Label: Quarto Valley Records (US), QVR 0114
Style: Blues Rock, Hard Blues Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 56:34
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 370 Mb
Before
a single note is heard, City Night defines a vision of urban nightlife
as seen through the blues-coated ears of Kim Simmonds. In lieu of sharp
angles and precise architecture, the hazy, dripping-with-paint cover
suggests an aural onslaught of tones and colors, and the music within
lives up to the expectation. Simmonds, Pat DeSalvo (bass) and Garnet
Grimm (drums) reload as Savoy Brown in an attempt to reprise 2017s
acclaimed Witchy Feelin. The album’s twelve tracks aggressively strip
standard blues structures to their core and rebuild them with throbbing
rhythm and searing guitar.
“Walking on Hot Stones” cracks open the
selection with a symbol crash and a crunchy guitar riff. Simmonds’s tale
of a hard-worn life sits behind the sonic deluge that characterizes
much of the album. Alternating between gritty and squealy, guitar
passages illustrate the song’s message while the rhythm duo provide the
pulsing groove. Stepping deeper into this territory, “Don’t Hang Me out
to Dry” features the DeSalvo-Grimm tandem leading. Simmonds exploits the
freedom they create to lay down choppy and languid musical lines that
are both authentic and creative.
“Red Light Mama” continues in this
vein. The vocals are direct and worthy, but cannot compete with the
fuzz, bluster and fire that emanate from Simmonds. The musical structure
is simple, but nonetheless it is the drum signal and ascending
bass-lead into a satisfying blues payoff that will encourage repeat
listenings. Grimm adds a bit of bongo to muddy-up the already swampy
feel of “Conjure Rhythm” and helps to slow down the following “Selfish
World.”
Savoy Brown is at its apex when they groove. “Wearing Thin,”
the best piece on the album, exemplifies this. The trio burst into the
tune’s only disruption and follow with a dark, brooding cadence. Lyrical
laments aside, the snaky rhythm is so good that one might think that
the tune is a celebration. It is. The tracks that follow are broken up
by a mix of punctuated guitar and sneering slide. “Hang in Tough” is a
great Bo Diddley send-up. “Ain’t Gonna Worry” closes with serious
instrumental breaks.
City Night is not about breaking new musical
boundaries, but the songs are strong and the saturated sounds are even
better. There are great, genuine moments of blues inspiration peppered
throughout the album. Fifty years on, Savoy Brown shows no signs of
slowing down, much to the delight of music lovers.
(bluesrockreview.com/2019/08/savoy-brown-city-night-review.html)
01. Walking On Hot Stones (04:32)
02. Don't Hang Me Out To Dry (04:20)
03. Payback Time (04:53)
04. Red Light Mama (04:15)
05. Conjure Rhythm (04:51)
06. Neighborhood Blues (05:10)
07. Selfish World (05:20)
08. Wearing Thin (04:03)
09. City Night (06:13)
10. Hang In Tough (03:37)
11. Superstitious Woman (04:20)
12. Ain't Gonna Worry (04:54)

No comments:
Post a Comment