March 2013 \ Reviews \ Media Reviews \ Album Review: Boz Scaggs - "Memphis"

Album Review: Boz Scaggs - "Memphis"

Tessa Jeffers
Premier Guitar March 2013

Boz Scaggs
Memphis
429 Records


Boz Scaggs is musically complicated. For Memphis, he brought on producer Steve Jordan (John Mayer) who also plays drums on the album, and the rest of the studio band is also star-studded: Ray Parker Jr. (guitar), Willie Weeks (bass), Lester Snell (string arrangements), and Spooner Oldham (keys). They do a lot of genre-jumping together, opening with a few soft jazz/R&B soul grooves, until taking a turn into a cover of Willie DeVille’s “Mixed Up Shook Up Girl,” where Scaggs channels Aaron Neville in a croon that waltzes with an island-reggae riff and primitive percussion.

It’d be unfair to dismiss this as an album of mostly covers, as the beautiful re-phrasing and interpreting travels across the Delta and further, hitting a “Rainy Night in Georgia,” before kicking out some Southern roots rock with a ZZ Top-locomotive pace and vibrato in “Cadillac Walk,” and then the blues classic “Corrina, Corrina” is morphed into a slowed-down, part-Willie Nelson, part-Muddy Waters ballad. The guitar highlight is Keb’ Mo’s slide resonator playing on the reverb-soaked “Dry Spell,” his soloing complemented by the amplified harp of Charlie Musselwhite.

This Kentucky-Fried Al Green smorgasbord is a strange phenomenon, and likely to throw some listeners off. Scaggs chose to record at Royal Studios for a reason though, and this album carries that weight—at times the familiarity is uncanny—but when Scaggs’ own musical voice shines, he brings something to this “place” that we’ve never heard before. —Tessa Jeffers
Must-hear tracks: “Mixed Up Shook Up Girl,” “Dry Spell”


     

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Comments

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Carlos LaTonga
on 02/14/2013
I've been listening to Boz greatest hits which is mostly silk degrees stuff, and has "immaculate" production values even by today's standards... Odd that growing up with Steve Miller Band tunes and pre-disco era Boz Scaggs there is very little of that material around now. I saw him perform at a Louisiana festival in 1971... It was amazing stuff... none of which is commemorated now.



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