• News
  • Interviews/Essential 8
  • Album & Single Reviews
  • Braun Brothers Reunion 2019
  • Plugged In
  • Music Videos
  • Tri-State Area Shows
  • About & Contact
  • Hear NOW

Amy Black Takes a Bluesy, Soul-Filled Journey to 'Memphis'; Hi, Stax Session Greats Featured on June 2nd Release

4/10/2017

0 Comments

 
Picture
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Press Release) — Amy Black has always been drawn to soul singers. But it wasn’t until she began exploring her own southern roots for her last album, The Muscle Shoals Sessions, that she found her musical sweet spot — and knew her next stop had to be the place where blues and soul converge (and where she herself was conceived); where Al Green, Otis Redding and so many others spun grit and groove into some of the world’s most beloved tunes. So she traveled from her Nashville home to Soulsville U.S.A. and joined forces with several top musical architects to lay down the sound she was meant to make — the sound of Memphis.

Releasing June 2, 2017 on her own Reuben Records, Memphis puts Black — already considered “a bluesy, R&B heavy hitter” by Elmore magazine — on the same continuum as soul sisters from Dusty Springfield, Ann Peebles and Mavis Staples to Bonnie Raitt and Shelby Lynne.  

On seven originals and three well-chosen covers (by Otis Clay, Bobby “Blue” Bland and Ruby Johnson), Black goes from silky smooth to raw and rough with ease, perfectly balancing Saturday-night sultriness and Sunday-morning gospel, slow-dance sexiness and fast-dance exuberance. 

The album was recorded old-school analog style at producer/engineer Scott Bomar’s Electraphonic Recording studio and mixed to tape by Adam Hill at Ardent Studios. Bomar, a Grammy-nominated, Emmy-winning film composer, also leads Memphis soul band the Bo-Keys. That outfit includes Hi Records rhythm section drummer Howard Grimes, who joined fellow Hi greats the Rev. Charles Hodges (piano and Hammond B3) and his brother, Leroy “Flick” Hodges (bass), along with Stax guitarist Bobby Manuel, on many of these 10 tracks. 

Bo-Keys guitarist Joe Restivo, St. Paul & the Broken Bones keyboardist Al Gamble and ex-Chris Robinson Brotherhood drummer George Sluppick also contributed. Bo-Keys trumpeter Marc Franklin, a former Bobby Bland sideman, handled horn and string arrangements, adding further power. Together with Black, they capture the passion that flows through this town like the mighty Mississippi, making Memphis is as authentic as it gets.

“I love the music of Memphis; everything that came out of there in the ’50s, the ’60s, the ’70s … I love the grit and the guts and the soul and the groove,” Black says. “And getting to record with some of the guys who made that music was amazing.”  

Black’s route to Memphis was one she never imagined when she decided, only 10 years ago, to leave behind a successful marketing career and pursue her first love. Her initial recorded forays, One Time and This Is Home, leaned more toward Americana and country than rhythm and blues.

“I wasn’t looking to evolve my sound,” she explains. “I liked what I was doing. But I always knew I had a very soulful, bluesy side to my voice.” She discovered just how much when she headed to Muscle Shoals, Ala., in 2015 to record The Muscle Shoals Sessions, featuring keyboardist Spooner Oldham, one of Muscle Shoals’ original “Swampers.” What started as an EP grew into a full album and Black’s touring Muscle Shoals Revue.

Once she was hooked, she kept exploring; eventually, her journey led her from the music of FAME and Jackson Highway to the music of Stax and Hi Records. 

“The Hi rhythm section and the folks who recorded with Willie Mitchell are now favorites of mine, but a year ago, I didn’t know about them,” Black admits. “Now I’m also a huge fan of O.V. Wright and Otis Clay. And Ann Peebles — oh man, I just love the feel of her music; I love what it does to me. That’s the coolest part of this project — the exposure to these artists that have become a part of me.” 

The Muscle Shoals experience also taught her she could take risks, which proved even more exciting when she explored the Memphis vibe. “It’s definitely a little bit dirtier, more from your gut,” she says. “I am so drawn to that feel and sound. I didn't know that I could sing this music and now it's what I do.” 

