Big Pete Pearson, I'm Here Baby (Blue Witch, 2007)
I'm Here Baby sounds a whole lot more like blues albums sounded in the 1960s than anything current, when the influence of hill-country Mississippi's raw and short riffs is in the ascendancy and much electric-blues performance looks to rural models. Unlike these, Pearson's approach is an unequivocally urban one, shaped by the influences of Albert King, T-Bone Walker and their like. Though he himself plays no instrument beyond his voice, he surrounds himself with a first-rate band of hard-driving pickers and pounders, including veteran guitarists and old associates W.C. Clark and Ike Turner on a couple of cuts, if not the same ones. A fierce, growling, soulful vocalist, Pearson throws himself heart-first into his material, covering standards such as "Tin Pan Alley," "Big Leg Woman" and more. If he is not an original, he demonstrates how much power a skilled, well-traveled journeyman can bring to a music that, delivered right, never wears out its welcome and or speaks less than truthfully to life's hard-earned lessons. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 29 December 2007 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |