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ARTIST: Johnny
Rivers
TITLE: Shadows on
the Moon
LABEL: Soul City Records
RELEASE DATE: 2009
Johnny Rivers' Shadows on the Moon Offers Fresh New Acoustic
Music
By Terry Roland
There are voices that have followed us through our lives.
We've heard them on our car radios as we've raced through the decades of our
childhood. They have played like a soundtrack for our lives through the
beaches, valleys, deserts and prarie roads we've traveled on our way to our
present. Johnny Rivers carries such a voice. So much so, when he sings, we sit
up and listen. We take notice because of our common history. When he first
emerged in the mid-sixties at his now legendary engagements and live recordings
at the Whiskey A-Go-Go, he created a tour de force that helped to break down
the wall between pop and folk music. With recordings like Where Have All The
Flowers Gone, Midnight Special and Memphis he did what it took The Byrds five
people to do; bring folk-rock to the musical stages of L.A. in the mid-sixties.
ARTIST: Johnny
Rivers
TITLE: Shadows on
the Moon
LABEL: Soul City Records
RELEASE DATE: 2009
Johnny Rivers' Shadows on the Moon Offers Fresh New Acoustic
Music
By Terry Roland
There are voices that have followed us through our lives.
We've heard them on our car radios as we've raced through the decades of our
childhood. They have played like a soundtrack for our lives through the
beaches, valleys, deserts and prarie roads we've traveled on our way to our
present. Johnny Rivers carries such a voice. So much so, when he sings, we sit
up and listen. We take notice because of our common history. When he first
emerged in the mid-sixties at his now legendary engagements and live recordings
at the Whiskey A-Go-Go, he created a tour de force that helped to break down
the wall between pop and folk music. With recordings like Where Have All The
Flowers Gone, Midnight Special and Memphis he did what it took The Byrds five
people to do; bring folk-rock to the musical stages of L.A. in the mid-sixties.
His music played against the backdrop of merging of folk, rock and blues during
the era of The Summer of Love when you were as likely to see Lightening Hopkins
and Dave Van Ronk in Hollywood as you were to see The Doors or Otis Redding.
Rivers absorbed these diverse forms of roots music into his own hybrid style
which has carried his own folk-influenced trademark blues-rock style years beyond
his last chart success.
For the last 25 years he's been underrated and largely
unnoticed by the music industry he helped to establish back in the early 60s.
So Rivers went his own way, recording blues, jamming in Memphis, reviving
sometimes lost musical forms like blue-eyed soul, rockabilly, and country
blues. He has remained a concert draw touring around the world to capacity
audiences.
His new release, Shadows of the Moon went quietly into
release in September. The CD brings Rivers to a place of textured folk/acoustic,
world music, melodic jazz strains and straight forward lyric driven songs.
This is an album of dimension and vision lacking in much of
today's mainstream music. Through every moment of this musical journey and
while 'journey' is a much overused term today, to be sure, this album is more a
journey than a concept, it is Rivers' voice that leads the way. With a still
youthful and assured quality in his voice, he provides the musical avenue we
walk with a set of well-crafted songs uncommon to mainstream records today. There
is a clear and soulful mandolin, played by Rivers himself, as well as, bass
fiddles, steel guitars, dobro and drums which lay levels and texture of pure
acoustic music.
As well-crafted as the music is, Shadows on the Moon is
matched by strong material from songwriters like Michael Georgiades (former
partner of Bernie Leadon of The Eagles), Jack Tempchin (Peaceful, Easy Feeling, Slow
Dancin Swaying to the Music, and Jimmy Webb (well, you know Jimmy Webb-I
hope). The first six songs of the album are penned by Georgeiades, a long
underrated songwriter. These songs add a concept of cloaked messages about the
passage of a generation and the pull toward spirituality. Most significant of
these songs are Hard Heart, Somebody to
Love and the title track Shadows on
the Moon. Hard Heart powerfully
addresses the excesses and insensitivity of the political, ethical and moral
shortcomings of the Bush years in a clever way cloaked in a love song. Somebody to Love is a prayer for the
need love in the world.
The last six songs focus on the personal journey through
love, renewal and redemption. Songs like Walk
in the Rain and Beautiful World,
speak of daily personal joys, that become more precious as we grow older while
the time passes. The beauty of songs like Slips
Away and Where Words End by Jimmy
Webb bring home the answer to the problems posed on the first six songs
sometimes dealing with the disillusionment of the past. These songs point to
the need to come home to our own lives, aside from a collective ideal, to find
virtue and fulfillment there. A bonus track The
American Dream, adds humor to the album and gives the listener a lighter
look at the recent economic crisis.
While this album brings together a diversity of writing
styles, instrumentation which clearly produces a feel of modern folk-rock, it
never loses its pop sensibility of appealing arrangements and accessible
production which can play as just a feel good listen or allow a deeper listen
into the insights of the writing and the soulful vocal Johnny Rivers brings to
each song in his own unique way.
Finally, the driving force and cohesive thread which runs
through the album's concept, material and music is Rivers' distinct, familiar
voice calling our memories back to the magic times we lived through but, never
allowing us the comfort of nostalgia instead, through some fine acoustic music,
skillful songwriting, and that one-of-a kind voice, challenges us to find our
life and passion in today's turbulent world.
Terry Roland is an English teacher, freelance writer, occasional
poet, songwriter and folk and country enthusiast. The music has been in his
blood since being raised in Texas.
He came to California where he was taught to say ‘dude' at an early age.
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