome Whistle," with some vocal help from Jim Lauderdale), a touchstone for country if ever there was one, but he also pulls off a passable version of Sam Cooke's soulful "Bring It on Home to Me," takes a North Mississippi country blues approach on "Moon Coming Over the Hill" (featuring some cool Cajun fiddle from Waylon Thibodeaux), and ratchets into familiar swamp rock territory with the hard-charging opener "Pack It Up," and the impressive, wry "Why Are People Like That?," before tying everything together with the set ender, "Can't Do One More Two-Step," which somehow manages to be swampy, rocky, country, and bayou blues all in one package, as well as giving Benoit plenty of room to trade guitar runs with Thibodeaux's fiddle slides. But there is a little bit of a change going on here if you listen closely you can hear string band-style banjo on several tracks and one wonders what Benoit has in mind for his next step down the road. There are a thousand ways to the river, as they say, but in the bayou the river is everywhere at once. There's a little bit of that feel here.