01. Housekey Blues
02. Dollar to a Dime
03. You Showed Me Something
04. Lonely Are the Brave
05. I Hope You're Right
06. Causing Joy
07. This Dream (Still Coming True)
08. Where Are You Tonight?
09. Wrong Love
10. Give It Like You Get It
11. Fool Me Again
12. Today's Your Birthday
13. Termites In My Basement
Trumpeter and vocalist Al Basile's six previous recordings for his Sweet Spot label have shown him to be a crowd-pleasing performer since his days as a prime contributor in Roomful of Blues. Good thing he never burned bridges with his former bandmates, for they all rally around him on his recordings that continue to brand
his style of blues with consistency within an authentic horn-fired Chicago style of sophisticated swing...
...Very few blues and jazz combinations will be as satisfying as Soul Blue 7, with the caveat that you should also check out Basile's previous recordings that mark as him as a true original and a star attraction of this purely American music blend...
~ Michael G. Nastos, cduniverse.com-----------------------------------------------
You can add Al Basile’s name to that super short list of trumpeters who play and sing the blues; a list that begins (as does the history of jazz/blues trumpet itself) with Louis Armstrong and includes "Hot Lips” Page, "Wingy” Manone and Louis Prima. A resident of the Northeast, Basile became friends in high school with Duke Robillard and, in 1973-75, became a member of Roomful of Blues as its first trumpeter. Reunited here with Robillard (as producer / player), Basile plays cornet on the disc’s 13 originals with terrific backing by ROB alumni.
Things get off to a terrific start with "Housekey Blues,” a double-entendre item, whose groove is enhanced by
Basile’s solid playing and singing, solos by both Robillard and organist Bruce Katz, plus superb riffing by the two-saxes / one-trombone horn section. (In fact, the riffing here is even better than most of the last few ROB discs.)
Basile notes that his music "is influenced by but not restricted to the blues,” and except for the other blues, "Termites in My Basement,” there’s a variety of soul/bluesy - pop here all of it very tasty. Great lyrics (all his), solid playing what’s not to like?.. ~ by Miles Jordan, newsreview.com
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