For
we already know RJs story; it reads like a film noire screenplay
about the lower middle class family just getting by in an impossibly
tough, inner-urban East Side, West Side kind of landscape. The kid
grows up streetwise and self-reliant, a quick-fisted scrapper with
the right moves who runs afoul of John Law more than once. Sure,
he knows right from wrong, but hes got another talent that
makes the girls swoon, the boys jealous, and puts him right on the
cutting edge: Hes a guitar-slingin bluesman, a latter-day
barroom visionary whose music, through his perspective on the stage
of seedy nightclubs provides the core moral commentary in the story.
WHam! Just as his career is gaining momentum, up the river for a
stretch on a trumped-up drug charge. His bands dissolve and reform
in his absence; hes gone but hardly forgotten. Back out on
the streets he resolves to make another go of it; within a year
he has a vinyl calling card, within 4 years 2 more. RJ leads his
band in search of the Grail, toward their musical Mecca: Memphis,
Tennesee. Here he makes what he thinks will be his last album at
legendary Sam Phillips Sun Records, before receding from the
limelight back into the urban night. Next scene: our heros
a working stiff of several years deterioration, prone to weekend
brawling, boozing and womenizing. On the receiving end of a licking
one night, he hears the voice of his longtime buddy and drummer
who comes to the rescue in the nick of time and saves his life.
They resolve to put the old band together, and with the kind of
serendipity reserved for those moments worthy of great Hollywood
comeback stories, RJ gets signed to VV Records. And the rest as
they say, is history... |
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THAT
LOVE THING Former Spann leader throws down the comeback gauntlet
You may recognize the style here as early rock blues revisited,
and youre right. But what makes RJ & the Houndogs
That Love Thing special is that the band members were there first
time round, and can lay claim to that cherished if overused
banner of authenticity. Jalberts first Spann album was arguably
the first blues album recorded in Montreals burgeoning blues
scene in the 70s.
That Love Thing features 9 new Jalbert originals, a take of Slim
Harpos King Bee and 2 bonus Jalbert slide solos from the old
days. Recorded in the unauspicious confines of producer/engineer
John Hagopians (Nanette Workman, Michel Pagliarro) North Montreal
garage studio, That Love Thing is the blues refined and reduced
to its Chicago-styled essence, the lyrics expressing the visceral
core of themes familiar to blues faithful: love gone bad and good.
The Houndogss driving intensity could be described as biker-grade;
Jalberts snarling guitar leads contrast with the melodic slide
guitar style of Dean Cottrill over top of the driving rhythm section
of Al MacNeil (bass) and Tequila Al Paterson (drums).
These elements serve as a soundscape for Jalberts seasoned
voice and simplistic lyric schemes.
Groups that bear the usual hallmarks of the blues these days - hot
guitar slingers, wailing saxes, throbbing bass and drums and youthful
lead vocals - are not so much about blues as they are about show.
With the release of That Love Thing, RJ & the Houndogs hope
to set atters
straight. |
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