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New
Orleans' Jon Cleary is a triple threat—with a salty-sweet
voice, masterful piano skills, and a knack for stacking infectious
grooves with melodic hooks and sharp lyrics. All of his talents
are manifest on Pin Your Spin, his tough new Basin Street Records
release, produced by John Porter. Backed by his Absolute Monster
Gentlemen band, Cleary delivers a dozen original songs with cool
conviction and expertise, and reminds us that soul can be spoken
in a variety of dialects. Tight-and-right funk ("Got to Be
More Careful," "Funky Munky Biznis"), sophisticated
balladry ("Smile in a While," "Is It Any Wonder"),
and Big Easy-via-Cuba piano ("Oh No No No," "King
Zulu Strut")—all of these seem to be Cleary's native
tongue.
Pin Your Spin
even includes a street-corner doo-wop workout, "Best Ain't
Good Enough." Sung with Absolute Monster Gentlemen bandmates
Derwin "Big D" Perkins and Cornell Williams, the gospel-flavored
a cappella arrangement seems an ideal setting for the song—though
Cleary admits that the treatment came years after the song's genesis.
"It was one of the first tunes we rehearsed when I put the
band together ten years ago," he says. "But after trying
several drastically different arrangements, I dropped it."
The song was resurrected on a recent road trip to a gig in Mississippi.
As he and the
Gentlemen passed the travel time by singing doo-wop arrangements
of gospel tunes, Cleary was struck with the idea of singing "Best
Ain't Good Enough" in the same vein. "We tried it out
in the van," says Cleary, "then cut a demo in my home
studio a few weeks later to see if it would work." It worked,
indeed. That demo is the take that landed on Pin Your Spin. "I'd
planned to re-record it for the album," Cleary adds, "but
[producer] John Porter really dug it and felt that it should go
on as it was."
Cleary is a
prolific writer, and he considered two- or three-dozen songs while
he was assembling material for Pin Your Spin. He is as particular
as he prolific, though, and he always strives to get his songs in
top shape before bringing them into the studio. "I had a bunch
of contenders for this record," Cleary says, "some old
and some new, in various stages of completion. With some of the
songs, it was a matter of working on the lyrics. With others—like
‘Best Ain't Good Enough'—it was a question of finding
an arrangement that suited the song and suited the record as a whole."
Because Cleary is a busy musician—balancing time between fronting
his own band and touring internationally as a key member of Bonnie
Raitt's band — putting the finishing touches on all of the
songs was a real challenge. "In order to satisfactorily complete
the lyrics to certain tunes, I'd sometimes have to wear my lyricist's
hat to the detriment of my arranger's hat, or my piano player's
hat, or my producer's hat." Ultimately, he whittled his big
batch of songs down to the 12 gems that comprise Pin Your Spin.
"The others," he says, "will sit on the back burner
for the time being, until I can properly dedicate myself to getting
them right."
If setting such
high musical standards means that Cleary's songs take longer to
complete, Pin Your Spin is evidence that the effort is justified.
There's no filler here—just smart lyrics, memorable melodies,
and rock-solid grooves. Over the churning funk of the disc's title
track, he skewers the influence peddlers prevalent in today's culture,
beseeching "Don't try to pin your spin on me." In "Agent
00 Funk," Cleary embodies a sly "secret agent" who
has to "operate behind enemy lines" to make time with
the object of his affection. He illustrates the flip side of this
tale on "Got to Be More Careful"—getting "caught
red handed at the scene of the crime." With its irrepressible
down-tempo bounce, yearning lyric, and Cleary's seasoned-to-perfection
voice, "Smile in a While" is a song for lovers with serious
soul. "Is It Any Wonder" is a break-up song, with Cleary
poetically telling it like it is. The jazz-tinged harmonies here
help set the mood with subtle sway, demonstrating Cleary's understanding
of the power of self-restraint.
While Cleary
is the prime motivator throughout, his Absolute Monster Gentlemen
band does their fair share of the work to bring Cleary's musical
vision to life. "They work together very powerfully,"
Cleary says emphatically. "There's a very high standard of
technical musicianship, but the key thing is that they also play
with a lot of soul and spirit. These guys dig in and play with a
lot of passion, and I think it's that intangible element that seems
to successfully move audiences everywhere we play.
"Living
in New Orleans," Cleary continues, "I've always been spoiled
for choice with great rhythm sections." Before assembling his
band, he used to enjoy the challenge of putting together different
rhythm sections for each gig, hiring Fats Domino's guys one night,
Professor Longhair's band the next, members of the Meters on the
next gig, and so on. "But one night, on my way home from a
gig, I stumbled across the Friendly Travelers—a gospel band—playing
for tips in a coffee bar. I dug them, and went back to their gigs
many times, sitting in sometimes, and ultimately we became friends.
Then I moved to New York for a while, but kept in touch with the
guys and would visit whenever I was back in town." In 1994,
Cleary was invited perform for the first time at the famed New Orleans
Jazz and Heritage Festival. Instead of hiring all-star session musicians,
he decided to try hiring Big D and Cornell from the Friendly Travelers.
"I called them, and they said, ‘What took you so long?
Of course we want to do it!'" Adding drummer "Jellybean"
Alexander, whom the Friendly Travelers knew from working on Bourbon
Street, the band was born.
Pin Your Spin
is Cleary's third release (his second for Basin Street). The sound
of the record is equal parts raw spark and refined sparkle, thanks
to Cleary's seamless coupling of modern studio technology with his
band's breathing, sweating human groove. Though Cleary doesn't like
to talk too specifically about the nuts and bolts of how he makes
records—preferring to "just present the finished thing
and leave the process a bit of a mystery"—he offers this
when pressed for details: "This project contained some of the
elements of my previous albums. The first one was a ‘studio'
record with more attention paid to polish and production, while
the last one was simply a recording of us in the studio, playing
as we would play on a gig. I combined approaches this time, drawing
templates in advance for some of the songs in my home studio, and
then bringing in the fellas to contribute their unique flavors."
Veteran producer
John Porter was at the helm to help Cleary realize his fantastic
soul vision. In electing Porter for the job, Cleary's reasons were
twofold. First and foremost, they share similar tastes and backgrounds,
so Cleary says he finds it easy to convey to Porter what he's trying
to achieve artistically. Equally important, Cleary adds, "John
brings a calm, confident, methodical approach to a process that
is for me upside down and chaotic. For me, creating abstract musical
ideas, writing songs, and crafting arrangements all requires a thought
process that is fundamentally opposite to the pragmatic. John Porter
restores order to my chaos, and he's good at it."
Cleary was recently
featured in Martin Scorcese's critically acclaimed seven-part PBS
Blues series "The Blues." The series' sixth film, "Red,
White, and Blues," was produced by John Porter and directed
by Mike Figgis and catches Cleary performing with Van Morrison,
Tom Jones and Jeff Beck. Cleary's impressive past credits include
work with Taj Mahal, B.B. King, and Bonnie Raitt—whom he continues
to tour and record with—but, as Pin Your Spin makes abundantly
clear, it's with the Gentlemen that his triple-threat flame burns
brightest.
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