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JOANNA CONNOR
Rise
M.C. Records
12 tracks
by Greg Easterling
If you were expecting a standard traditional sounding blues record from
Joanna Connor nearly twenty years into the new millennium then think
again. Not only is her new M.C. Records album a mix of more contemporary
blues influenced styles, it's a veritable guitar clinic put on by a
singer/songwriter who Guitar World says “might be the best or most
original blues-based guitar player you're likely to come across today or
tomorrow.” Rise is Connor's
third album for M.C. and the follow up to her 2016 release,
Six String Stories. It's been
a long road since Connor began her recording career for the Blind Pig
label several decades ago and the experience shows.
Connor has retooled the band for 2020 with Delby Littlejohn on keyboards
and Joewaun Jay Red Scott on bass. Cameron Lewis and Tyrone Mitchell
split drum duties on the new album. Connor sings and plays guitar
including slide, acoustic and electric with endorsements from the
legendary Gibson Guitars brand, Orange Amps and Rocky Mountain Slides.
Fellow blues guitarist Sue Foley featured Connor recently in her monthly
Guitar Player column adding to the anticipation of
Rise's release in early
November. A brief tour of Connor's native New England in October
preceded the album's release before Connor returned to Sweet Home
Chicago to resume her long running gigs at House of Blues and Kingston
Mines, where she once jammed with Jimmy Page during her apprenticeship
with Dion Payton and the 43rd Street Blues Band.
Rise
opens with “Flip”, an uptempo band songwriting effort that gets the
album off to a very funky start with a bit of rap late in the song.
It's a celebration of seduction inspired by a winter-spring
romance. So it's sort of a different kind of flip, documented by Connor.
She cranks it up on the first of many sassy slide solos throughout the
album with strong support from Littlejohn on keyboards. It's the first,
but certainly not the last, time that strong 1-2 organ-guitar combo will
make us want to flip.
Connor follows with a duet with special guest guitarist, Mike Zito from
St. Louis and a founding former member of the Royal Southern Brotherhood
band. It's her own original song “Bad Hand” as in a bad poker hand
that's been dealt and the presence of the respected Zito brings extra
gravitas to the proceedings. After an acoustic intro with some nice
slide work, it rocks in a bluesy vein that benefits from a Zito solo and
a strong piano part by the talented Littlejohn that's reminiscent of
Chuck Leavell (Allman Brothers/Rolling Stones keys player) on the
Allman's Brothers and Sisters
record.
The next track is a two-minute Connor instrumental entitled “Joanna in
A,” a fast jazzy guitar work out that includes the sympathetic sax of
Ryan Shea. It's yet another moment that demonstrates the range of
Connor's considerable guitar skills, which are frequently on display in
her adopted hometown of Chicago during both acoustic and electric sets
at the legendary Kingston Mines. And she’s a regular at House of Blues
located at the base of the Chicago's famed Marina City. Sometimes you’ll
see her at Buddy Guy’s Legends, too.
It's back to rockier territory on “Earthshaker,” in praise of another
fellow Chicago blues man much admired by author Connor who again shines
here with another great slide solo. The title track comes next with a
different touch as Connor moves into jazz fusion mode here, displaying
shades of Larry Carlton or George Benson with Littlejohn on organ once
again.
The first half of the album comes to end with Connor's version of the
pop jazz standard “Since I Fell For You,” covered by many since the
1940s including Bonnie Raitt on her first album. While Raitt is a big
influence on Connor, she devises her own arrangement of the Budd Johnson
penned classic here. Then it's time for another short instrumental
interlude called “My Irish Father.” It's a special moment for guitar
lovers with a mix of acoustic and slide, a real jam for 2:36. “Mutha”
follows with more electric guitar intensity, band vocals and a title
that reflects the fact that Connor is a bad mutha on guitar!
Then it's Rise's second and
final cover song, a very cool choice of the Sly Stone hit “If You Want
Me To Stay.” At 5:52 it's the album's longest cut and instrumentally a
chance for the studio band to stretch out as Connor dispenses with the
lyrics. It's also a reminder of influential Sixties legend Stone who was
ahead of his time when he eventually flamed out creatively. “Cherish And
Worship You” is a hard charging anthem of devotion and lust that rocks
as hard as anything on the album with special emphasis on the guitar
solos once more.
Getting close to the end now, it's “Blues Tonight,” a fast slide guitar
workout with power and purpose. Not only is “Blues Tonight” the song
title, it's a mantra for Connor's long career during which she has often
played the blues in Chicago on a nearly nightly basis. As a single
working mom at times, it has given her the opportunity to employ her
guitar skills to earn a paycheck and still be home with the kids at the
end of the night no matter how late that might be. It's much better than
being in a Motel Six or in the back of a bus at a truck stop outside
Omaha.
The album closes with a forceful open letter to fellow Americans called
“Dear America,” one of the more effective blends of rock and rap that
you'll ever hear, serving as a warning to the nation about four more
years of misdirection and bigotry at the highest levels of our
government. It's a strain that should be familiar to baby boom blues
rock listeners who were once influenced by ripped from the headlines
songs like “Ohio,” “Monster,” “American Tune” and “A Hard Rain's A-Gonna
Fall.” Vocalists and rappers Alphonso Buggz Dinero and Ricky Liontones
deliver the word over the ominous dirge-like “When The Levee Breaks,”
the Memphis Minnie blues classic covered so well by Led Zeppelin. It's a
timely message well worth hearing at yet another crucial crossroads in
American history.
Rise
was produced by Connor along with Eric Sraga and bassist Joewaun Scott
at Information Payback Reel in Chicago and mastered by Fred Guarino at
Tiki Studios in Glen Cove, New York. The Executive Producer is M.C.
Records label chief Mark Carpentieri.
Connor says Rise is a very personal statement from start to finish, “It's all about rising in life, rising to know yourself, rising to meet the challenge of exploring yourself deeper.”
Joanna will be one of the headliners at the
Hey Nonny Winter Blues Summit in Arlington Hts. on Feb. 1, 2020. Connor will be featured February 18-22 on Joe Bonamassa's Keeping The Blues
Alive Cruise.
Read more about Connor at
www.Joannaconnor.com
For info or to buy the music:
https://shop.mc-records.com/products/joanna-connor-rise
Greg Easterling
holds down the 12 midnight – 5 a.m. shift on WDRV (97.1 FM). He also
hosts American Backroads on
WDCB (90.9 FM)
Thursdays at 9 p.m.
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