Being released August 25, 2017 on Ruf Records, veteran British
Blues band Savoy Brown's Witchy
Feelin' proves the Devil still has all the best
tunes. From the thrillingly
brittle guitar riff that opens Why Did You Hoodoo Me, we are in the
hands of a master, with founding member Kim Simmonds reigniting the seismic
vocals and searing fretwork that established Savoy Brown as linchpins of the
'60s British blues boom. "On this album, I tried my best to get my voice
in its power zone," he explains. "I'm a baritone singer. I like
listening to singers I can relate to, such as J.J. Cale, Mark Knopfler, Tony
Joe White and Tom Rush. For my guitar playing, I still get inspiration from
Otis Rush, Buddy Guy and all the Chicago players I grew up listening to back
in '63... but I always listen to new music too."
Recording alongside Pat Desalvo (bass), Garnet Grimm (drums) and
engineer Ben Elliott, Simmonds leads us into a world of dark nights, wild
weather, women and whiskey: all perennial themes given a modern twist by this
ageless bluesman. "The songs on this album have been two years in the
making," he reflects. "I tried to write songs that had a personal
point of view yet can be relatable to everyone. On Vintage Man, I wrote
about being the type of guy who doesn't change as he gets older. I wrote
about the power of love on Why Did You Hoodoo Me. And
with Guitar Slinger, I wrote a song about seeing a great guitar player
in an old country bar - as I did when I first saw Roy Buchanan in '69."
Blues is not for the faint-hearted. Since the genre first drew
breath, its greatest practitioners have embraced the darkness, spinning tales
of hardship and death, hellhounds and devilry. If the sleeve of Witchy Feelin' suggests
that Kim Simmonds, too, has a tendency towards the macabre, then Savoy
Brown's iconic leader is happy to confirm it. "Blues has always dealt
with themes of the Devil, witchcraft and so forth, and I've
always written along those lines. At least three of the songs on Witchy Feelin' have
that hoodoo vibe..."
Anyone who witnessed Savoy Brown leave the blocks in 1965 would
speak of a similar epiphany. Back then, the band were the spark that ignited
the blues-boom, signing to Decca, opening for Cream's first London show and
boasting a lead guitarist who was being namedropped in the same reverential
breath as peers like Clapton and Hendrix (with whom Simmonds jammed).
Already, the guitarist was emerging as the band's driving force. "I had
a vision," he reflects. "When I started the band back in 1965, the
concept was to be a British version of a Chicago blues band. And the exciting
thing now is, that vision is still alive."
Soon, Savoy Brown had achieved what most British bands never did
- success in America - and became a major US draw thanks to their high-energy
material and tireless work ethic. "There's far too much said about sex,
drugs and rock 'n' roll," Simmonds told Classic Rock. "It's a
cliché. We were all extremely hard-working guys. When we came over to America,
we were like a little army. I look at that time as being filled with
incredible talent."
Times changed, of course, and by 1979, Simmonds had moved from a
London he no longer recognised - "The punks were everywhere!" - to
settle permanently in New York. The Savoy Brown bandmembers came and went,
and the music scene shifted around him, but the guitarist stuck thrillingly
to his guns and reaped the rewards, performing in iconic venues like Carnegie
Hall and the Fillmore East and West, releasing thirty-odd albums, and later
enjoying a well-deserved induction into Hollywood's Rock Walk Of Fame.
Even in the post-millennium, while his peers grow soft and drift
into semi-retirement, Simmonds retains a vision and an edge, spitting out
acclaimed albums that include 2011's Voodoo Moon, 2014's Goin' To The Delta,
2015's The
Devil To Pay - and the emphatic new addition to Savoy
Brown's catalogue, Witchy
Feelin'. "I'm amazed that I still have the
energy inside me to play guitar, create music and write songs," he
considers. "I've been blessed in my life and I thank God for that. I've
never been a believer in holding on to the past - I don't look over my
shoulder and congratulate myself. I always want to climb the next mountain -
and I'm very pleased with this new album..."
|
Exclusive Blues Interviews, Blues Reviews, Blues Videos, Top Blues Artists, New Blues Artists.
Pages
▼
No comments:
Post a Comment