Wednesday, May 05, 2021

Curtis Salgado - Damage Control

Curtis Salgado - Damage Control -Alligator Records

Listening to Curtis Salgado's new album (his fourth for Alligator), I found his soulful singing evoking Solomon Burke. I am not suggesting conscious copying, but rather similarity in their voices. This similarity is perhaps most evident in the opening "The Longer That I Live," a fresh original from Salgado, Mike Finnigan, and another that has him sing about growing older, the challenges he faced, and that the older he is, "the older I want to get." Finnigan adds some sterling organ, Jim Pugh is on piano, while Kid Andersen provides some scintillating guitar. Another original, the funky "What Did Me In Did Me Well," has a philosophical reflection about a relation he ruined. He adds some harmonica against the same sterling backing band.

Contrasting to these two numbers' southern style is the New Orleans to Memphis rock and roll of "You're Going To Miss My Sorry Ass," with Kevin McKendree's rollicking piano and George Marinelli's piano. While his singing is not evocative of Solomon Burke here, Salgado ably delivers these witty vocals. McKendree and Marinelli (on slide guitar) are also on the southern roots rock-flavored "Precious Time." Then there is the Tex-Mex accent of "Count of Three" with guitarist Johnny Lee Schell, organist Mike Finnigan, pianist Jim Pugh, and drummer Tony Braunagel. Then there is a terrific soul ballad, "Always Say I Love You (At The End Of Your Goodbyes)," with Jackie Miclau replacing Pugh on piano. It is a further demonstration of the variety to be heard on this recording. 

The 13 songs on this album were captured at sessions in Nashville (engineered by McKendree), Studio City, California (engineered by Schell), and Santa Clara, California (engineered by Andersen). Salgado has had difficult health issues in the past, but listening to his vibrant, robust singing, one would never guess that. Add first-rate backing and terrific originals to Salgado's top-flight vocals, and one has an outstanding recording.

I received a download to review from Alligator Records. Here is "The Longer That I Live."

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