Album Reviews

Boz Scaggs: Memphis

BOZ_SCAGGS_v2_30-_boz_cover

Boz Scaggs
Memphis
(429)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

R&B music, particularly of the Memphis ’70s variety, has always coursed through the catalog of Texas bred blue-eyed soul singer Boz Scaggs. But working with Michael McDonald and Donald Fagen in the Dukes of September touring unit for the past three years became the catalyst that drove Scaggs to not only record the music of that cityโ€™s golden era, but ensconce himself in Royal Recording Studio, the hallowed location much of it emerged from.ย ย Although the bulk of this is covers, Scaggs steers away from the more obvious Hi Records hits to dig deeper into rock and soul nuggets by wrapping his velvet croon around music made famous by Tyrone Davis (a beautifully slowed down โ€œCan I Change My Mindโ€), Mink (Willy) DeVille (two tracks from the bandโ€™s debut), and Jimmy Reed (the deep slow blues โ€œYou Got Me Cryinโ€™โ€). He pays tribute to the eraโ€™s Godfather Al Green with a rubbery cover of the seldom heard โ€œSo Good to Be Hereโ€ complete with Greenโ€™s studio organ player Charles Hodges. This approach is as perfect a fit for the singer as the sharp suits he used to sport in his ’70s โ€œLidoโ€ heyday. It even inspires two originals from his pen, of which the opening โ€œGone Baby Goneโ€ sounds like it was recorded 40 years ago. Producer Steve Jordan captures the thumping drums, horns and string arrangements always so essential to this music, creating Scaggsโ€™ finest album since Come on Home, 1997โ€™s previous set of predominantly soul covers.