Power of the Pontchartrain

Tab Benoit Power of the Pontchartrain

Tab Benoit
Label: Telarc
Number of Discs: 1
Format: Audio CD
Release date:26th June 2007

Studio Audio CD $7.81Buy now at Amazon

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Track Listing

  • 1. Don't Make No Sense
  • 2. Good To Ya, Baby
  • 3. Shelter Me
  • 4. Power Of the Pontchartrain
  • 5. For What It's Worth
  • 6. Midnight And Lonesome
  • 7. Sac-au-lait Fishing
  • 8. Somebody's Got To Go
  • 9. I'm Guilty Of Lovin' You
  • 10. Addicted
  • 11. One Foot In the Bayou

Amazon.com

Tab Benoit's album titles leave little doubt as to where he's from or the music he plays. Brother to the Blues, Fever for the Bayou, Wetlands, and now Power of the Pontchartrain exude the sweaty Louisiana swamp, blues, and R&B inherent in their names. But that only tells part of the story--the rest is in the grooves where Benoit's distinctive, grainy voice and tough Telecaster leads bring soul, grit, and intensity to a sound already infused with an earthy sensibility. There's more of the same on this disc, but that's no criticism. Benoit generally sticks with others' songs here, yet he unearths hidden gems. Julie Miller's "Midnight and Lonesome" is dragged into the murky swamps as a driving ballad with eerie qualities that live up to its name. Miller and husband Buddy are also credited with the righteous-yet-rugged gospel of "Shelter Me." "Somebody's Got to Go," originally by Lonnie Johnson, gets a crisp, frisky makeover, and even Buffalo Springfield's crusty "For What It's Worth" takes a swim in the muddy waters of Benoit's home state, with a little help of some altered, post-Katrina lyrics. The guitarist lets his Cajun influences fly on the bouncy rhythms of "Sac-Au-Lait Fishing," the album's only original, and shifts into pleading Otis Redding mode for the aching blues ballad "I'm Guilty of Lovin' You." The Chicago-by-way-of-the-Delta shuffle of "One Foot in the Bayou" is also an apt description of Benoit's approach. He touches on a variety of Americana styles, yet always keeps part of himself planted firmly in the wetlands of his roots. --Hal Horowitz

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