LARAMIE, Wyo. — Blinddog Smokin’s larger-than-life
new album High
Steppin’ is a kaleidoscopic romp
through the wild side of roots music. The disc’s nine songs
ricochet from rock ’n’ roll to juke joint blues to New Orleans jazz
to raw Americana, all supported by the band’s twin pillars: hot ’n’
greasy funk and frontman Carl Gustafson’s epic storytelling.
High Steppin’ follows 2014’s Decisions, a collaboration with
soul-blues legend Bobby
Rush that earned a Grammy
nomination for Best Blues Album. Decisions includes the song
“Another Murder in New Orleans,” which enlisted another legend, Dr. John, to tell its tale of
street violence. The tune was widely played on Americana and blues
radio, and was used by the New Orleans
Crimestoppers organization to raise
awareness. Blinddog
Smokin’s imaginative video for
“Another Murder in New Orleans” mixes performance footage, cartoons
and live action actors, and has received more than 110,000 views on
YouTube.
Blinddog
Smokin’s 11th release, High Steppin’ kicks off with “Pimp
Shoes,” an ebullient, percolating funk gem that displays the
group’s spectacular ensemble. “’Pimp Shoes’ is not about
pimps or shoes,” says Gustafson. “It’s about attitude. When a man
becomes the captain of his soul, and he’s mastered who he is, it
comes out in his posture, in his pose, in his walk. That’s what
that song’s about.” On a more literal note, there’s “Big Behind,”
an ode to a lady’s posterior largess that straddles funky
soul-blues, rock and — with its sweeping pedal steel guitar —
honky-tonk country. High Steppin’ is set for a July 17th
release date on Silver
Talon Records exclusively distributed
by City
Hall Records in tandem with The Orchard.
“I Caught Her Lyin’” goes deeper into the
country tradition to offer Blinddog Smokin’s version of a mountain
lament — surrounding Gustafson’s heartbroken yarn with an
Americana-perfect framework of crying violin, grinding guitar and
his appealing worn-leather voice. “Lady’s Playin’” changes the
locale to New Orleans. That song’s a Crescent City funk powerhouse,
with bold horns, a scalding six-string solo and chanting group
vocals that celebrate la difference. Similarly, “Don’t Put
No Money on Me” — a wickedly funny loser’s lament — sounds like a
drunken Mardi Gras street parade, while “Tell ’em Shuffle” is a
straight-up Chicago blues.
Blinddog
Smokin’s marvelously eclectic
sound and approach is the result of Gustafson’s literal and musical
world travels. He and the band have toured the planet numerous
times since 1994, putting more than a million road miles on their
vehicles — which include Gustafson’s bicycle.
“When we get to a new town, I like to take my
bike off the bus and ride the backstreets,” he says. “When you
travel the alleys, you learn about people. The front yard is for
show; the backyard shows the way they live. And when I run into
old-timers, I stop and listen to their stories.”
Gustafson, who describes himself as an
adventurer and philosopher, has plenty of tales of his own. And his
book It
Ain’t Just the Blues, It’s Showtime: Hard Times, Heartache and
Glory Along the Blue Highway chronicles Blinddog
Smokin’s experiences on the road.
“I come from a time before television, when
telling stories was part of the fabric of life,” he offers. “So I’m
a songwriting machine. I’m constantly coming up with new lyrics and
our producer and friend, Donny Markowitz, has provided much
of the music based on his skills and his knowledge of how we think
and play as a band.”
That knowledge is deep. Markowitz is the Oscar-, Grammy- and Golden Globe-winning writer of the
song “(I’ve Had) The Time of My Life” and the composer of
soundtracks for the hit Steve Carell film Crazy, Stupid, Love and many others. And High Steppin’ is the third album in a
row he’s produced for Blinddog Smokin’. “We didn’t hit our stride
in the studio until we started working with Donny,” Gustafson says.
The other essential ingredient to Blinddog Smokin’s broad stylistic
mastery is the ability of its players. The core members of the
group comprise one of the finest modern bands in American roots
music. Dynamic drummer and vocalist Chuck Gullens started with the
Blinddogs in 1994 in Laramie, Wyoming, shortly after Gustafson
and the band, then named Bluestone, returned
from traveling the Middle East and Mediterranean, playing for
troops on a 49 day DOD tour. Versatile bassist Roland Pritzker joined in 2000,
followed by keyboardist and exceptional vocalist, Mo Beeks — whose own, earlier
band, Lock
& Chain, gave R&B singer Chaka Kahn her start back in 1972.
In 2009 came back-up singer and bassist Chris White, and virtuoso guitarist
Chalo
Ortiz also entered the fold, followed quickly by
backing vocalist Linda
Gustafson, who plays feminine yin
to her husband’s hot-dogging, high stepping yang in concert.
“I couldn’t ask for a better group of performers
to share the stage with,” says Gustafson. “They can go anywhere at
any time, and get along, and that’s a rare thing in any style
of music.”
Gustafson’s own musical tale begins in Laramie,
his hometown. “My first exposure to blues was hearing Willie Dixon,” he recounts. “My
parents went to a little club outside Cheyenne, and my brother and
I — we were six and eight years old — stayed in the car. When we
heard the music, we were absolutely fascinated by it, so we peeked
in the windows. Then I started sneaking around listening to blues
whenever I could. I had to sneak, because my father was a classical
pianist and said the blues was ‘Satan’s music’ and ‘not culturally
acceptable.’ He’d only gone to the club to socialize with
relatives.
“When I was 16 I ran away from home,”
Gustafson continues. “There was a little after-hours café down by
the railroad tracks called the Pic-a-Rib. I went down there and
lived with a black boy I played football with, whose mother, Miss Peggy, ran the café. I stayed
with them, hiding from my mom and dad, and I learned how to
appreciate blues. I learned how to dance. I learned how to sing. It
was a really cool, isolated pocket, of black culture in a
completely white conservative environment.”
Gustafson says that High Steppin’ reflects those early
life lessons and the myriad others he’s learned along the way.
“This album shows me as a philosopher; as somebody who analyzes
life and adjusts from honest vulnerability to establish a fun
swagger. There’s a journey here that can only happen to an introspective
person who loves life, people, stories, and never believes that you
have to stay in the station where you are. And until the day I die,
I plan to grow as an artist and storyteller.”
BLINDDOG SMOKIN’ TOUR
DATES
Wed., June 24 PHOENIX, AZ The
Rhythm Room
Thurs., June 25 NEW ORLEANS, LA Old
U.S. Mint
Mon., June 29 CHICAGO, IL Martyr’s
Fri., July 3 OKLAHOMA CITY,
OK Bourbon Street
Sat., July 4 MCPHERSON, KS
Fri., July 10 LARAMIE, WY Jubilee
Days
Sat., July 11 LARAMEE, WY Jubilee
Days
Tues., July 14 OVERLAND PARK, KS Kanza
Hall
Thurs., July 16 JACKSON, MS Underground
119
Thurs., July 23 TORONTO, ON Hard
Rock Café
Thurs., July 30 RAWLINS, WY Rawlins
in the Park
Fri., July 31 LARAMIE, WY Alibi
Sat., Aug. 8 ROCK SPRINGS,
WY Blues & Brews Festival
Thurs., Aug. 13 THEMOPOLIS, WY
Fri., Aug. 14 CASPER, WY The
Attic
Sat., Aug. 15 SINCLAIR, WY Platte
River Festival
Sun., Aug. 16 CENTINNIAL, WY Bear
Tree
Sun., Sept. 6 LARAMIE, WY Snowy
Range Music Festival
Sat., Nov. 15 HIGH POINT, NC High
Point Theatre
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