Bronze Radio Return Featured July 13

The July 13 edition of The Devo Rock Show featured the Hartford-based band Bronze Radio Return, including an interview with their drummer Rob Griffith and their just-released singe, “Still Wandering”.

The band formed in 2007 at the University of Hartford’s Hartt School of Music by classmates Chris Henderson (vocals, guitar), Matt Warner (keyboards, vocals), Patrick Fetkowitz (guitar) and Griffith (drums, vocals). Henderson named the band after an old radio he used to listen to in his father’s art studio in Maine.

They released their first self-titled EP in 2008, followed by the full-length album, Old Time Speaker, two years later. While several members of the band continue to live in the Hartford area, Henderson maintains a residence in Maine.

Bronze Radio Return have released six full-length albums, including their latest, Entertain You from 2019. Their music has been featured on many television programs, movies and commercials.

As Griffith discusses in the interview, many people discover their music through television and movies and then seek out their records. They have toured extensively in the past decade with appearances at festivals including Bonnaroo, Lollapolooza and Firefly. In addition to being mainstays on the festival circuit, they have also toured Europe and performed in China.

Riposa in Pace, Ennio Morricone

The world lost a legend as Ennio Morricone passed away on July 6 at the age of 91 in his beloved Rome.

Widely considered the greatest film composer ever to have written for the cinema, Morricone’s career was spotlighted on the July 10 edition of Duck, You Sucker!

Morricone scored more than 500 films during his lifetime. He wrote music for films done by such legendary directors as Pier Paolo Pasolini, Sergio Leone, Gillo Pontecorvo, Dario Argento, Bernardo Bertolucci, Terrance Malick, John Carpenter, Brian De Palm, Quentin Tarantino and many others, as well as for many low-budget productions.

His work spans widely different forms, from sweeping melodramatic scores to avant-garde experimentation. Regardless of the style, il maestro’s sound was always instantly recognizable and his influence is beyond measure.

Sons Of The Soul Revivers Mark 50 Years

The July 11 edition of Greasy Tracks featured an in-depth feature on The Sons of the Soul Revivers, including an interview with lead singer James Morgan who discussed the group’s just-released Songs We’ll Always Sing — A Tribute to The Pilgrim Jubilees (Little Village Foundation).

Click here to listen to an archive of the show, while a playlist is here.

The venerable San Francisco Bay Area gospel quartet marked its 50th anniversary on July 4. The group was formed in 1970 by elder brother Walter Morgan, Jr. as a tribute to their father, Walter, Sr. They trace their roots back to Pastoria, Ark., and their father’s first group, the Silver Four. In the early 1950s, following a move to the Bay Area, Walter, Sr. formed the True Tones and then, in the sixties, the Soul Revivers.

Joined by his brother Sidney and some cousins, Walter Jr. founded the Sons of the Soul Revivers at the age of nine.

At the age of seven, younger brother James made his debut at a local playground where he sang lead on a song by the Swan Silvertones, “We’re Going to Have a Good Time.”

As the years passed, the Vallejo-based Sons primarily performed around the Bay Area, but amassed legions of fans. They would share the stage with the likes of the Mighty Clouds of Joy, The Canton Spirituals and The Blind Boys of Alabama.

The latest edition includes Dwayne Morgan joining his brothers Walter Jr. and James, along with bassist/vocalist DaQuantae Johnson and drummer Ronnie Smith.

“We definitely used the Pilgrim Jubilees as a blueprint for how the traditional gospel quartet sound should be,” explained James Morgan. Seven of the 11 tracks on the newest release are by either Clay Graham or Major Roberson, two of the primary songwriters and vocalists in the Pilgrim Jubilees.

“We got a chance to see those guys (Jubilees) in 1977,” said Morgan “and long story short, they blew us away. When they got on the stage, they sang. They didn’t have fancy gimmicks, they didn’t have a standout tenor singer where you can showcase his vocals, like Claude Jeters (Swan Silvertones), they were just a good, old-fashioned solid group who could really sing. And I said to myself: ‘that’s the way traditional gospel quartet should be.’”

