NEW MP3 (Cleared to post): The Great Book Of John - "Robin Hood" (via My Old Kentucky Blog)
"Sounding a little like Jeff Buckley fronting Pink Floyd, "Robin Hood" has apparently been given the deluxe treatment by producer Jeffery Cain (Remy Zero, Dead Snares) and Grammy Award-winning engineer Darrell Thorp (Radiohead, Beck, Outkast). This tune sounds big. Huge in fact, thanks to densely-layered guitars and jaw-dislocating drums, all serving to float Shaw’s impressionistic lyrics, which call to mind fellas with surnames like Cohen and Dylan. Not bad company to keep. Not a bad band to keep an eye on." - My Old Kentucky Blog
The Great Book of John is led by Taylor Shaw -- founding guitarist of Birmingham Alabama's late, great Wild Sweet Orange. Shaw's music is eminently lyrical – recalling Jeff Buckley’s psychedelic soul, Leonard Cohen’s poetic (and lacerating) wordplay, and fiery fretwork influenced by Stevie Ray Vaughn and David Gilmour as much as it is by Radiohead. Yes, those are big names to drop, but this is big music – emotional, cinematic, but never pandering. Dreams writ large but still cryptic and surreal. And though these songs almost ceaselessly flow from Shaw, The Great Book of John is very much a band – and a formidable one at that. Along with fellow WSO alumni vocalist Bekah Fox, bassist Alex Mitchell, and drummer Chip Kilpatrick, The Great Book of John can conjure the sublime in any setting – with or without electricity.
NEW MP3 (Cleared to post): The Great Book Of John - "Robin Hood"(via My Old Kentucky Blog)
MP3 (Cleared to post): The Great Book Of John - "Let Me Slide"
MP3 (Cleared to post): The Great Book Of John - "Let Me Slide"
The Great Book Of John Fall Dates
08.06 • The Earl (Atlanta, GA)
09.02 • Uncle Slayton's (Louisville, KY)
09.09 • Walnut Street Blues Bar (Greenville, MS)
09.10 • Vino's Bewpub (Little Rock, AR)
09.22 • Blue Canoe (Tupelo, MS)
Whereas the band’s debut album, Yves’ Blues, was a largely acoustic affair recorded in one long session,The Great Book of John is a deeply-layered production brimming with amplified crunch and a thick, somnambulant atmosphere, provided in part by musician / producer Jeffery Cain (Remy Zero, Sanders Bohlke, Dead Snares) and Grammy Award winning engineer Darrell Thorp (Radiohead, Beck, Outkast). These big sheets of sound are in full-effect on the three songs that commence the album -- “Robin Hood,” “Brown Frown” and “Let Me Slide” (the last of which, along with “On and On” is also available as a limited-edition 7-inch single) – and the songs that open and close Side Two (“Black Heart” and “Simple Things”).
But The Great Book of John is not completely laden in thick guitars. In fact, the album’s stripped-down middle section most closely reveals the fragile heart that beats beneath many of Shaw’s best songs. “Ashes Over Manhattan” is perhaps the album’s most buoyant song while “Wise Blood” might the most beautiful – and, with it’s stripped down arrangement and a production reminiscent of Nico’s “Chelsea Girls,” “Wise Blood” is a prime showcase for Shaw’s lyrical acuity.
Check out the video for the band's re-interpretation of INXS' "Never Tear Us Apart" below (via Magnet).
The Great Book of John is the debut long-player from Birmingham-based label Communicating Vessels. It will be available digitally and physically (CD and limited-edition 180-gram clear vinyl) on August 16th via Burnside Distribution.
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