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For
thirty-plus years Robert Cray has laid down track after
track of good-time, uptown, low-down blues. He's won five Grammys
and been nominated for 11 more, inspired critics to praise his soulful
vocal and instrumental artistry, earned respect from his peers, and sent
young guitarists running back to the woodshed.
What he hasn't done is work this magic on a full-length concert CD, where
the fires that drive him onstage burn on disc as well.
Not, that is, until now.
On The Robert Cray Band: Live From Across The Pond, the
first release on Cray's own Nozzle Records imprint, the
celebrated triple-threat singer, guitar slinger, and songwriter presents
the best moments from his week-long run at London's Royal Albert Hall
in May 2006, opening for friend and mutual admirer Eric Clapton.
From classic titles "Phone Booth" to highlights
from his latest releases "Poor Johnny", whether
addressing timeless themes of heartache and romance "The
Things You Do To Me" or this morning's headlines "Twenty",
Cray delivers on a promise he's been making since his first trip into
the studio.That promise to record himself and his band when inspired by
their fans at the instant of performance pays off on Live.
And it pays double, by the way, on two CDs, each packed with about as
much intense, emotional playing as a listener can handle in one sitting
all of it a pristine reproduction of what transpired under the spotlights,
without a single edit or punch-in. Once the rush of Live
begins to settle down, though, it's natural to wonder why Cray took this
long to document his stage chops. Ask him, and his answer is disarmingly
candid.
"In the past, whenever we've known that we were going to record
ourselves onstage, we've just gotten too psyched up to sound as strong
as we normally do," he says. "You go into it feeling
like you've got this one shot, and that can be challenging. I've actually
lost my voice from the anticipation." Live was different in
that it draws from seven consecutive shows at the Royal Albert Hall, which
allowed Cray and his road-seasoned band keyboardist Jim Pugh, bassist
Karl Sevareid, and drummer Kevin Hayes to feel more at home from one night
to the next. "After just a short while we weren't even thinking
about the recording," he explains. "We were only thinking
about the music and about playing at this particular venue."
Cray and his crew were in fact familiar with the Royal
Albert Hall, having played there more than a few times with Clapton over
the years. That, plus Cray's affection for London in general, contributed
to the vibe. It's a paradox, perhaps, that as musicians relax, they lock
tighter with each other and play with deeper feeling yet the evidence
is there, on each track of Live. When the London dates were done, Cray
returned to the States and began going over the results. What he heard
was, he admits, an eye-opener in some ways. "When I'm playing
up there, I don't really catch everything that's going on. But when I
sat back and listened to the tapes, it was like, 'Wow, these guys are
great!"
He laughs at his own surprise after all, knowing each player as long as
he has, the excellence of these recordings was more a reminder than a
revelation. "What I mean is, so much stuff goes on that I can't
really catch it all. I'm singing and feeling their support, but when I
take myself out of the playing picture and just listen, that's when I
really hear how magical the ensemble can be." The toughest part
of putting Live together involved choosing which tracks
would make the cut. Cray tackled this job meticulously,
playing through all seven concerts and taking detailed notes. "I
was listening for the best performances," he explains. "I
listened for enthusiasm, if that's what was called for in the song. And
I listened for things that stood out from the norm. One night, for example,
we played 'Our Last Time,' and Jim Pugh, who normally plays piano on that
one, decided to do it on organ. I went with that version not only because
it sounded great but also because it was so uncommon."
Cray's band rocks and wails and plunges way down to the
bottom of the blues well on track after track. And as for Pugh's solo
organ showcase in the midst of "The One in the Middle"?
Let's say that unless you're going to a sanctified church every Sunday,
it's been a while since you've heard anything like this. Aside from their
musicianship, the key to Cray and his band is their history. Through more
than a thousand gigs played around the world, they've locked in a sound
that's elegant and direct, searing and smooth.
And before that, Cray himself developed quickly, having
been raised on the gospel and soul records in his parents' collection
while growing up in Georgia and Washington State. By the time he formed
his first band in 1974, the components of his sound were in place: a vocal
delivery rooted in the Stax/soul tradition and a Stratocaster guitar style
that even then stood him out among the greatest of his peers in the blues.
Perhaps another reason for the passion of Live owes to
the importance of England in helping Cray launch his career. His second
album, Bad Influence (1984), shot to number one on the U.K. indie charts
while Clapton paid tribute to his colleague by covering the title song.
From that point he rose quickly to worldwide prominence, earning his first
Grammy for Strong Persuader (1986), releasing one double-platinum
and two gold albums, and appearing or recording with
the Rolling Stones, B. B. King, Muddy Waters,
John Lee Hooker, Chuck Berry, Bonnie Raitt, and other giants.
The Cray saga continues on September 16,
as he embarks once again with Eric Clapton on a North
American tour just four days after The Robert Cray Band: Live
From Across The Pond, issued on Nozzle and distributed by Vanguard,
drops in stores across America
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