Toni Price - Talk Memphis (1990)
Artist: Toni Price
Title: Talk Memphis
Year Of Release: 1990
Label: Texas Music Group
Genre: Blues
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:45:33
Total Size: 297 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Talk Memphis
Year Of Release: 1990
Label: Texas Music Group
Genre: Blues
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:45:33
Total Size: 297 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Talk Memphis
02. What I'm Puttin' Down
03. Mean Man
04. Am I Groovin' U?
05. Leftover Love
06. Gravy
07. Sunflower
08. Right Where I Belong
09. Poor Little Fool
10. Runnin' Out
11. Sorry About That
12. Ninety-Nine Pounds
13. The Power
Austin mainstay Toni Price (who moved to San Diego shortly before the release of this set) ups the energy on her first album in four years. Talk Memphis rocks a bit harder, brings tougher soul, and generally burns hotter than much of the singer's catalog. As usual, she chooses terrific material to work with. From the greasy Memphis groove of the title track to the rootsy funk of "Am I Groovin' U?" to an obscure blues-soul gem from Stax's tag team of Hayes/Porter called "Leftover Love" (originally performed by Mable John), Price stamps these songs with her distinctive and sexy Southern drawl. Longtime cohort Gwil Owen contributes three tunes that tap into his country-folk pedigree. Price also digs deep into the Ashford & Simpson catalog for the R&B grit of "Runnin' Out'" and tears through the Ann Peebles' staple "99 Pounds" with the driving yet subdued passion that informs all of her work. Price slinks around Owen's "The Power" like a cat on the prowl and returns to Memphis again for a cover of Booker T. Jones' "Sorry About That." The Texas Horns and female background vocals (to which she often overdubs herself) bring even more sultry soul to a few tracks, including Allen Toussaint's "Mean Man." The band of Austin pros plays with hot-buttered precision, and even though Derek O'Brien's production is in the pocket, the sound is somewhat reserved for music that thrives on passion. Regardless, it adds up to a rousing good time that doesn't expand Price's borders as much as refine what she has already proved to do so effectively. It's another in a series of terrific releases from one of Southern music's best-kept secrets, who seems to improve with the passing years.