Search - Nick Curran :: Doctor Velvet

Doctor Velvet
Nick Curran
Doctor Velvet
Genres: Blues, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1

Young Austin-based guitarist and singer Nick Curran revs up his jump blues with a strong infusion of rockabilly energy, but it's his inherent feel for vintage R&B that makes his music work. On his third recording, Curr...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Nick Curran
Title: Doctor Velvet
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Blind Pig
Release Date: 2/4/2003
Genres: Blues, Pop, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 019148508125

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Young Austin-based guitarist and singer Nick Curran revs up his jump blues with a strong infusion of rockabilly energy, but it's his inherent feel for vintage R&B that makes his music work. On his third recording, Curran, with the help of honking saxes, jazzy upright bass lines, and propulsive piano from Matt Farrell, conjures a sound that energetically radiates retro authenticity. Jimmie Vaughan provides scintillating second-guitar support on a couple of songs, and harmonica hero Gary Primich also joins in on a couple of tunes, but the singer is the show. Curran, with a cool, confident vocal swagger, is perfectly suited for the music, and he reinforces that affinity with carefully selected material, topping off a half-dozen of his original, in-the-tradition tunes with minor masterpieces from the classic Charles Brown catalog. Curran, who has worked with hard country singer Wayne Hancock, rockabilly rebel Ronnie Dawson, and Kim Lenz and Her Jaguars, also funks up Hank Williams's country standard "Cold Cold Heart" with a Doug Sahm-style vocal and arrangement before closing out the album with the jumping and jiving instrumental "Stompin' at the Fort." --Michael Point

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CD Reviews

Not just another old soul
Tony Tomlinson | Imperial Beach, CA United States | 06/04/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Maybe it takes a musician to really "get" Nick Curran, the Horton brothers ability as producers and immensely talented Nitelife rhythm section. More accurately, maybe it takes a musician who has done his or her homework both on their instrument and on their stereo. If "Doctor Velvet" was released by any other blues artist it would be considered a master work. Nick has his best years ahead of him so I hesitate to refer to it as such. Not since Jimmie Vaughan strapped it on with the Thunderbirds has there been a guitarist so confident of his ability that he doesn't need to play ridiculously long and pointless solos to validate his place in the blues world. Like Jimmie, his playing is perfectly appropriate for the arrangement. Tone, vice speed serves as his foundation. Speaking of the arrangement, Nick's skill as a composer, student of many regional styles, and bandleader will most likely be overlooked by the casual listener. Maybe that is his flaw. Who is going to see the originality in his take on the Hank Williams classic "Cold, Cold, Heart" or appreciate the sparse arrangement ala the Otis Rush Cobra sides on "Driving me Crazy?" Who but Gatemouth will be able to appreciate "Midnight Hour" and "Stopmin' at the Fort?" If the arrangements and guitar playing weren't enough, Curran is the single best young blues singer on the scene - his recent Handy Award serves as a testament to that. Nick is clearly the most talented artist on Blind Pig. He is not some poser sporting a baggy suit and clinging to the promise of the immediately unimportant neo-swing movement. He is clearly above that and I hope the label (as Blue Note did with Nora Jones) realizes what they have in him. Obviously Nick Curran did not originate this music but why is it acceptable for jazz musicians to play straight-ahead but not ok for blues or country players to? Why does the industry and the public want to homogenize every aspect of American music? Give the kid his propers, he really is the best out there right now... and like it or not he will be for a long, long time. Besides, if Kim Wilson, Junior Watson, Jimmie Vaughan, and Preston Hubbard believe in this kid that's enough for me."
He's playing blues people and doing it well!
Tony Tomlinson | 06/04/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"People who insist on lumping Nick into retro swing circles should consider buying some 1950's sides from T-Bone Walker, B.B. King, Otis Rush, Gatemouth Brown, and Johnny "Guitar" Watson, just to name a few. While you're at it, try some Jimmy Reed and a splash of Magic Sam. (Now I know why Nick pulled the grease out of his hair.) Yes, Nick does jump with the best of them (Wynonie Harris and Jimmy Liggins would be proud, T-bone and Pee Wee Crayton too), but he'll turn around and whack you with a spot on Ike Turner if need be. Seen any retro swing bands pull of a Wynonie Harris vocal lately? How about Little Richard? Jimmy Reed or Otis Rush? Then again, nothing cries retro swing quite like opening a set with Magic Sam's, "Lookin' Good". Hold onto your "Go, Daddy, Go", your purple, tiger striped, bowling shirts, and your vacuous associations and criticism, based solely on CD cover art, and do your homework. Nick has."
In the Nick Of Time
Elaine R. McIntyre | San Francisco, CA United States | 02/21/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Oh! I have been delivered!! With this album I have escaped the barage of sap-shackle-pop and the soulless melodies that dominate the airwaves of our time. This cry of the heart is not a new notion, but the type of rescue this time will leave you swooning and weak in your pedal-pusher covered knees. Nick Curran and the Nitelifes swing in on the vine of rockabilly jump blues, and everyone, hear their roar. Nick's gritty, gravelly vocals, innovative lyrics, and musical palimpsest are irresistable. Actually, I don't really care about the lyrics--heartfelt as they are--if he sang anything to me in that voice, I'd black out before I'd heard what he said. So, if you are on the rebound from Brian Setzer, beware of Nick Curran. His sound evolves from the '40s swing to the '50s era "get you as low to the floor as my pompadour is high" jump blues. "Shot Down" is a must hear. Go, go, go, daddy-o."