Raw
Editorial Reviews
<"b000006cri7499"> Amazon.com
Ealey gets back to basics on the aptly titled Raw, after the disappointing R&B-oriented experiment that was Stuck Between Rhythm & Blues. Raw is a satisfying slab of unpretentious electric blues with some nice guitar work. Ealey's not a fantastic vocalist, but he is a good one, and his singing complements his playing nicely, especially on "Walkin' Blues." There are quite a few covers on this album, which Ealey performs with a kind of low-key energy that suits them perfectly: Bob Dylan's "Meet Me in the Morning," Willie Nelson's "Funny How Time Slips Away," and Ivory Joe Hunter's "Since I Met You Baby." "I've Got the Blues" proves that Ealey can write a traditional blues tune, and the folk-like "A Song for My Daughter" is a pleasant surprise. Highly recommended. Genevieve --Williams
<"b000006cri5540"> Living Blues
[Ealey's] tone has that attractive meld of pugnacity and warmth that characterizes the great lone Star improvisers; he combines string-bending suppleness with an aggressive single-note attack; and even at his most rocked out and abrasive, he extracts creative ideas from a melody to create lines of horn-like sureness.
Raw
Raw, Music, Theodis Ealey, Blues, Blues Music, Modern Electric Blues, Pop
Music:
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