|          AZ     Kenny Tsak/56 Deluxe - Like I Do     Self Release         www.56deluxe.com             www.myspace.com/azkennytsak56deluxe     11 tracks Total time: 46:20     The CD case and sleeve notes artwork of     Like I Do, featuring AZ Kenny Tsak in a paisley shirt surrounded by     comely, scantily clad young women with guitars in hand, and with the     Guitarus Maximus bravado graphic embedded in the sleeve notes, might     make one feel this is a guitarslinger rock or blues-rock album. But     that’s definitely not the case, for this critically acclaimed CD by     Tsak and his band, 56 Deluxe, is straightforward roadhouse blues     that, while certainly rocking, is solidly blues, not rock.     Kenny Tsak first took up guitar in the     1970s, but had to abandon it in the 1980s to run a business. He     reunited with his friend Avery T. Horton, Jr. in 2005 to form 56     Deluxe, which was soon performing regularly across southern Arizona     and on the East Coast. Like I Do is the group’s debut CD.     Tsak fronts the band with gravelly     bravura vocals and excellent, straight-ahead guitar solos with no     extraneous flash, following in the tradition of Lonnie Brooks,     Luther Allison , Hubert Sumlin and other masters, the tradition that     captured young white players on both sides of the Atlantic and gave     birth to rock ‘n’ roll and rock. But Tsak has two other fine     soloists on hand in 56 Deluxe—piano and organ man James Holt, and     saxophonist Frank Perez, both of whom get appropriate space on Like     I Do to strut their stuff. Bassist Avery T. Horton, Jr. is an able     songwriter as well, co-writing one of the songs of the CD with Tsak,     track 9, the exuberant celebration of a woman, “My Tastee Cake;” and     writing solo two of the others, track 10, the bass-dominant shuffle     “All It Takes,” and track 5, a “sober” warning about the killjoy     perils of sobriety, “12 Step Boogie,” that admonishes, “Now that we     got sober/All the fun is over.” Rounding out the band is Andy “G,”     drummer, and guest players Joe Beard, Jr. on drums and Bernie Rose     on back piano.     Six other songs are written by Kenny     Tsak himself, which are a solid and variegated mixture of     traditional blues themes and approaches, which I list here. The     opening title track, “Like I Do,” sets off the roadhouse flavor of     the CD well with a sax-opening traditional city blues of doubt about     one’s woman. Track 2, “Full Time Lover,” comes in as a ruminative     slow number with a piano-and-organ backdrop, while track 4, “Blues     Attitude,” is another slow number, this time about getting through     tough times. Track 3, “Walkin’ Shoes,” is a vigorous     leaving-a-bad-woman sax-driven rocker with solos from both Holt and     Perez, and track 7, “Down South Florida, “ celebrates the Sunshine     State with a rhumba beat. The final track is actually two tracks     combined: “I’ll Take You With Me,” a rockin’ jump with an elemental     vocal line and extended guitar and piano work, followed by an     untitled “bonus track,” a short guitar-bass-and-drums medium-tempo     ruminative instrumental coda.      There are two covers of classics—track     8, Willie Dixon’s “I Just Wanna Make Love To You,” and track 6,     Chick Willis’s risqué “Stoop Down Baby,” sung by Florida bluesman     Joey Gilmore, who adds two original verses, one celebrating Tsak,     the other himself. Gilmore also engages Tsak in a guitar solo duel     on the track, where both are in top form.     Like I Do, AZ Kenny Tsak and 56 Deluxe     re-create the classic blues sound of the late 1950s and early 1960s     in a most convincing way, with real fealty not just to the music     itself, but also to its raucous spirit.      This review is an extended version of     one that originally appeared in my July 26, 2009 “Blues and More”     column for the Bloomington (IN) Alternative.            Reviewer George Fish lives in     Indianapolis, Indiana, home of blues legends Yank Rachell and Leroy     Carr, and writes a regular music column, “Blues and More” for the     online Bloomington (IN) Alternative. He’s also published in the     regional Indiana blues and alternative presses as well as Living     Blues and Blues Access, and wrote the notes for Yank Rachell’s     Delmark album, Chicago Style. He has also published on blues and pop     music for the left-wing press as well, and has appeared in Against     the Current and Socialism and Democracy, as well as the online     Political Affairs and MRZine.     For other reviews and interviews on     our website         CLICK HERE. |