Whereas on 1993's
Feels Like Rain Buddy Guy flirted with pop and R&B material, on
Slippin' In, released one year later, he firmly reasserts his bluesness. From the very first track on,
Guy lets his incomparable guitar loose. Throughout the album, he even experiments with
Hendrix-esque effects on his guitar (perhaps at the prodding of producer/engineer
Eddie Kramer), but the results never seem kitschy or gimmicky. Accompanied on half of the tracks by ex-
Stevie Ray Vaughan associates
Tommy Shannon and
Chris Layton, the groove is deep and swinging. It makes you realize how much of
Vaughan's signature sound lay in his rhythm section. There are only two original
Guy compositions on
Slippin' In, but since he has always been better as an interpreter than a writer, this is a non-complaint. Playing a superb foil to the leader is none other than
Johnnie Johnson, whose solo on "7-11" simply takes over the track. The difference in sound quality between this album and
Feels Like Rain is astounding. Whereas on
Feels Like Rain the sound was often thin and unimpressive, über-engineer
Kramer has created an ideal sonic space here for
Guy's music. Some may feel that the individual instruments are too distinct, but for those who feel that the development of multi-tracking and other advances in recording technology are good things will not be disappointed. Also absent from
Slippin' In is the rotating all-star casts of notables that appeared both on
Damn Right, I've Got the Blues and
Feels Like Rain. This is encouraging, because an artist of
Guy's stature and caliber does not need celebrity appearances to make his records worth investigating, a fact which he proves masterfully on this album. ~ Daniel Gioffre