E-mail Me! Click Here!
Louisville Music News.net
April 2001 Articles
Cover Story
Tim Roberts
Columns
Berk Bryant
Decimus Rock
Mike Stout
Paul Moffett
Chris Crain
Keith Clements
Tim Roberts
Jason Koerner
Muffy Junes
Laura Spalding
Jimmy Brown
CD Reviews
David Lilly
David Lilly
Beth Jones
Tim Roberts
Bob Mitchell
Jim Conway
Performance Reviews
Jason Koerner
Laura Spalding
Interviews
Jason Koerner
Calendar
Staff
Preview
Paul Moffett
Bookmark Louisville Music News.net with these handy
social bookmarking tools:
del.icio.us digg
StumbleUpon spurl
wists simpy
newsvine blinklist
furl blogmarks
yahoo! myweb smarking
ma.gnolia segnalo
reddit fark
technorati cosmos
Available RSS Feeds
Top Picks - Top Picks
Top Picks - Today's Music
Top Picks - Editor's Blog
Top Picks - Articles
Add Louisville Music News' RSS Feed to Your Yahoo!
Add to My Yahoo!
Contact: contact@louisvillemusicnews.net
Louisville, KY 40207
Copyright 1989-2024
Louisvillemusicnews.net, Louisville Music News, Inc.
All Rights Reserved  


Issue:April 2001 Year: 2001
this one

Sizzlin'

Steak

Guy Forsyth (Antone's Records)

Imagine, if you can, the following ingredients: the rockin' rhythms of Bo Diddley, Chris Isaac's slightly twisted contemporary rockabilly, and the raspy distorted voice of Dusty Hill (back when ZZ Top was still worth listening to, of course). If that isn't enough, throw in a little homage to Louis Armstrong and a touch of Muddy Waters. Then produce your tunes using a freak-out boomerang guitar, an armpit fiddle and a Mississippi indulgeaphone (a real instrument, or did he just make that up?). Throw it on a flaming grill and you've got Steak.

The combinations above sound scary, but Guy Forsyth doesn't try to do them all in one song. And even though the influences are obvious, he easily manages to keep it from sounding copycat boring. In fact, it's some of the funkiest, quirkiest blues I've ever heard.

But Forsyth isn't relying on mere shock value and cheap tricks to make his mark. How about this line from "Mad," the recording's second cut: "Morning come and you look me in the eye and come up with some Wal-Mart lie". And from "You're Still Here," a classic one-who-got-away theme: "You're hidin' in my mirror and you're dyin' in my head / You're still here."

I have to admit, though, that Forsyth loses me on "Thibodaux Furlough." I love the bayou beat, but somehow, I've never learned to appreciate the saw as a musical instrument. Sounds a little too much like a theremin played in the soundtrack of a cheap 1950s B-movie for my taste.

Steak is interesting without being weird. It's innovative without forcing you to think too hard, and, by golly, it's just plain fun.

For more information, visit www.guyforsyth.com, or call Antone's Records at 1-800-96-BLUES.

Bookmark and Share