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Written
by Robert Michaels, posted by blog admin
The
blues is alive and well, but many of the best bands still playing electric
blues don’t restrict themselves to that alone and need a central selling point.
KALO fits the bill. Their eleven song third studio album Wild Change incorporates
funk, R&B, and singer/songwriter influences into its bluesy stew and the
results are appropriately impressive. They are, likewise, distinguished by the
presence of Bat-Or Kalo, a duel threat as both a first rate guitarist with
great fluency and originality alongside her astonishing vocal talents. Her
voice is flexible enough to inhabit any musical landscape and does so on this
album without venturing too far afield of its core strengths. The production
plays an important role in this album’s success thanks to the big screen manner
it uses to depict the arrangements – they forever teeter on the brink of
overwhelming listeners, but never cross that line.
The
most successful blues numbers on the album are all nicely positioned in the track
listing. “One Mississippi” kicks things off with a lot of gritty, yet finessed,
energy while the bucket of blood theatrical fury of barnburners like “Isabel”
and the title track help make the album’s first quarter as memorable as
anything you’ll hear this year. It’s a true bonanza for guitar lovers. The
title track, in particular, solidifies all of the album’s achievements to that
point in a performance that seems personal and marvelously impassioned. The one
time on Wild Change that they choose to pursue the traditional, slow meditative
blues is on “Only Love” and they do the style more than justice. It gives Kalo
an opportunity to show us the full soulfulness of her voice and she invests the
performance with an emotiveness that any singer will envy. “Free” has some
similarities to the blues tunes, but it leans much more in a hard rock
direction and ranks as one of the album’s more pile driving, aggressive performances.
Kalo is up to the task as she unleashes one of Wild Change’s most incendiary
vocals.
“Pay
to Play” is probably the most significant stylistic variation you’ll hear on
Wild Change. This is an outright funky tune spiked with some sharply presented
guitar that, nonetheless, changes gears in the second half and adopts that
warm, brown sound we are accustomed to hearing on bluesy numbers. The
juxtaposition works quite nicely. “Bad Girl” blasts the audience with a final
exhibition of their hard blues chops and Kalo lets loose with another lung
buster that sets up the quiet, muted finale of “Calling All Dreamers” in a very
lovely light. We needed this song to close out the album and its tenderness is
an antidote, of sorts, to the muscular guitar workouts characterizing so much
of the release. There’s something for everyone who loves guitar and great
songwriting on KALO’s Wild Change.
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