Fifth Annual Blues Music Festival
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Performers: B.B. King, the Neville Brothers, Delbert McClinton, Taj Mahal. Reviewed Aug. 17, 1996. Jazz festivals are often easily carped upon for violating some sort of purist edict; the blues has a lot longer rope with which to hang itself. So while Aaron Neville chirping '70s AM radio hits shouldn't fit anyone's description of the blues, this five-hour concert succeeded by flying a festive banner of upbeat
B.B. King and his 13-piece orchestra was a fitting topper, energetic and crisp with shades of jazz adding a delightful tang to King's big-band blues. King still possesses a full roar, but his dexterity has begun to falter -- often he talk-sang to mixed results ("Five Long Years" worked, "We're Gonna Make It" was iffy). His guitar playing, however, was biting and poignant, with the sting of his influential work intact. Speculating on the source of his drive this particular evening may be foolhardy, but he is within a month of his 71st birthday, and reports from a Santa Barbara concert last week said it showed. King, as smooth a performer as this world has ever seen, played this night with purpose.
Performing, too, with a newfound sense of purpose made the Neville Brothers the evening's winner in showing how blues is more conceptual than a series of chords.
In a set that included works by Bill Withers, the Beatles, T-Bone Walker, Albert King and Dobie Gray, the Nevilles did it all in overdrive. Clearly, the shows that emphasized Aaron's angelic voice are a thing of the past; keyboardist Art Neville, who sat out a previous tour due to back problems, is back and playing with the sizzle and funk he employed during his Meters days.
And Cyril Neville has come out from behind his percussion instruments to fire up this unit and provide a bona fide front man, turning a blues classic, "Born Under a Bad Sign" (with equally jagged guitar lines from Taj Mahal), and Lennon-McCartney's "Come Together" into wild New Orleans funk forays.
Delbert McClinton provided some potent Southern soul with his crack seven-piece band, turning his attention to a solid block of covers highlighted by a driving version of "You Are My Sunshine." Taj Mahal (reviewed Daily Variety , March 29) was his usual sharp-as-a-tack self and smoked the living daylights out of "I Need Your Lovin " from his new Private Music disc.
Music, much of which related to the blues.
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