For
Robert Randolph & the Family Band, the three year break after 2010's somewhat stilted-sounding
We Walk This Road was well deserved. By
Randolph's own admission, their 280 date-per-year touring pace had taken its toll: playing music, let alone trying to find time to create it, had become a chore. Their Blue Note debut,
Lickety Split, features an expanded
FB lineup that includes vocalist
Lenesha Randolph and guitarist Brett Haas; the group has gone back to its earliest recorded efforts for inspiration while furthering their new music considerably. The end result resembles their live sound more than any studio record in their catalog. Co-produced by the
FB with
Randolph's songwriting partners, it was primarily engineered and edited by
Eddie Kramer, and mixed by
Jim Scott. Opener "Amped Up" delivers the
FB's trademark party-time meld of screaming hard rock, funk, gospel, blues, and R&B, all at full-tilt and in the raw. "Born Again" delivers the band's signature gospel message with celebration. The gorgeous call-and-response vocals between the Randolphs, and guest
Bekka Bramlett, and the meaty, contrasting guitar interplay between
Robert and Haas, are irresistible. Soul, Cajun-country, and gospel are at the heart of the dreamy yet earthy
Lenesha-led, "New Orleans." Speaking of NOLA, Trombone Shorty lends his horn and energy to the gospelized, Crescent City-flavored stomp of "Take the Party."
Carlos Santana makes two appearances here as well. On the driving funk of "Brand New Wayo," he delivers a fine, overdriven
B.B. King nod when prompted by
Randolph, while bassist
Daniel Morgan lets his
Bootsy freak flag fly and pushes the tune into the red. The rangy, pulsing hard rock gospel blues in the title track gets high marks for
Randolph's tasty fills and the soulful vocal exchanges. The cover of the
Ohio Players' "Love Rollercoaster" has its horns supplanted beautifully by the color palette from
Randolph's pedal steel, and
Morgan's knotty, funky bassline. The other cover here is an off-your-seat-and-on-your-feet reading of
the Rascals' "Good Lovin," with Dwan Hill adding his B-3 to the mix and trading fours with
Randolph, sending it all off in party-down version of a Möbius strip.
Lickety Split is not only a joyous, unhindered return to form, but the group's finest studio offering to date. ~ Thom Jurek