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February
2005
The
title of this album tells you most of what you need to
know about San Francisco blues rocker Tommy Castro. His
first disc of original material in four years finds him
back with the Blind Pig label and expanding his crackling
R&B-drenched blues into a more rock-oriented sound.
On Soul Shaker, Castro downplays the sizzling guitar that
dominated his previous releases and focuses instead on
songs and arrangements. The horns that pepper -- and often
power -- tracks such as the frisky "What You Gonna
Do Now?" push the soul element even further to the
forefront. But it's Castro's gutsy, gritty vocals -- something
like a mix of Delbert McClinton and John Mellencamp --
and his energetic approach that ignite these tunes. Castro
borrows Little Feat's New Orleans stomp for the swampy,
slide-driven title track, shifts into Bob Seger territory
on the thumping rocker "The Holdin' On," and
even delivers a flute-powered song, "The Crossanova"
-- a lively instrumental cowritten by reed player Keith
Crossan that wouldn't be out of place on an old Herbie
Mann disc. "Take Me Off the Road" burns with
ZZ Top hip-shakin' boogie. This may not be what established
Castro fans expected, but by widening his scope and beefing
up his sound the soul shaker has delivered his most satisfying
and eclectic set in a decade-long career. -- Hal Horowitz
Hal
Horowitz
Original
Review (Offsite Link)
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