Search - Joe Louis Walker :: Jlw

Jlw
Joe Louis Walker
Jlw
Genres: Blues, Pop, R&B
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Joe Louis Walker's JLW has never been in more soulful voice nor has his guitar playing ever been so lean and eloquent. He has chosen his songs wisely--mixing three originals with four excellent contemporary numbers plus fo...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Joe Louis Walker
Title: Jlw
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Polygram Records
Original Release Date: 6/7/1994
Release Date: 6/7/1994
Genres: Blues, Pop, R&B
Styles: Contemporary Blues, Regional Blues, Texas Blues, Electric Blues, Modern Blues
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 731452311825, 731452311849

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Joe Louis Walker's JLW has never been in more soulful voice nor has his guitar playing ever been so lean and eloquent. He has chosen his songs wisely--mixing three originals with four excellent contemporary numbers plus four R&B standards revamped as blues tunes--and he has fleshed out eight of the arrangements with either a horn section or a gospel quartet. As a result, Walker's emotionally charged vocals have top-notch material to work with and are supported by the most sympathetic context imaginable. Walker is a former gospel singer himself, and he brings the full-chested sound of conviction to secular laments such as "Rain on My Window" and "Alone." He opens his own composition, "12-Step Lovin'," with a stinging guitar summary of the melody and then has his guitar comment caustically on every vocal complaint about the addictive qualities of love. The album's best song is Carl Schumacher's "Inner City Man," a slow blues about the trials of modern life in urban America; Walker's robust vocal is echoed in the sustaining harmonies of the Gospel Hummingbirds and saxophonist Branford Marsalis. Walker is joined by duet vocalist Angela Strehli, the Tower of Power Horns and his rocking road band, the Bosstalkers, on a punchy version of "Hold On"; he is accompanied only by his own dobro and James Cotton's harmonica on the rural blues of "Going to Canada." Either way--electric or acoustic, pained or exuberant--Walker is a tremendous singer who can grab hold of both melody and story and squeeze them dry. --Geoffrey Himes

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CD Reviews

The "Inner City Man"
Tony Plott | Salt Lake City, Utah, USA | 06/11/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Joe Louis Walker lets it all hang out there on every track. Backed by his tight group "the Bosstalkers", Joe Louis Walker plays the a blues that is no style but his own. This collection also has a number of great surprises. The Tower of Power horn section blares through a few number. And if that's not enough for you, Bradford Marsallis plays is meloncholy tenor sax during Inner City Man. Guitar driven with a whole lot of soul Joe Louis Walker's JLW is surely a must own for all you blues finantics."