Thursday, October 22, 2020

Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters Rise Up

Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters
Rise Up
Stony Plain

Ronnie Earl returns with a new album, the majority of which were recorded in "Living Room Sessions" at his house in March 2020, and several from a set at a "Daryl's House Club" show in 2019. Earl was recovering from back surgery at the time of these sessions. Recorded shortly before Covid-19 pandemic shut down most live music, "Rise Up" features the guitarist's band of Dave Limina on keys, Diane Blue on vocals, Paul Kochanski on bass, and Forrest Padgett on drums. Guitarist Peter Ward is also present on some of these recordings and contributed the liner notes. The album is his 13th for Stony Plain and 27th of his 45-year-old career.

Earl is one of the most distinctive and interesting guitarists in the blues. A nuanced player, Earl, is a master of tonal dynamics, phrasing, and solo construction. Earl builds solos like smoldering coals in a charcoal grill that bursts into flames when fat drips down. Furthermore, his accompaniments here cradle Ms. Blue's soulful vocals, while the band displays the cohesiveness and strong interplay of years together.

Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters seem incapable of playing poorly, and like his prior albums, one would be hard-pressed to find a weak chorus, much less track. There is a solo rendition of the traditional "I Shall Not Be Moved," opening this recording followed by Earl's original "Higher Love" with one of Blue's sterling vocals. Among her other memorable vocals are the performances of Fenton Robinson's "You Don't Know What Love Is," Little Johnny Jones' "Big Town Playboy," and the gospel-tinged interpretation of Bob Dylan's "Lord Protect My Child." Then there is the stone-cold topical blues with perhaps Diana Blue's most intense vocal, "Black Lives Matter." This song is an original from her and Earl, and Earl adds a spoken part where he celebrates Dave Maxwell and others who have passed on.

There are, of course, several superlative instrumentals, including the slow, brooding "Blues For George Floyd," where his playing drips with emotion. In addition to a tribute to Lucky Peterson, another slow mesmerizing instrumental is "Talking to Mr. Bromberg." Limina is a first-rate organist who is featured on piano on the old Ray Charles instrumental "Mess Around."

Peter Ward joins in on "Navajo Blues" that showcases both guitar stylists. It is the closing track on yet another exceptional Ronnie Earl recording.

I received my review copy from a publicist. Here is a relatively recent performance by Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters.

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