Memphis Moonlight
VizzTone
"Memphis Moonlight" is a new release from the husky-voiced blues singer and songwriter Deb Ryder. Like her earlier recordings, it is produced by Tony Braunagel and Ryder's husband Rick while Johnny Lee Schell engineered the session. A core backing group of musicians includes Braunagel on drums, Schell on guitar, bass, and keyboards, Travis Carlton on bass, Mike Finnigan on the Hammond B-3, Peter Van Der Pluijim on harmonica, Joe Sublett on saxophone, and Mark Pender on trumpet. There are guest appearances by guitarists Ronnie Earl, Joey Delgado and Alistair Greene, saxophonist Steve Berlin, and accordionist David Hidalgo. Ryder wrote all 13 songs (two with her husband, Rick).
Deb Ryder's previous releases impressed me with her strong songwriting and her convincing, powerful vocals. Like her prior albums, this new release contains some hard-hitting blues and blues-rock. She sings powerfully but with nuance and an excellent display of vocal dynamics. Ryder never comes off as sounding shrill and emoting. The production and the support are top-notch as well.
Things kick off with the brassy, horn-driven, soulful funk of "I'm Coming Home, where she proclaims she is coming home where she belongs, singing over Sublett's sax. Plujiom's harmonica adds down-home flavor to "Hold On," with Braunagel leading an insistent groove. Alistair Greene adds his slide guitar along with that from Schell on her soulful vocal on a vibrant down-home gospel blues, "These Hands." Then there is "Get Ready," with an echo added to her voice as she urges us to start a revolution of love and speak out against injustice.
The mood shifts on a slow, straight-forward blues, "Love Is Gone," with Finnigan's organ adding atmosphere. This song is one of the two tracks that showcase Ronnie Earl, whose playing is impressive as always. This is a standout track here. Another high point is the title track has her singing supported only by Schell on guitar, bass, and tambourine and backing vocals by her and Finnigan. She sings about feeling good about being in Memphis and regrets letting her lover go in the past. "Just Be Careful" takes us musically to the Mississippi hill country with its infectious groove and memorable lyric with the tagline, "if you can't be good, just be careful," with Schell adding some rollicking slide guitar.
Schell shines on "Jump On In," where Ryder tells her man to let himself go and spend time with her. A jazzy shuffle, "Standing at the Edge," follows with swagger and swing in Ryder's vocal. Finnigan lays down a tough foundation for her vocal as well as taking a greasy solo. The Delgado brothers, Hidalgo and Steve Berlin lend a zydeco flavor to the lively "Second Chances." At times Ryder's tune "Most of All" hints at Etta James' "I'd Rather Go Blind." Ryder sings magnificently here while Ronnie Earl adds a solo played with such depth of feeling that matches Ryder's superb singing. It closes another excellent recording with outstanding originals, terrific backing, and Deb Ryder's authoritative singing.
I received my review copy from VizzTone. Here is a relatively recent performance from Deb Ryder.
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