Album Reviews

Black Pumas: Black Pumas

Black Pumas
Black Pumas
(ATO)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

โ€œItโ€™s about time Steve Winwood fronted a soul band,โ€ you may say after an initial spin of this debut from the Black Pumas. But it wonโ€™t take long to realize that frontman/singer/songwriter Eric Burton is actually the vocalist for this Austin based R&B act. Still, his voice and phrasing is occasionally so similar to Winwoodโ€™s, and by association Ray Charlesโ€™, itโ€™s easy to make the mistake.

Videos by American Songwriter

Black Pumas is a project of Burton with songwriter/guitarist/producer Adrian Quesada, a Grammy-winning member of Grupo Fantasma and Brownout. Together they hired some session people to fill out the sound of this R&B based band, heavily influenced by both Motownโ€™s classic years and Curtis Mayfieldโ€™s supple soul. The resulting songs straddle the lines between retro R&B and a singer/songwriterโ€™s attention to lyrical detail. There are some sensual make-out tunes like โ€œYou Know Betterโ€ (โ€œIย gottaย love you right/ I want to know you betterโ€) and โ€œFireโ€ with its reverbed, twang guitar (โ€œGotย aย lover on my mind/ She keeps me wanting, steady wanting moreโ€). But more spiritual matters are on Burtonโ€™s mind too.ย 

On the groove-heavy โ€œConfines,โ€ he sings, โ€œIn lifeโ€™s confines I try to let my soul refineโ€ above honeyed keyboards, female backing vocals and even a closing violin. In the stripped-down (acoustic guitar and skeletal drums), closing โ€œSweet Conversations,โ€ Burton testifies, โ€œIf Iโ€™m lost in my darkness with my soul on the pavement/ Wonโ€™t you speak with me spirit.โ€ But itโ€™s the opening bittersweet ballad โ€œBlack Moon Risingโ€ that combines the spiritual and the physical with an instantly memorable chorus as Burton emotes with heart-palpitating sincerity, especially when shifting into falsetto. And for the poignant โ€œOctober 33,โ€ Burtonโ€™s acoustic guitar provides the foundation for a tune that sounds like something Van Morrison might have crafted in his Moondance period. 

As the disc rolls on, there is an evenness to the overall vibe that feels a bit repetitive. Yet itโ€™s so inviting, subtle and enticing, you canโ€™t help but be sucked into Black Pumaโ€™s heartfelt musical swirl. Credit goes to Quesada for creating the overall palette with production that never overplays its hand. Still, itโ€™s Burtonโ€™s vocals that create the focal point for music that consistently hits a sweet spot like the finest soul music from the โ€˜70s and โ€˜80s, without feeling the least bit retro. 

The 10 tunes fly by in the fastest 40 minutes of your life. No need to pick and choose favorites either, because thereโ€™s little filler on a debut that knows the approach it wants and nails it with graceful professionalism and buckets of passion.