Mike Zito is one who enjoys returning to his blues roots, playing electric guitar and ripping though songs with his sawtooth-sharp voice.
Pearl River -- his fifth album -- is quite different than the previous effort
Today, which was more rock-oriented, and focuses on not only contemporary urban tunes but a few acoustic folk-oriented ones, and the basis of all of his music, the sound of New Orleans. He's got help from guitarist
Anders Osborne and keyboardist Reese Wynans from
Stevie Ray Vaughan's band, and there are guest appearances from
Cyril Neville,
Johnny Sansone,
Lynwood Slim, Randy Chortkoff (also his producer,) and
Susan Cowsill (yes, she of
the Cowsills fame). It's good to hear
Zito dig deep into songs like the title track,
Neville's pure, slow blues, the New Orleans shuffle treatment of
Sonny Boy Williamson's "Eyesight to the Blind," and Mel London's rocksteady "Sugar Sweet."
Zito is no slouch as a songwriter, and his "Dirty Blonde" is a swing jump blues, as he admonishes a lady "friend" for her entire persona being low-down and scurrilous from the neck down. He does get into some choogling voodoo à la
Charlie Musselwhite, and plays toy piano on "The Dead of Night," while the acoustic tunes, especially with rising star
Osborne, offer a sweeter side to
Zito's normally rough exterior. With
Cowsill, "Shoes Blues" is the most humorous song, and interactive as he trades lines with the former pop star/girl next door. This is not a cookie-cutter album from
Zito and friends, as it shows off all the musical styles that have led him to the point of being an individualist. It's well worth the purchase price, and comes highly recommended. ~ Michael G. Nastos