Funky King of Spades
Warning ! If you dislike funk, keep going your way. If on the contrary, you appreciate funky rhythm'n'blues with a nice jazzy blues swinging guitar, this Clarence Spady excellent album might well be your treat.
Born in 1961 in Paterson, New Jersey, Spady grew up in Scranton, Pennsylvania, among parents who listened to soul and blues. His father played guitar as well as his uncle Fletchey who, Spady said once, “was a very good blues guitarist, in the manner of Otis Rush or Booba Barnes”, so that he began to play the instrument as early as… 5 !
Born in 1961 in Paterson, New Jersey, Spady grew up in Scranton, Pennsylvania, among parents who listened to soul and blues. His father played guitar as well as his uncle Fletchey who, Spady said once, “was a very good blues guitarist, in the manner of Otis Rush or Booba Barnes”, so that he began to play the instrument as early as… 5 !
After high school, Spady started his real musical education on the job, playing in several local bands, even accidentally getting involved in his first recording session as a sideman for the Jimmy Johnson's family band in the end of the seventies. The Johnsons' rhythm guitarist, Buddy Blackstone, probably saw Spady's potential and began to coached him.
Spady then joined touring local rhythm'n'blues bands, A Touch of Class then Greg Palmer’s band, for eight years, before leaving for Michigan where he played funk music in different bands for a couple of years. “I’ve always dug funk,” he comments. That, when listening to "Just Between Us", we've understood !
Back to Scranton, eager to find back his blues roots, he set up the West Third Street Blues Band, playing at night while working in the day as an excavator operator. He started to write songs for the group, that finally gave birth to his 1996 self-produced album “Nature Of The Beast”.
Despite a 1997 W. C. Handy Award nomination in the Best New Blues Artist category that brought him international attention and tour bookings, it took Spady another twelve years to put out "Just Between Us" in 2008.
Spady sings with a seducing soul voice. He's a gifted lyricist, a talented melodist and arranger, and a very elegant guitar master. Perfectly groovy on rhythm guitar, he is at the same time an elaborate subtle soloist putting out a very polished cool lightly jazzy playing. The presence of a Hammond B-3 organ (Benjie Porecki and Bob O’Connell) on every track colors the album with a tasteful churchy sound, and the whole structure of the album lays on the excellent funky bass work of Steve Gomes. More generally the production has been finely crafted in every detail.
Spady masters the art of composing groovy rhythms and hot funky riffs. Listen for example to "I'll Never Sell You Out", "King Of Hearts" or "Cut Them Loose", and you'll see (if I may use that verb in a musical matter).
This funky brand of impassioned, electrifying soul blues gathers strictly original Spady-penned songs. Some singularities deserve to be mentioned : the funky acid jazz sound of "I'll Never Sell You Out"; the melodic similarities between "Just Between Us" and Bob Marley's "No Woman No Cry"; the great Hammond and guitar work on the excellent jazzy blues "Be Your Enough"; the killing bass lines on "King Of Hearts", "Cut Them Loose", "24/7 Luv" and "Candy"; the psychedelic folk-rock twist of "E-Mail" ("I ended up writing it in the studio", Spady recalls) which also reminds the early Allman Brothers' style. As for Spady's refined and swinging guitar style, as said earlier, it shines from beginning to end.
Such an original and sophisticated work was justly rewarded with a second nomination in 2009, this time for a Blues Music Award as Soul Blues Album of the Year.
Discography
1996, Nature of the Beast (Evidence Music)
2008, Just Between Us (Severn Records)
2021, Surrender (Nola Blue )
Videos
> On the Blues Society Of Central Pennsylvania (BSCP) New Year's Eve Virtual Jam on December 31, 2020 (42mn): https://youtu.be/3Vhu8PAVoSw
> On the BSCP Virtual Jam, on December 10, 2020 (42mn): https://youtu.be/J6pCafAYNFA
- The technician
> "The sky is crying" live at Terra Blues in October 2019: https://youtu.be/d89NYGmfB0Y
> At the River Street Jazz Cafe, Plains, Pennsylvania:
- in November 16, 2013 (complete 2h40 show): https://youtu.be/Zn-YVSZ5BtY & (4h18 version): https://youtu.be/MWp1Rq9oCzg
> At the Chameleon Club during the 2019 Lancaster Roots and Blues Fest. (1h27): https://youtu.be/13r_h6mg1Vk
> At The Recovery Bank in April 2021 (1h18): https://youtu.be/OXQMh25n0zU
> On The Exchange just days after Clarence's new album, "Surrender", was released, May 2021 (1h15): https://youtu.be/qNOc5RTiEAg
> In 2016 at Arlo's Tavern
- Part 1: https://youtu.be/sMRbzCTwjkg
- Part 2: https://youtu.be/HddS2fsKN_o
- Part 3: https://youtu.be/i1i5NhQzpPw
- Part 4 (with the incredible young Eamonn Hubert): https://youtu.be/RmHDHJfHNto
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