Mick Pini Review..... |
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If Eric Clapton ever decides to give up music and earn an honest crust as a reviewer then we can all give up. His description of Mick Pini as 'the natural successor to Peter Green' was spot on. Proof positive came in the second half of a barnstorming night at Barrels when Pini launched himself into Green's Looking For Somebody. |
On another night this would be described as a show-stopping tour de force, but there was to be no respite and each number was a highlight in its own right. It not only showed how good Mick Pini is, it also demonstrated how the soul of Fleetwood Mac disappeared with Green. The blues burns bright because of its imperfections not in spite of them, the songs are battered and bruised by the experiences of their authors. Time and life add a few dents along the way and when they are placed in the hands of a musician and character like Mick Pini then they are given an unique lustre. There was nothing staged or sanitised about The Mick Pini Band's performance. Walter Jacob's Last Night was the kind of steamy blues that had you reaching for the windows to let some air in. The one slight disappointment was the relative lack of original material. Pini is acknowledged as one of the great interpreters of the blues but he undersells himself as a writer. Happily that will be put right early in 2003 with the release of the first 'all Pini' album. We were given a little mouthwatering introduction in the shape I Won't Be Your Fool No More, if Pini can write like this then he should concentrate his efforts a little more. He has that magic quality essential for the blues, cut through the bull and get to the heart of the matter. As always the fans have their part to play. Pini feeds off them like a vampire taking blood and all were willing donors, one pair having travelled from Southampton. A trio of moments summed the whole thing up, the cheers that greeted the gigantic rock of You Can Run But You Can't Hide, which opened the second half, the sheer unadulterated enjoyment of a blistering Hendrix segue of Hey Joe into All Along The Watchtower and finally an encore that was a microcosm of everything that was great about The Mick Pini Band. Like A Road the slow-burning anthem from his latest album Blues Gonna Be My Way followed by Buddy Guy's Let Me Love You Baby, the call and response yeahs saw the night finish off as the frat party in Barrels animal house of the blues. |
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