Bitrate: 320K/s
Year: 2021
Time: 53:50
Size: 123,4 MB
Label: Stony Plain Rights Management
Styles: Blues/Blues Rock
Art: Front
Year: 2021
Time: 53:50
Size: 123,4 MB
Label: Stony Plain Rights Management
Styles: Blues/Blues Rock
Art: Front
Tracks Listing:
1. As the Crow Flies - 4:25
2. Can't You See What You're Doing To Me - 3:32
3. That's Why I'm Crying - 5:04
4. Open Road - 5:09
5. Change It - 4:16
6. Raging River - 4:23
7. Leave This House - 3:29
8. It Takes Time - 3:08
9. There's a Fire - 4:41
10. It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry - 2:47
11. Bad Boy - 3:32
12. Down on the Bottom - 4:36
13. I Love You More Than Words Can Say - 4:42
1. As the Crow Flies - 4:25
2. Can't You See What You're Doing To Me - 3:32
3. That's Why I'm Crying - 5:04
4. Open Road - 5:09
5. Change It - 4:16
6. Raging River - 4:23
7. Leave This House - 3:29
8. It Takes Time - 3:08
9. There's a Fire - 4:41
10. It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry - 2:47
11. Bad Boy - 3:32
12. Down on the Bottom - 4:36
13. I Love You More Than Words Can Say - 4:42
Open Road, Colin James’ 20th studio album, finds the Saskatchewan-born recording artist looking forward to the future – personally and musically – while continuing the ongoing dialogue with the past so central to his relationship with the blues.
While it was made during a time when connecting with others was difficult, Open Road is a record that celebrates personal connections – a deeply satisfying set of original tunes written with long time collaborators like Colin Linden, Craig Northey, and Tom Wilson, and reinterpretations of covers by a diverse group of songwriters including Bob Dylan, Albert King, Tony Joe White, and others.
“We did the first session right after we got off the road on the last tour,” James explains, “which, I think, was my favorite tour I’ve ever been on.” In addition to taking the band coast-to-coast across Canada, the tour found James playing a wide range of venues in the US. “We got a lot of traction there recently, and, after 30 years or whatever it’s been of touring, I just felt so happy and grateful to have this band out on the road.”
When they started to head deeper into the US, however, he adds: “That’s when Covid hit…” Recorded with long-time co-producer, Dave Meszaros, and showcasing the talents of players culled from James’ live and studio combos over the years, listening to Open Road stem to stern is like spending some long-hoped-for quality time with old friends. Accomplishing that wasn’t easy, James explains: “Dave was working in London, England, so our session times were all over the map. It’s phenomenal (what technology allows you to do) when you have to, but I never want to make a record like that again. Ever. My tendency is to write collaboratively, and there’s no substitute for the energy of everyone getting together in the same room.”
Although that wasn’t always possible, Open Road displays what consummate musicianship, dedication, and the impact that deep, long-time musical connections can accomplish, even in far from ideal circumstances. Fuelled by standout performances from drummer, Geoff Hicks, bassist Norm Fisher, B3 wizard Simon Kendall, and rhythm guitarist Chris Caddell – Open Road is a celebration of those bonds.
Characterized by ghostly organs set against James’ substantial vocal and guitars chops and featuring stellar turns by the likes of Steve Marriner on Harmonica, Jesse O’Brien on Piano, and saxophonists Jerry Cook and Steve Hilliam, it’s also a record with the kind of depth, breadth and impact only someone as intimately acquainted with the genre can pull off in a way that’s both fresh and familiar as well as fiery and thoughtful.
That’s abundantly clear on the album’s title track, a song co-written by James and Northey that sets the tone for the album’s preoccupation for traveling the highways and byways that are part and parcel of a touring musician’s life. But while the track seems custom-crafted to reflect the road life of traveling musicians, it’s a song anyone can find their own lives and experiences reflected in; all summed up in the lyrics, ‘every life is an open road’. “It’s definitely got a sense of movement,” James says, “which, I think, is compounded by our lack of ability to travel over the last year and a half.”
For James, Open Road is the third in a trilogy of records, a natural follow up to the 2018 JUNO Award-winning Miles To Go, itself a sequel to his critically acclaimed 2016 effort, Blue Highways. “Those two records, in a way they’re almost street blues, and through them we found a new audience, especially in America. They also had a fair number of covers; some of them reimagined versions of songs I’ve known since I was 12 or 13 years old. So, on Open Road I wanted to try and stay true to that kind of blues, but also to show some growth.”
Job done – from tunes James terms “unlikely covers,” like his spirited version of the Bob Dylan penned, ‘Down on the Bottom’ to ‘There’s a Fire’ – a cowrite with Colin Linden that James describes as an instant reflection on the need for justice in the wake of the past years humanitarian struggles, Open Road mines the past and present for inspiration in equal measure.
That said, it’s also a record that finds James looking forward with determination. After 19 months and change of Covid, everyone feels more than a bit down and done. But while James isn’t immune to that feeling, the variety of blues he presents on Open Road – rather than dwelling on struggle – is meant to lift people’s spirits, encourage them to shake off the shadows, and move forward in a way that’s fiercely hopeful.
That’s a sentiment that’s loud and clear on the album’s opening track, ‘As the Crow Flies’, a stomping, relentlessly swampy interpretation of the Tony Joe White classic that puts the enforced distance we’ve lived through since mid-2020 into welcome perspective. But far from looking at that distance and bemoaning the loss of connection, Open Road is all about celebrating the commonalities that bring us together even when circumstances – be they a global pandemic or the routine struggles of living – threaten to tear us apart. A thread he teases out further and just as compellingly on his signature take on Otis Rush’s ‘It Takes Time’ and his co-write with Tom Wilson, ‘Leave This House’.
