
CD Review of Just As I Am

DANNY
BRYANT'S REDEYEBAND
Blues/Rock guitarist Danny Bryant roars into the New Year with his best
effort yet. ‘Just As I Am’ is an apt title for the big toned guitarist
who leads his powerful trio through nine tracks that incorporate
powerful licks, soulful grooves, mellifluous ballads and of course
Danny’s undiminished fiery passion.
This is Danny’s 7th album and easily his best. The songs are strong, his
guitar playing is imposing and his band comprising dad Ken Bryant on
bass and drummer Trevor Barr, provide rock solid support; while the Dave
Williams co-production brings out the best in his singing. But more than
that there’s a fast growing maturity to Danny’s work as evidenced by his
impressive vocal phrasing and his unhurried heavy duty solos.
Opening with the big tone and solid groove of ‘Shut Out the Light’ Danny
quickly slips into rock ballad format on ‘Blues for Buddy’ - an ode to
Buddy Guy full of guttural enunciations, staccato notes, repeated riffs
and overall fiery guitar work - while the following ballad ‘For The Last
Time’ offers more expansive guitar work.
And while the tough but cluttered ‘Every Time The Devil Smiles’ borrows
some well worn lyrics including, ‘staring down the barrel of a loaded
gun, wicked grin and the deal’s done’ and ‘Mojo hand and a black cat
bone, track of tears and a heart of stone’, the combination of a big
drum sound and incisive soloing provides a suitable resolution
But it is to the overriding strengths of ‘Just As I Am’ that we should
look, for this is a very good album. The title track is a tub thumping
slow burner with a chiming rhythm track and some impressive searing
solos. You could almost summarise Danny’s climactic power ballad style
as steering a measured course through big chords, tough riffs and angst
filled vocals. It’s a style further exemplified on the equally
impressive ‘Day By Day’. The latter employs a deep tone a la Robin
Trower to bring real presence to an emotive ballad. The
acoustic/electric double tracking nicely fills out the tone leaving
Danny to do all the talking with a meandering solo. Only a rather
perfunctory fade detracts from a mesmerising outing. But as if paying
attention to the dynamics of the album’s sequencing, he quickly
juxtaposes that with a Walter Trout style rocking blues ‘The Hard Way’
and saves his best for last on the closing ‘Alone in the Dark’, a
delicious wah wah inflected climactic ballad.
‘Just As I Am’ has enough radio friendly outings - helped in no small
way by the surprising but effective inclusion of John Hiatt’s ‘Master of
Disaster’ - to surely help Danny pick up more fans at home. At present
his rock /blues style has served him well on the hard gigging Euro
circuit, but given a fair wind he might just finally crack his home
market with an album that will surely turn a few heads.
****1/2 (4 and a half out of 5)
© Pete Feenstra
www.getreadytorock.com

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