Sonny Green
Found! One Soul Singer
Little Village Foundation
"Found! One Soul Singer" is the latest release from the Little Village Foundation. The album is the first full album by Robert 'Sonny' Green, a Louisiana native who relocated to Los Angeles. Green was named Sonny by Big Jay McNeely to make folks think he was Little Sonny Warner, the vocalist on "There Is Something On Your Mind." Growing up, he was a classmate of Mighty Sam McClain. He did record some highly prized 45s.
This recording was done at Kid Andersen's Greaseland Studio, and Andersen plays guitar. Others on the session include Jim Pugh on Hammond B3, Chris Burns on clavinet and piano, Endre Tarczy on bass, and Ronnie Smith on drums. Others on the session include Mariachi Mestizo on violins, Jeff Lewis on trumpet, Mike Rinta on trombone, and Aaron Lington on tenor and baritone saxophone. D'mar plays drums on one track while Terry Hanck and Gordon Beadle are heard soloing on one track each.
Musically, this is a very appealing album of modern urban blues and soul-blues in the vein of Bobby Bland, Little Milton, Syl Johnson, Little Johnny Taylor, and others. He has the gospel-rooted screams and chocked cries down and puts everything into the performances here that are ably backed. There are times when his diction is a bit slurred, as on the cover of Bobby Bland's "I'm So Tired" and Little Milton's "If Walls Could Talk." His rendition of "Blind Man" owes a bit to Little Milton. It is a fine performance, as is Green's channeling of Syl Johnson on the churning groove of "Back For a Taste of Your Love." Trumpeter Lewis stands out with his brief horn blasts here.
Rick Estrin's "I Beg Your Pardon" is a superb slow blues with a vocal that would do Little Johnny Taylor proud. Pugh plays a greasy organ solo. There is a deep soul rendition of an early Willie Nelson song, "Are You Sure." Alabama Mike joins on an original, "Trouble." It is a first-rate duet in the style of the Jewel recordings by Ted Taylor and Little Johnny Taylor. Incidentally, the CD cover lists it as the ninth track. It is the eighth track, and "If You Want Me To Keep Loving You," another strong performance in the Little Johnny Taylor mode, is the ninth track.
This album closes with a well-sung cover of Ted Taylor's "Be Ever Wonderful." There is plenty to enjoy about this recording. Sonny Green ably evokes so many greats as he recreates their songs. He certainly displays his considerable vocal chops, and Kid Andersen and the backing musicians provide top-flight backing. For fans of soul-blues and deep soul, Little Village Foundation has indeed found a most soulful singer.
I received my review copy from a publicist. Here is Sonny Green performing recently.
Ron Weinstock's semi-regular collection of observations, reviews and more about blues, jazz and other matters informed by the blues tradition.
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