Bad Influence
Editorial Reviews
<"b0000005nz7580"> Amazon.com essential recording
When the Washington-state-based bluesman cut this album, his second, for Hightone in 1983, Robert Cray was still four years away from his major-label, Top 40 hit "Smoking Gun." Nonetheless, his signature sound is intact: horn-colored Stax-style arrangements, a backbeat laced with funk, Cray's own gospelized vocals, and the stiletto-tipped notes that he rips from his Stratocaster. A few years later Eric Clapton covered the title song; but what's most fun here is listening to Cray pay homage to his good influences. He covers numbers by Johnny "Guitar" Watson and Eddie Floyd, and charges into his guitar solos with a brittle tone and bristling attack that at times recalls the underrated Watson, Cray's mentor Albert Collins, and Chicago legend Buddy Guy. But it's really the sound of a modern virtuoso distilling his craft from the raw material of blues history. --Ted Drozdowski --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.
<"b0000005nz5228"> From Grove Press Guide to Blues on CD
A portent of impressive things to come. In 1983 Cray's second album trickled out of Oakland and turned a few heads. Here was a thirty-year-old unknown capable of co-writing articulate, absolutely gripping songs of forlornness ("Phone Booth") and complicated love-lust relationships ("The Grinder," "Bad Influence"). Less involving then were his spiky guitar work- too emulative of Albert King's-and his not-yet-ripe singing. -- © Frank John Hadley 1993 --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.
Bad Influence
Bad Influence, Music, Robert Cray, Blues, Blues Music, Contemporary Blues, Modern Electric Blues, Pop, Retro-Soul, Soul-Blues
Music:
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