Now six albums into his career, it doesn't seem likely that
Chris Duarte will ever quite shake off comparisons to
Stevie Ray Vaughan and, to a lesser extent,
Jimi Hendrix -- not because those comparisons are lazy critical shorthand but because
Duarte continues to find more to mine in the tones and licks of those twin Stratocaster gods. On
Vantage Point he relies rather heavily on Texas shuffles and slow, elongated 12-bar blues, so the scales are tipped slightly in
SRV's favor, but
Duarte does manage to fuse his two inspirations on "She Don't Live Here Anymore," which comes across as a
Stevie Ray spin on "Voodoo Chile." Of course,
Vaughan covered that on
Couldn't Stand the Weather, finding his own voice within
Hendrix, and
Duarte follows his idol's lead here, creating his own sound out of his inspirations. At first, the similarities to
Stevie Ray can be overwhelming --
Duarte loves that big, clean out-of-phase sound that
SRV did -- but that fades away as you concentrate on how
Duarte spins away from that, either in the funky,
Jeff Beck fusion of "Woodpecker," or how liquid his leads on "More Boogie" are. Throughout this record,
Duarte's playing is this exceptional, but the best moments here are when his writing is up to his playing, as it is on the old-style roadhouse shuffle "Satisfy." These are the moments that suggest his growth as a writer is starting to match his growth as a player.