John Lee Hooker Jr. - Cold As Ice (2006/2022)
Artist: John Lee Hooker Jr.
Title: Cold As Ice
Year Of Release: 2006/2022
Label: Telarc
Genre: Modern Electric Blues, Urban Blues, Detroit Blues, Jump Blues
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:54:02
Total Size: 125 mb | 324 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Cold As Ice
Year Of Release: 2006/2022
Label: Telarc
Genre: Modern Electric Blues, Urban Blues, Detroit Blues, Jump Blues
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:54:02
Total Size: 125 mb | 324 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. John Lee Hooker Jr - You Blew It Baby
02. John Lee Hooker Jr - Fed Up
03. John Lee Hooker Jr - Cold As Ice
04. John Lee Hooker Jr - Somebody's Out To Get Me
05. John Lee Hooker Jr - Do Daddy (Requiem For John Lee Hooker)
06. John Lee Hooker Jr - Wait Until My Change Comes
07. John Lee Hooker Jr - 4 Hours Straight / Blues Man
08. John Lee Hooker Jr - Trapped
09. John Lee Hooker Jr - I'm In The Mood
10. John Lee Hooker Jr - I Got To Be Me
11. John Lee Hooker Jr - Oh Baby
12. John Lee Hooker Jr - Eva'body Pays Attention
John Lee Hooker, Jr. hasn't shied away from his father's immense legacy, and he always features some of Hooker, Sr.'s signature songs in concert; he included three of them on his debut album, 2004's Blues with a Vengeance, but anyone expecting him to replicate that legacy is mistaken, for Hooker is after something else again, a true synthesis of the old with the new, and his sound is much closer to contemporary urban R&B or funk than his father's raw, Delta-derived blues style. Still, the most immediately memorable song on Hooker's second album, Cold as Ice, at least on first listen, is a straight out tribute to his father, the moving "Do Daddy (Requiem for John Lee Hooker)," and another of the best tracks, "Oh Baby," works clearly out of a blues template. Most of the rest of album is a kind of funky, neo-jump blues blend, however, full of horns and a kind of urbane, good-natured humor that is in striking contrast to what passes for contemporary blues thus far in the 21st century. Unfortunately, nothing here works the synthesis between the old and the new quite as well as "Blues Ain't Nothing but a Pimp" from Hooker's first album, which leaves Cold as Ice feeling a bit like a transitional outing, however memorable. One gets the sense that Hooker has an even better album in him, and it could well be right around the corner.