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From
Gritz Magazine (www.gritz.net) - review by Derek Halsey
David
Kimbrough Jr.
Shell-Shocked
David
Kimbrough, the son of the late and great North Mississippi bluesman
Junior Kimbrough, recorded this album called “Shell-Shocked” less
than a week after getting out of jail, having spent several years in the
joint for drug dealing and whatnot. Well, I guess that gets the question
of blues cred is out of the way. Actually, Kimbrough repents for his
sins on here, with songs that tell the story of drugs getting him sent
up the river, and how not fun that is. “I Don’t Do The Things I Used
To Do” is a good example. Still, he recorded this album with his funk
intact, and his desire to chase some ass back on line.
The
best way I can describe this groove of an album is to compare it to the
blues house party music from back in the day. These are the kind of jams
that a good house party would have going on the record player, that are
both smoking yet mid-tempo enough for folks to pair off and dance to, so
you can show your groove off to the babe swaying in front of you who is
smiling and looking you in the eye.
The album starts off with “Come Into My World,” a good sign of the
soulful songs to come. The instrumentation backing Kimbrough is solid
and strictly blues in nature, yet it allows his Curtis
Mayfield-influenced soul singing to float on top of it effortlessly.
There are nine songs on here, and six of them are over 7-minutes long,
including the old school blues shuffle of “Jump To My Rules,” the
funky “Will You Be My Wife,” and the nasty groove of the title cut.
He also pays tribute to his late father with “I Dreamed Pop Gigged
With Us.”
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