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May
31, 2002 - Piermont, NY
Although
the tiny but venerable Turning Point Café has seen
its share of great acts, I can't imagine that many have
elicited any more excitement and raw energy from an audience
or a band than this group did last Friday night. Playing
two very solid sets, this polished and soulful performer
and his band touched the emotions of every person in the
room with skillful musicianship, great vocals and more
charisma than anyone has a right to possess.
Playing
tracks from their new CD, Guilty of Love, featuring a
cameo performance by John Lee Hooker, reportedly his last
recorded performance, The Tommy Castro Band with Castro
on lead guitar and vocals, Randy McDonald on bass guitar,
Keith Crossan, tenor sax, and Billy Lee Lewis on drums,
started off the first show with a nice mix of soul and
blues. One was struck by the tightness of the band and
the quality of Castro's controlled guitar work; no pyrotechnics
here, just honest and lyrical playing by someone who has
a great deal of respect for the music. You get the sizzle
AND the steak with this group who totally warmed the hearts
of the audience with their diverse mix of rock, soul,
blues and R & B, all served up with Castro's strong
vocals, a great supporting cast, and a charm that's as
much a part of the live performance as the music. A blend
of covers and original work gave a nice feel for TCB's
depth, good taste and genuine affection for the work,
each other, and the audience. Nice stuff.
And
then there was the second show. WOW. Now usually the second
show pretty much repeats the first with some other stuff
thrown in depending on the crowd and how good the band
is feeling, right? Well there was so much good feeling
in this room that night, that at one point, in a good-humored
plea from Castro to the crowd to let the band off the
stage, he suggested that we all just rent a bus and come
with them to Cambridge, their next gig. We were ready.
In a generous bow to the NY Blues & Jazz Society presence
at the first show, he announced that he'd better play
some different music now and he knocked us out with blues
and rock work that just oozed sensuality, lyricism, and
power. The crowd was screaming, singing along, standing
on the tables, exchanging in a good-natured banter with
Castro, and yelling for more. And more they got. Even
the exhausted band gave up trying to end the show. After
playing, "Just a Man," Castro teased the audience
one more time by saying it was a band rule never to end
a set with a slow song. Yes! Ladies, he's even got dimples.
This
is a performer who could bridge the gap between mainstream
and blues; a complete package who can pull off rock, blues,
soul and R&B with style and integrity. He can write
the music, cover it with respect and style, croon AND
wail, and make women think the thoughts that men want
to know about. He appeals to old and young alike, and
last but not least, these are a bunch of really nice guys
who exude such a sheer joy of performing that when we
had an opportunity to spend some time talking with them
we mostly just tried to convince them to come back.
And
when they do, do not miss it. You won't be sorry.
Janice
S. Salomo
New
York Blues & Jazz Society
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