Quantcast
NEWS |
Return to home page





Simpatico
Claudio Roditi
Here In the Moment
Gail Pettis
Folk Songs for Jazzers
Frank Macchia
Room 13
Yair Loewenson Trio
Spanish Breeze
Thomas Lorenzo, Alphonso Johnson, Walfredo Reyes, Dave Garfield
Freefall
The Chuck Anderson Trio



Trio Reenactment
Info | Enter
Dave King
Info | Enter
Frank Macchia
Info | Enter
Kurt Rosenwinkel
Info | Enter




CD/LP Review | Published: February 1, 2000

Ain't Dead Yet
Bloozotomy | Happy Head Records


By Ed Kopp
Discuss    

Bloozotomy is a jumpin’ four-piece outfit from Burlington, Vermont, with plenty of talent and a profusion of personality. The latter emanates from Jim Branca, the group’s singer, guitarist and songwriter.

The energetic Branca is part Louis Prima, part John Belushi, part upbeat philosopher. His outlook is best summarized by these lines from his song "Dancin’ Through This House": "Life to me is too important to take so damn seriously. It’s a mystery we celebrate, don’t want to agonize, don’t want to speculate, just want you to share it with me."

Such sentiments seem downright profound coming from a bluesman, and they might lead you to conclude that Bloozotomy's music is mellow and reflective. Believe me, there ain't a mellow bone in these four bodies. Ain’t Dead Yet swings hard from start to finish, and Branca's eight original tunes are just as compelling as the four well-chosen covers.

Branca must be a really big dude, 'cause he owns a really big voice. Only a big dude can do justice to Willie Dixon’s "300 Hundred Pounds of Joy," Merle Travis’ "16 Tons," Roy Brown’s "Good Rockin’ Tonight" and Charles Calhoun’s "Shake, Rattle & Roll." Branca makes each of these songs his own.

His original tunes touch a variety of styles. "Tribal Obligation" is a blues shuffle that espouses nonconformity. The group combines rap, funk and gospel on "I Shouted When It Hit Me." "Love Me Baby, or Get Outta My Face" is a Brave Combo-like number featuring a klezmer-style performance from saxman Lenny "The Lip" Maskowski. The versatile Maskowski even plays flute on "Wherever You Go, That’s Where You’ve Been," a surrealistic excursion in jazzed-up blues.

You have to admire any group of musicians who can keep up with the free-spirited Branca. This man is apt to launch into a spontaneous wacky scat a la Louis Prima before returning temporarily to the structure of the song at hand. But Makowski, Matty Nerbak (drums and percussion) and Mike Bernal (basses) more than keep pace. "The Lip" deserves special commendation for his masterful blowing on every type of saxophone imaginable. And Branca is nearly as energetic a guitarist as he is a singer.

Bloozotomy is a smart, adventurous band that uses jump-blues as its launching pad. Few jump outfits are this creative, or this much fun.



Style: Blues


Be the first to post a comment on:
Bloozotomy's Ain't Dead Yet

Signup & post a comment!





More articles by Ed Kopp

Blues
A Brief History of the Blues
Blues Starter Kit
Great Northeast Blues Festival
Miriam Makeba and the Skylarks Vol. 1/Miriam Makeba...




Recent CD Reviews
Kenny Davis - Kenny Davis Kenny Davis
Kenny Davis
Marbin - Marbin Marbin
Marbin
Paquito Hechavarria - Frankly Paquito Hechavarria
Frankly
Soren Moller / Dick Oatts - The Clouds Above Soren Moller / Dick Oatts
The Clouds Above
Hadley Caliman - Straight Ahead Hadley Caliman
Straight Ahead
The Red Earth Collective featuring Soothsayers Horns - Red Earth Dub The Red Earth Collective featuring Soothsayers Horns
Red Earth Dub

CD Review Search
Artist Name  
Album Title  
Record Label  
Author  
 




 
(53)




Gene Harris

Sweet Georgia Brown
From Another Night in London

More | Recent | Top









Advertise | Contact Us | Site Map |


All material copyright © 2010 All About Jazz and/or contributing writer/visual artist. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy