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"Pin
Your Spin" review
Paste Magazine - June 2004
Move
over Jelly Roll, Fats, Professor Longhair and Doctor John. There’s
a new Crescent City piano master in town. Standing firmly in the time-honored
tradition that has produced piano geniuses for close to a hundred years,
transplanted English keyboard maestro Cleary and his Absolute Monster
Gentlemen create a glorious groove on Pin Your Spin. Combining doo-wop,
gospel, the Cuban Son tradition, blues and – above all – a
heavy dollop of P-Funk bass-quake, Cleary and his band stomp through a
dozen tracks that considerably spice up the already-rich N’awlins
piano gumbo.
It’s a heady mixture.
The Cuban polyrhythms of “Zulu Strut” and “Oh No No
No” recall Buena Vista Social Club piano master Ruben Gonzalez,
while “Ain’t Nuttin’ Nice” recaptures the groove
and grit of southern-friend fusion bands like Sea Level and The Dixie
Dregs. “Smile in a While” is a gospel-influenced soul workout,
while “Doin’ Bad Feelin’ Good” and “Funky
Munky Biznis” compare favorably to Stevie Wonder funk-pop classics
like “Superstition” and Livin’ for the City.”
The Absolute Monster Gentlemen are spectacular throughout. Derwin “Big
D” Perkins’ impossibly syncopated stop/start guitar and Cornell
Williams’ popping bass particularly stand out, and Perkins, Williams
and gust Ivan Neville sing up a gospel storm behind Cleary on nearly every
track, tossing in revelatory whoops, asides and swooping glissandos. There’s
no denying the righteous funk at work here.
Cleary is a solid, if unspectacular,
vocalist, and a couple of his songs are generic Mardi Gras party tunes
designed to get the Midwestern housewives up-and-dancing on Bourbon Street.
“Agent 00 Funk” (with a license to chill, no less) is particularly
egregious, leaving me neither shaken nor stirred – only annoyed
by the kitsch. But these quibbles aside, this is an absolute monster band,
as funky as the come, and they’ve created an album that is an absolute
joy to hear
- Andy Whitman
PasteMagazine.com
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