|
Issue
#144
May '11
The power-trio. It’s
a difficult format to undertake
let alone master. Each of the three musicians must be able to pair off
as well
as break free, yet stay united as one. Since Cream first broke the
power-trio
format in the 60s many bands have come and gone, trying to live, but
mostly
dying, behind an art form much more problematical than would seem from
the outside
looking in. This month we bring you 2 power-trios that have each
mastered the
format in their own individual ways. The Ivory Bills and Eula are both
power-trios out of New Haven, CT and while their existence
parallels each other, that’s
about where the similarities end. So tell me, how do you like your
power-trio?
In Color by The Ivory Bills
is a flat out blistering 70s classic Rock record complete with monster
riffs
and monster rhythms. This tight 3-some welcomes back GlamRock with a
Mott The
Hoople/Deep Purple hybrid and a Foghat style Blues-Metal that has us
yelling “More Cowbell”
in a most complimentary
way.
Comprised of veteran New Haven scenesters, James Velvet (vocals, bass, songs), Johnny Java (drums, percussion) and John L. (guitars, harmony vocals), The Ivory Bills let loose 6 songs that capture
the essence of Rock
in all its loud and live glory.
Evident on Here/Today and Golden Girl, The Ivory Bills
rally around John
L.’s killer guitar
licks, hooks, and runs that channel Mick Ronson incarnate. Supported by
James’ and Johnny’s tight
rhythm section, John
L. has the freedom to
step up and back when called for, which allows them to take the garage
blues
and blow it wide open.
Close your eyes, open your ears, move your feet, it
doesn’t matter if you’re in a shotgun shack, a
bayou gin joint, a city club or
arena, a fair or festival, or your mother’s garage, The Ivory Bills will blow it up with pure
primal Rock-n-Roll.
Delivering on that and more is Bonehead, The
21st
century’s 1st flat-out Anthem, the
heir-apparent to The Kingsmen’s
“Louie, Louie.” Whether your pelvic (elvis) bone is
thrusting to the beat or
dancing over John
L.’s Jimi Hendrix/Eric
Clapton/Steve Earle inspired bridge solo this is the song that will
define The
Ivory Bills and your admiration for them.
To keep things interesting, the record includes two
slight variants: Down In The Basement is a mid-tempo mood shift,
exploring the softer,
gentler side of the band (much the way Mott The Hoople, The Rolling
Stones, and
Led Zeppelin use to do), with a tale that accentuates Velvet’s songwriting skills centered
around brazenly
suggestive lyrics that get to the point of what Rock-n-Roll is suppose
to be about. Strange Weather solemnly creeps in much like New England weather, with the instruments
enacting the feel of an
unsettling storm while the lyrics chart the course of a shifting
personal tempest. Velvet’s vocals are just that
– Velvety smooth yet intensely
on edge.
Mother
Of Pearl closes
the disc by launching us deep into (another power-trio) ZZ
Top’s Texas, A
huh, huh,
huh. This is outlaw territory; a juke joint,
“Glory-to-me,” braggart Blues-Rock
at it’s finest. The
Ivory Bills lay down
the southern spirit, musically and lyrically, as smooth as passing the
moonshine, all the while staying true to the original concept of the
power-trio.
So tell me, how do you like your power-trio?
In Color by The Ivory Bills
available now for $6.98 + s/h*
$5.00 +s/h*
View
Shopping Cart / Checkout
Accepting Credit Cards and PayPal
*Shipping
&
Handling charges:
USA - $3.00
for the first 2 CDs
ordered,
Add $1.50 per each CD after.
Canada - $5.00 for the
first
CD ordered,
Add $2.00 per each CD after.
Everywhere else -$7.00
for the
first CD ordered,
Add $3.00 per each CD after.
|