Blues bassist
Willie Kent has strong, supple bottom lines that have supported all the best groups, but he's led his own band as well. This is his fourth
Delmark date, and
Kent heartily asserts himself as a singer, with a tone like
Johnny Adams with a rougher edge. His equally excellent band features lead guitarists
Bill Flynn and
Jake Dawson alternating tracks, with rhythm guitarist
Willie Davis, pianist
Kenny Barker, and drummer
James Carter. Baritone saxophonist/arranger
Willie Henderson from the old
Tyrone Davis band leads a three-piece horn section on three tracks. This 13-song program -- ten written by
Kent -- comprises mostly classic 12-bar, IV-V-I
blues changes. A hard-swinging
"3-6-9," with
Dawson's swift guitar and
Baker's boogie piano, supports a bitch session for
Kent. He is fairly believable on the
B.B. King-styled
"Address in the Street." Albert King's style is more prevalent on a long, loping eight-minute title track with horns, and the more
R&B-ish
"I'm Hooked," again with
Flynn doing a
Memphis soul style of interpreting.
Flynn can also play tasty
Elmore James-type slide as on the easy, lowdown
"I Had a Dream." Most fun is the typical
Chicago blues "Do You Love Me?," which jumps and jives with all the flavor and depth you expect from the real thing. The deepest emotion is in the slower numbers.
"I Know Where You've Been" is patient, deliberate, and cocksure, while
"Teach Me How to Lie" is a down-home contradiction that perfectly exemplifies what everyone has to/doesn't do in this convoluted society. Unquestionably a great modern
blues document, and one of the best CDs of 1998. ~ Michael G. Nastos