GAMBLE
BROTHERS BAND CARRY ON SOUND OF SOUTHERN R&B WITH CONTINUATOR,
DUE OUT FEBRUARY 21
Guitar-free Memphis band evokes lost sound
of Stax, Hi and Muscle Shoals in third album, produced by Jeff Powell
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — The Gamble Brothers Band went
to Ardent Studios in the heart of Memphis to lay
down tracks for their new album, Continuator, on Archer Records,
which will hit the streets on February 21, 2006. Produced by Jeff
Powell (Big Star, Afghan Whigs, North Mississippi Allstars),
Continuator has what Powell describes as “a soulful, Memphis-style
behind-the-beat feel, with a sound that jumps out of the speakers.”
The album follows the Gamble Brothers Band’s previous Archer
Records disc, Back to the Bottom, which gleaned favorable reviews
and comparisons with the likes of Booker T & the MG’s
and The Meters. The band is comprised of
Memphis keyboard player Al Gamble, his brother Chad
Gamble on drums, tenor saxophonist Art Edmaiston
and bassist Blake Rhea. The band revels in the space
and freedom afforded by the absence of guitar.
Al and Chad gamble grew up in Tuscumbia, Ala., within spitting distance
of Southern soul mecca Muscle Shoals. The other two members hail from
Memphis and surrounding environs. The two Gambles plied their craft
backing up such Southern denizens as The Bar-Kays, Irma Thomas,
Syl Johnson, Rufus Thomas, Johnnie Bassett and the Memphis Horns.
Edmaiston toured from the VFW post in Lake Charles, La. to Harlem’s
Apollo Theater as a member of the Bobby “Blue”
Bland Orchestra and on Jonny Lang’s
Grammy-winning Lie to Me.
You’ll find their indigenous inspirations displayed proudly
and impeccably on Continuator and in the GBB’s scintillating
live performances — flavors cooked up and marinated to perfection
several decades ago at Fame Studios in Muscle Shoals, Memphis’
Stax Volt and Hi, Allen Toussaint’s studio
in New Orleans and wherever Ray Charles and his band
set up.
“My dad had the Genius of Ray Charles and Modern Sounds
in Country & Western Music, along with some Jimmy
Smith albums and a bunch of Verve Forecast stuff,”
Al recalls, “and I wore them out. I grew up in the ’80s,
and I couldn’t relate to the music on the radio, so those records
were my salvation.”
But this band isn’t interested in merely replicating the past
or geographically confining its reference points, although they readily
acknowledge that they’re paying tribute to the great soul acts.
“We try to further the heritage,” says Edmaiston.
Expect the aptly titled Continuator to further up the ante for a savvy,
surefooted band that, as the title indicates, continues to follow
its own path. As Al succinctly puts it, “We let the music tell
us where to go.” For this super-tasty band, the music is proving
to be one helluva guide.
# # #