Joe Louis Walker Talks New CD

An interview with guitarist Joe Louis Walker was featured on the June 27 edition of Greasy Tracks.

Click here to listen to an archive of the show.

Walker recently released Blues Comin’ On (Cleopatra Records) which features a veritable who’s who of guitarists making appearances, including Keb’ Mo, Jorma Kaukonen, Albert Lee, David Bromberg, Waddy Wachtel and Eric Gales along with vocal contributions by Dion, Carla Cooke, Mitch Ryder and John Sebastian.

Ryan Miller Talks Guster Release

The band Guster was featured on the May 25 edition of the Devo Rock Show with lead singer Ryan Miller talking about their new album OMAGAH! which features the Omaha Symphony Orchestra.

Click here to listen to an archive of the show.

Recorded in 2019 at The Holland Performing Arts Center in Omaha, Neb., the digital-only release (Bandcamp) features a variety of songs from Guster’s nearly 30 years together, the twist to it this time is that their material is performed with new orchestral arrangements.

Miller, Adam Gardner and Brian Rosenworcel formed Guster at Tufts University in Medford, Mass., in 1991. Since that time they have released nine albums.

Tom Guerra Talks New Album, Guitar Heroes

Veteran guitarist and songwriter Tom Guerra was a guest on the May 15 edition of Greasy Tracks where he discussed his just-released album, Sudden Signs Of Grace.

Click here to listen to an archive of the show.

In addition to playing a handful of tracks from the album, Guerra and host Chris Cowles spotlighted some of their favorite guitarists.

The album, Guerra’s fourth, features nine original compositions and two interesting covers: “Streets of Baltimore” and “Gimme Some Water.” The former, while oft-covered over the years, was one of the most-beloved songs associated with the late Gram Parsons who recorded it for his debut solo release, GP, in 1973. The later, an Eddie Money track which appeared on his second album, Life For The Taking, in 1979, had as special connection for Guerra who got to know Money over the years.

“When I heard Eddie (Money) was sick, I recorded one of my favorite tunes of his and sent him a copy,” Guerra said. Money passed away at the age of 70 last year.

Similar to earlier projects, Guerra enlisted the help of some crack musicians to help bring his songs to life in the studio, including long-time collaborator Kenny Aaronson who has worked with the likes of Bob Dylan, The Yardbirds and George Harrison. Keyboardist Matt Zeiner and drummer Mike Kosacek rounded out the backing band while Morgan Fisher (Mott The Hoople) contributed piano on “Just Like The Sun” and Scott Rath provided a sublime pedal steel to “Streets of Baltimore.”

The album, which came out on May 12, has been well received. Pete Prown, music editor for Vintage Guitar magazine wrote: “With his previous albums, Tom (Guerra) established himself as a fine rock and roll guitarist. Sudden Signs Of Grace shows his growth and new direction as a songwriter steeped in the Laurel Canyon school of songwriting.”

Since the late 1970s, Guerra has been a popular guitarist on the New England club circuit, playing with a host of leading blues, rock and R&B acts.

He first gained notoriety after being featured in the March 1991 issue of Guitar Player. Over the years, he has recorded or played with Rick Derringer, The Dirty Bones Blues Band, E Street Band drummer Max Weinberg, Mark Nomad, The Easton Brothers with Muddy Waters bassist Charles Calmese, Jai Johanny “Jaimoe” Johanson of The Allman Brothers Band, Second Son, Guitar Shorty, Adolph Jacobs of The Coasters, Aaronson and The Delrays, for which he received acclaim from Buddy Guy.

He formed Mambo Sons in 1999 and the group released four albums of original music over the next 15 years.

In 2014, Guerra released his first solo album, All of the Above, a collection of 11 original rock tracks. The CD was critically acclaimed and favorably reviewed in numerous music and guitar magazines as well as mainstream media such as The Huffington Post.

He also spent a five-year period working for Johnny Winter, penning liner notes as the guitarist released a handful of live recordings via The Bootleg Series and has done extensive studio work since the late 1980’s.

In 2016, he released Trampling Out the Vintage followed by American Garden in 2018