She also never thought about horns before the Muscle Shoals album, and now, she says, “I’m addicted.” They assert their presence right from the opener, “It’s Hard to Love an Angry Man,” an original intended “to show a little love to my man Bobby Bland; he’s so smooth, yet powerful, and so Memphis.” Black shows him even more love with her saucy, high-spirited cover of “Further on Up the Road." 
​
She and fellow Nashvillian Karen Leipziger co-wrote the slow-burning Peebles tribute, “What Makes a Man?” But she’s referring to herself on the album’s first single, “The Blackest Cloud.” With an uplifting groove riding on baritone sax and trumpet notes, it’s a study in how music about sadness can make us feel happy — for a few minutes, at least.  

Black’s gospel-infused version of Clay’s “If I Could Reach Out (and Help Somebody),” one of several tracks enhanced by backing vocalists Reba Russell and Daunielle Hill, has a similar effect.

“I had to do this song. The whole attitude is how I feel about life,” Black reveals. “In my darkest times, I’ve gotten out to help others, and it puts everything in perspective.”

It’s followed by “Let the Light In,” which sounds like something the Staple Singers could have written for the civil rights movement. It carries the heft of an anthem — with show-stopping power. 

“I had no idea how much we, as a country, would need this song,” Black says. “I wrote it for myself, to make sure that I’m letting light into my own darkness. But with events being what they are, it’s a good time to sing it. I always dedicate it to Mavis. Her spirit and music inspire and educate me. They represent the fight against darker forces and the need to persevere.” 

Black first heard Staples when the gospel-soul icon toured with Raitt, one of Black’s favorites since high school; she often covered “Love Me Like a Man” while performing in Boston, her former home and the place where she launched her music career. Her Nashville move was to be closer to family, but fortuitously, it also put her in close proximity to Memphis — a city to which she now feels spiritually connected. 

Black says she hopes Memphis inspires listeners to dig into this music as she has, and to explore “the history, the people and the stories” of this fabled place. With her live Memphis Music Revue, she’s ready to carry that message far and wide. But no matter how you get there, when Amy Black takes you to Memphis, it’s a journey you won’t forget.

Amy Black’s Memphis Music Revue tour dates
Mon., June 5  CLEVELAND, OH  The Beachland Ballroom 
Tues., June 6  WORTHINGTON, OH  Natalie’s Coal Fired Pizza 
Sun., June 11  NASHVILLE, TN  City Winery Nashville 
Mon., June 12  ST. LOUIS, MO  Off Broadway
Thus., June 15  KANSAS CITY, MO  Knuckleheads

Sun., June 18  CHICAGO, IL  City Winery Chicago 
Wed., June 21  NEWPORT, KY  Southgate House
Fri., June 23  OKLAHOMA CITY, OK  The Blue Door 
Sat., June 24  DALLAS, TX  AllGood Cafe
Tues., June 27  AUSTIN, TX  The Townsend 
Thurs., June 29  HOUSTON, TX  The Mucky Duck 
Sun., July 2  ATLANTA, GA  City Winery Atlanta
Thurs., July 6  MEMPHIS, TN  Lafayette's Music Room
Fri., July 7  BIRMINGHAM, AL  Workplay

Thurs., July 13  AUBURN, AL  Pebble Hill
Fri., July 14  ASHEVILLE, NC  The Grey Eagle 
Tues., July 18  WASHINGTON, DC  Gypsy Sally’s
Wed., July 19  ASBURY PARK, NJ  The Saint
Thurs., July 20  PHILADELPHIA, PA  World Cafe Live 
Fri., July 21  CAMBRIDGE, MA  Regattabar 
Thurs., July 27  PORTLAND, ME  One Longfellow Square
Fri., July 28  PLYMOUTH, MA  The Spire Center for the Arts
Sat., July 29  NORTHAMPTON, MA  The Iron Horse 
Sun., July 30  NEW YORK CITY, NY  City Winery NYC

http://amyblack.com

PopMatters premiered the video for "The Blackest Cloud": URL TK 
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Tweets by @TheDailyCountry
    ​BLOGROLL
    ​B-Sides and Badlands

    Hitting All The Right Notes
    Key Music News
    Dreamspider's Blog
    Farce the Music
    TJ Music


    RSS Feed

    Archives

    October 2024
    February 2020
    January 2020
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013

    Picture
    Picture
Web Hosting by iPage
  • News
  • Interviews/Essential 8
  • Album & Single Reviews
  • Braun Brothers Reunion 2019
  • Plugged In
  • Music Videos
  • Tri-State Area Shows
  • About & Contact
  • Hear NOW