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The
Butanes Soul Revue
One
Night
Atomic
Theory 1139
The muscular
ten piece Soul Revue (the Butanes plus three additional vocalists and
three horns) plays twelve soulful songs, including one original, "Without
You," live at the Cabooze bar.
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People
Here is an album for unfortunates born too late for the days when big
band R&B outfits like this roamed the land playing honking soul music
all night in smoky bars and roadhouses. The 10-member Butanes are based
in the Minnesota north country, but their heart belongs in New Orleans,
where they have backed blues guitarist Earl King and zydeco's Al Rapone,
among others. Recorded live during one of the band's frequent gigs at
the Cabooze Bar in Minneapolis, this collection of 12 rhythm and soul
classics (plus a handful of originals) could serve as a primer for bar
and party bands everywhere. With a muscular drums-bass-guitar rhythm section,
three full-throated vocalists, two sax players, a trombone, trumpet and
Hammond organ, the Butanes keep it simple: Play loud, play fast and by
all means, keep the dancers moving and the waitresses working.
Steven
Daugherty
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Blues
Revue
The Butanes recorded this vigorous set of classic soul in 1990 at the
Cabooze, a popular blues nightclub in their hometown of Minneapolis. The
Butanes have considerable experience as a backing band, having worked
with artists such as Earl King and Al Rapone over the past decade. Led
by the gritty vocals of baritone saxman Maurice Jacox (who developed his
reputation as vocalist with Willie & The Bees), this energetic set offers
timeless music from artists such as O.V. Wright, the Isley Brothers, Johnnie
Taylor, Tyrone Davis and Otis Redding. Their horn-heavy style is similar
to Tower of Power's, yet there are two blues tunes that showcase guitarist
Curtis Obeda's chops (Gatemouth Brown's "Gate Walks the Board"
and Jimmy Liggins' "I Ain't Drunk"). Although there's no new
ground covered here, The Butanes fire up this set of live soul with reverent
zest.
Thomas
J. Cullen III
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Living
Blues
The Butanes are an R&B band from Minneapolis that has backed up Earl King,
King Floyd, and Al Rapone, among others. The band added vocalist/saxist
Maurice Jacox, extra horns and a couple of female singers when this set
was recorded live in 1990 at the Cabooze Bar. Recording a ten-piece soul
band is no mean feat, so it's a tribute to Atomic Theory that this CD
sounds so good. The horns are sharp, the vocals are clear, and the rhythm
guitar lines distinct. The playlist includes a number of originals in
addition to such R&B classics as It's Your Thing, Gate Walks to Board,
Turn Back the Hands of Time, and I Ain't Drunk (played with more balls
than even Albert Collins brought to it).
Peter
R Aschoff
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Blues
Access
Memphis, 1966? Try Minneapolis, 1990. This live recording catches much
of the energy of a '60s soul show. Vocals by Maurice Jacox, Kiara Conners
and Beverly Demps.
=editor's
choice
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In
The Basement
Although apparently recorded back in 1990 - at the Cabooze Bar, Minneapolis-
this is being reviewed as a 'new' recording because it appears only now
to be seeing regular light of day, supported by US advertising. This is
another feel-good item as the ten person, mixed race band power their
way through mainly familiar material, led by vocalist/sax-player, Maurice
Jacox, former member of Willie & the Bees. Jacox also shares vocals
with Kiara Conners and Beverly Demps on the distaff side and John Lindberg
and Curtis Obeda, who double as bass and guitar players respectively.
The band
is a very tight outfit and they blast and funk their way through the two
opening cuts before settling into a slightly easier mould with a vocally
torrid 'Nickel And A Nail'. From 'Turning Point' through 'I Got The Will',
the band carries an appreciative audience along on a wave of sterling
musicianship, on into 'Gate Walks To Board', a guitar and brass led rocking
instrumental. Respite is to be had on the bluesier slowie, 'Without You',
with the blue-eyed songster coming across in best Billy Vera fashion.
'Ain't No Fun To Me' employs an Al Green sound-alike while the 'Time Medley'
successfully blends 'Turn Back The Hands Of Time', 'Time Is Tight' and
'Time'. 'I Ain't Drunk' takes things out in stomping, blues-heavy fashion.
David
Cole
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Jazz
& Blues Report
Let's get this straight. (a) The Butanes are a five-piece r&b backup band
based in the Twin Cities. (b) They are known for their work behind a pair
of Louisiana-based musicians: blues guitarist Earl King and zydeco artist
Al Rapone. (c) When on their home turf, the Butanes frequently double
in size and morph into a full-blown soul/r&b show band. It is fact "(c)"
that we are concerned with at the moment. One Night is a 1990 recording
of this ten-piece incarnation and one wonders why it took so long to get
it out. It certainly was not an issue of quality. Highlighted by the performances
of vocalists Maurice Jacox, Kiara Conners and Beverly Demps, this is an
energetic and tasty collection of live tracks that grows quickly on any
hardcore soul listener. Dosed with enough Tyrone Davis ("Turning
Point", "Turn Back The Hands Of Time") Isley Brothers ("It's
Your Thing") and Al Green ("It Ain't No Fun To Me") covers
to keep a connoisseur well-grounded, One Night succeeds not only as a
document of a hot band but as a celebration of the genre itself. Thanks
in no small measure to the four-piece horn section, the Butanes deliver
a powerhouse ensemble sound that is true to the "literature".
There are no attempts to be clever, just lots of good straight-ahead delivery.
There is even the prophetic inclusion- seven years ahead of the trend-
of a jump-revival instrumental, "Gate Walks To The Board". This
is a great party disc.
Duane
Verh
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2002
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