Rating:
Genre:
Blues
Release Date: 01/11/2005
With its second release for the
Alligator label, the journeyman Rhode Island ensemble maintains its reputation as no-nonsense keepers of retro-flavored horn-based upbeat
blues. The band's previous album was nominated for a Grammy and this one maintains the energy, taste, and passion it has always supplied in its cover choices, while delivering some excellent original material. Harpist/singer
Mark DuFresne's booming, husky vocals are reminiscent of
Big Joe Turner, one of the group's obvious influences, as he bellows and leads the charge through 14 more examples of why
Roomful of Blues remain the finest
jump blues outfit on the scene 35 years after their debut. Although the slightly deceptive album title indicates this might be a concert disc, it is all recorded in the studio, but retains a live feel that leaps out of the speakers. Hearing the eight-piece pounce on saxist
Rich Lataille's instrumental tribute to
Illinois Jacquet,
"Straight Jaquette," it's obvious that these guys would also have the chops to pull off a straight
jazz release if they put their minds to it. Rollicking versions of
Roy Brown's
"Up Jumped the Devil," Lowell Fulson's
"Love Grown Cold," and a pair of obscurities from
Little Milton sit comfortably next to likeminded originals. One of those, guitarist/bandleader
Chris Vachon's
"Boomerang," has a catchy singalong chorus strong enough to be a radio hit, if contemporary radio played this style of music. But that minor detail has never prevented
Roomful of Blues from adding a slight contemporary spin to a sound that was popular before these guys -- and most of their fans -- were born. And it doesn't stop the band from delivering wildly successful albums like this, albeit to an ever-dwindling core demographic.
Standing Room Only doesn't expand the group's reach, but it maintains and even solidifies the position of
Roomful of Blues as the most accomplished horn-dominated
jump blues/
R&B band on the scene.
~Hal Horowitz, All Music Guide