Steve Arvey CD Collection


                      
                            

 

                           


                                   

Buy These CD's Click Here

Listen To Soul Of A Man

1.   Mississippi
2.   A Bridge Torn Down
3.   WRFG
4.   Christmas Time Intro.
5.   Christmas Time In Washington
6.   Trouble No More
7.   Evening
8.   Hip Hop
9.   Ocean Boulevard
10. Buttercup
11. Oh Lucky
12. Soul Of A Man
13. Whiskey Wine & Song
14. Killin' Floor / Die Easy

REVIEW

Steve Arvey - Soul Of A Man
(Only Blues Music)

There's something reassuring about the blues - its popularity dips and rises periodically but it always survives all the musical fads and comes back rejuvinated with a raft of new musicians at the grassroots level.

So welcome to a new bluesman - Steve Arvey hails from Chicago [how more authentic can that be!] and his new album Soul of a Man is an excellent showcase for his band and his own mastery of the electric and acoustic guitars. This album is so vibrant and rocking that I guess it would be fair to rank Arvey up there with other white bluesmen such as Gary Moore, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Clapton.

Indeed there are times when I flashbacked and thought I was listening to the classic British blues and r'n'b band Lee Brilleaux and Doctor Feelgood! Mind you, when Arvey roars out the blues you'd believe for a moment that Howling Wolf had crawled his way out of the grave. The album contains a mixture of original songs and a selection of classic blues from Muddy Waters, Lonnie Johnson, T-Bone Walker and the not so bluesy but heavily rootsy Steve Earle. In terms of style the album covers them all: rural country blues, urban blues and of course, the hot city variety that made Chicago the blues capital of the world.

I'm hard pressed to pick out highlight tracks from the fourteen [plus a hidden lengthy jam session track] on this cd, the variety and quality is so just so high. If you're a blues aficionado you'll love this album!

Distro: Only Blues Music
Email: onlybluesmusic@aol.com
Website: www.onlybluesmusic.com

review by John Peters from the UK