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| Administrator GCB Senior Citizen Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: The hearts of women everywhere. Age: 28
Posts: 3,497
Rep Power: 50 ![]() ![]() ![]() | REVIEW: Chewy is Chewy Good REVIEW: Chewy is Chewy Good
Add to this tradition the band Chewy. Band co-founders Lorrie Ruiz and Joe Doria have created a tight musical unit and a satisfying record. Ms. Ruiz' voice is authentically soulful and Doria's Hammond Organ and Fender Rhodes electric piano captures the sound and feeling of the McCann, Joe Zawinul (yeah, he played in Weather Report but check out his song "Country Preacher" with Cannonball Adderly for the essence of soulful piano) and other keyboardists from back in the day. And when he isn't playing airtight, scratchy, wah wah, rhythm riffs or airy, jazz chord voicing, Chris Spencer adds sizzling rock guitar leads to the mix. Anchored by a rhythm section of bassist Dayna Smith and Larry Bichler on drums, this band creates tasty tracks that lean heavily on jazzy, funk without all sounding the same. "New Train" is an upbeat song that leans to the easy going, California, soul side of the funk. The intertwining piano, organ and guitar licks are the template for most of the record. Spencer waits to the end of the song to wail a solo, taking the song to another level. It is on the song "Getting Nowhere," however - the halfway point of the album - where things get interesting. Luiz' lyrics capture, in the timeless, classy manner of soul storytellers like Smokey Robinson, the complexities of keeping relationships alive. The intro to the song is a series of tight unison stop hits by the band, while she sets up the story of the song: "Need help understanding this problem with some friends of mine / ... they wonder if / The other one's still in love." The music switches gears at a key emotional point - "Where? They're gonna get there" - with a blast of electric space jazz, courtesy of Doria's keyboards and Spenser's noise guitar. The funk snaps back in and rides out the song to its bittersweet conclusion. Lyrical content this sophisticated is the biggest surprise.
The CD's final song, "Time Lost," written by the bassist Smith, hints at the band's musical potential. The song starts with electronic sounds, then goes to a heavy, disco/slow, hard step rhythm. Stops and starts coincide with the vocals. Suspended guitar and keyboard chords merge into a jazzy, funk beat on the drums while the bass counters with sustained notes. Spencer plays a guitar solo that has echoes of prog rock. Later the piano solos over the disco beat. The overlapping of the rhythmic grooves with parts of the verse and solos hints at the band's reservoir of ideas. Through song craft and subtlety and hot tracks by a hard-working band, Chewy create way more excitement than the average screaming diva and her computer manipulating producers. Content provided by the Copyright © MusicDish, LLC 2007 - Republished with Permission click here for free music content for your site or blog |
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