If there’s one thing Colin James takes from the past year and telegraphs elegantly on Open Road, it’s how important and powerful music as a communal experience is to people. Not only as a means of responding to struggle, but moving through and past it, together. That’s reflected clearly in the result – a product of his lifelong love affair with the blues and the deep relationships he has with those he collaborated with on Open Road, and a powerful set of songs that sound just as live, immediate, and vital as any of James’ past work.
ultimately, Open Road is a record that will resonate deeply with anyone with a pulse – whether as a balm to soothe the transition back to normal life post-pandemic, as the celebration of a tradition that’s as lively and vital today as ever, or as a soundtrack to push yourself forward to meet new challenges.
While it was made during a time when connecting with others was difficult, Open Road is a record that celebrates personal connections – a deeply satisfying set of original tunes written with long time collaborators like Colin Linden, Craig Northey, and Tom Wilson, and reinterpretations of covers by a diverse group of songwriters including Bob Dylan, Albert King, Tony Joe White, and others.
“We did the first session right after we got off the road on the last tour,” James explains, “which, I think, was my favorite tour I’ve ever been on.” In addition to taking the band coast-to-coast across Canada, the tour found James playing a wide range of venues in the US. “We got a lot of traction there recently, and, after 30 years or whatever it’s been of touring, I just felt so happy and grateful to have this band out on the road.”
When they started to head deeper into the US, however, he adds: “That’s when Covid hit…” Recorded with long-time co-producer, Dave Meszaros, and showcasing the talents of players culled from James’ live and studio combos over the years, listening to Open Road stem to stern is like spending some long-hoped-for quality time with old friends. Accomplishing that wasn’t easy, James explains: “Dave was working in London, England, so our session times were all over the map. It’s phenomenal (what technology allows you to do) when you have to, but I never want to make a record like that again. Ever. My tendency is to write collaboratively, and there’s no substitute for the energy of everyone getting together in the same room.”
Although that wasn’t always possible, Open Road displays what consummate musicianship, dedication, and the impact that deep, long-time musical connections can accomplish, even in far from ideal circumstances. Fuelled by standout performances from drummer, Geoff Hicks, bassist Norm Fisher, B3 wizard Simon Kendall, and rhythm guitarist Chris Caddell – Open Road is a celebration of those bonds.
Characterized by ghostly organs set against James’ substantial vocal and guitars chops and featuring stellar turns by the likes of Steve Marriner on Harmonica, Jesse O’Brien on Piano, and saxophonists Jerry Cook and Steve Hilliam, it’s also a record with the kind of depth, breadth and impact only someone as intimately acquainted with the genre can pull off in a way that’s both fresh and familiar as well as fiery and thoughtful.
That’s abundantly clear on the album’s title track, a song co-written by James and Northey that sets the tone for the album’s preoccupation for traveling the highways and byways that are part and parcel of a touring musician’s life. But while the track seems custom-crafted to reflect the road life of traveling musicians, it’s a song anyone can find their own lives and experiences reflected in; all summed up in the lyrics, ‘every life is an open road’. “It’s definitely got a sense of movement,” James says, “which, I think, is compounded by our lack of ability to travel over the last year and a half.”
For James, Open Road is the third in a trilogy of records, a natural follow up to the 2018 JUNO Award-winning Miles To Go, itself a sequel to his critically acclaimed 2016 effort, Blue Highways. “Those two records, in a way they’re almost street blues, and through them we found a new audience, especially in America. They also had a fair number of covers; some of them reimagined versions of songs I’ve known since I was 12 or 13 years old. So, on Open Road I wanted to try and stay true to that kind of blues, but also to show some growth.”
Job done – from tunes James terms “unlikely covers,” like his spirited version of the Bob Dylan penned, ‘Down on the Bottom’ to ‘There’s a Fire’ – a cowrite with Colin Linden that James describes as an instant reflection on the need for justice in the wake of the past years humanitarian struggles, Open Road mines the past and present for inspiration in equal measure.
That said, it’s also a record that finds James looking forward with determination. After 19 months and change of Covid, everyone feels more than a bit down and done. But while James isn’t immune to that feeling, the variety of blues he presents on Open Road – rather than dwelling on struggle – is meant to lift people’s spirits, encourage them to shake off the shadows, and move forward in a way that’s fiercely hopeful.
That’s a sentiment that’s loud and clear on the album’s opening track, ‘As the Crow Flies’, a stomping, relentlessly swampy interpretation of the Tony Joe White classic that puts the enforced distance we’ve lived through since mid-2020 into welcome perspective. But far from looking at that distance and bemoaning the loss of connection, Open Road is all about celebrating the commonalities that bring us together even when circumstances – be they a global pandemic or the routine struggles of living – threaten to tear us apart. A thread he teases out further and just as compellingly on his signature take on Otis Rush’s ‘It Takes Time’ and his co-write with Tom Wilson, ‘Leave This House’.
If there’s one thing Colin James takes from the past year and telegraphs elegantly on Open Road, it’s how important and powerful music as a communal experience is to people. Not only as a means of responding to struggle, but moving through and past it, together. That’s reflected clearly in the result – a product of his lifelong love affair with the blues and the deep relationships he has with those he collaborated with on Open Road, and a powerful set of songs that sound just as live, immediate, and vital as any of James’ past work.
ultimately, Open Road is a record that will resonate deeply with anyone with a pulse – whether as a balm to soothe the transition back to normal life post-pandemic, as the celebration of a tradition that’s as lively and vital today as ever, or as a soundtrack to push yourself forward to meet new challenges.
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