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SLINGSHOT
PROFESSIONALS REVIEWS
"Few
songwriters can deftly weave separate similes involving Popeye,
Olive Oyl and Sweet Pea into a single verse. Fewer still can make
it sound deeply soulful. But such are the gifts that make Phelps
such a remarkable artist. Besides his off-kilter lyrical expression,
Phelps boasts a haunting vocal rasp and unmatched mastery of finger
style and slide guitar. Together, these elements explore the deepest
shades of blue, and they have never worked better than on this disc.
Be it the melancholy waltz of "Not So Far To Go", or the
shuffling blues of the title track, Phelps makes the sublime sound
effortless. He enjoys spare, but detailed support throughout, notably
from Jesse Zubot's plaintive violin and and some truly thrilling
guitar cameos by Bill Frisell. This is music that rings with bittersweet
experience." - Mojo (UK)
"Empowering his characters with detail of Springsteen and Waits,
Phelps' songwriting has leapt to a level inhabited by few (Dylan
and Cohen spring to mind), while his voice sounds like Kentucky
bourbon being poured over a waterfall. Frills are non-existent,
instead Phelps relies on atmosphere and incredible warmth, lending
these tales - all contenders for the plot of innumerable Cohen Brothers
films - an air of late-autumn calm that simultaneously grips and
soothes the listener." - Logo (UK)
"A scrumptious disc of Phelps' freewheeling, though tightly
written, tunes, sketched broadly, with a richer sound filled with
fiddle, accordion, mandolin and keyboards. Critics are going gaga."
- St. Petersburg Times
"Phelps'
recent release, "Slingshot Professionals", is a tribute
to his own evolution
his style has an original darkness and
depth. Here, it seems, is a singer/songwriter who's settled firmly
into his own voice." - Asheville Mountain Xpress
"Phelps
makes the complex appear simple by allowing his songs to unfurl
slowly, flowing with confidence and unctuous rhythms. "Slingshot
Professionals" is draped in eloquence and humble introspection."
- Boston Herald
"Having long since mastered the technical aspects of his trade,
Phelps now seeks to locate the spirit of the old rural blues among
the chaos and bitterness of modern life
A marvelous, absorbing
album." - The Independent (UK)
"Phelps'
musical world is constantly evolving and 'Slingshot' stays true
to
the exploratory path. For this project guitarist-singer Kelly Joe
uses two groups of musicians to create a full, atmospheric wash
that surrounds his thoughtful lyrics with a grace rooted in jazz,
folk and blues
. There's no doubt Kelly Joe Phelps writes engaging
and truthful songs and the musicianship by all is impeccable. The
often elusive wordplay demands close attention but the rewards are
there. Full of twists and turns, light and dark, Phelps once again
proves himself an estimable complete musician ever changing, ever
growing." - Plan9Music.Com
"Steeped
in the spirit of the blues, Phelps' voice is rich and raw, with
liberal doses of Nebraska Springsteen and even, occasionally, Tom
Waits. Bongos and strings join the mix, giving it a drive and adding
delicate accents. Instrumentally, the CD is full of such understated
touches
Frisell plays in such a way to draw just enough attention
to his beautiful style while still keeping his ear trained on Phelps'
skewed snapshots of characters. A subtle and engaging disc."
- Harp
"On 'Slingshot Professionals' Phelps's acoustic guitar is fleshed
out by strategically placed string instruments, delicately handled
percussion and massaged keyboards. Phelps lends his husky vocals
to heartfelt observations
The album is a sublime exercise
in subtlety."
- Sarasota Herald Tribune
"An
ace guitar player
a singer with an almost gothic, gravel and
velvet voice; and a songwriter whose literate, cliché-dodging
way with lyrics mixes art and grit in a distinctive way."
- Santa Barbara News-Press
"It's
not every guitar icon that turns away from the idolatry his mastery
inspires
For Kelly Joe Phelps, the evolution from venerated
picker to respected singer-songwriter has been gradual and organic
With "Slingshot Professionals", Phelps has thoroughly
crossed over into the territory of Tom Waits and J.J. Cale, couching
his sly songs in his fullest arrangements to date
Phelps definitely
hasn't dulled the guitar chops. But more than ever, his playing
serves a larger purpose." - S.F.Gate.Com
"Phelps' songs and his playing coalesce in his music, which
combines the sophistication of jazz with the unadorned realism of
the blues and the stark honesty of folk music."
- Tampa Tribune
"Phelps
is a remarkable acoustic guitarist who has assimilated so many disparate
influences - everyone from Chet Atkins and Leo Kottke to Mississippi
Fred McDowell and Ornette Coleman - that he escapes and even defies
categorization. He has also become an adroit lyricist. His new album,
'Slingshot Professionals', finds him engaging in the sort of knotty,
elliptical wordplay that is generally more the province of established
novelists than fellow songwriters. In that sense, Phelps has much
in common with Tom Waits and precious few others
This musical
hunger can be heard on 'Slingshot Professionals' on which Phelps
plays in a conversational and spontaneous way with two discrete
small ensembles. One features the renowned guitarist Bill Frisell,
while the other is built around a core of guitarist Phelps, fiddler
and mandolinist Jesse Zubot, and Weissenborn player Steve Dawson.
a testament to strong material, good chemistry and great musicians."
- Winston Salem Journal
"What a wonderfully fresh release this is from Kelly Joe Phelps.
I can't emphasize enough just how this release has bowled me over
I certainly haven't heard many play with such genuine and pure emotion
and I can certainly never recall having never felt so in awe of
an artist after an album has finished
.. Each track reads like
a poem and Kelly Joe's touching and heartfelt tones certainly capture
the essence of those words to jaw dropping effect.
.. One
of the most organic and natural offerings I've ever been privileged
to have the introduction to and I would recommend this to everybody
who wants to hear the Blues with 'real' breadth and effortlessness
Blissful."
- Blues Matters (UK)
BLUES
CRAFTED WITH A CARE
"KELLY JOE PHELPS has been punching through the boundaries
of who he is
supposed to be with every album. I first knew him as the religiously
inclined, prodigious country blues guitarist of 1996's Roll Away
The Stone,
itself a progression from his jazz beginnings. The three albums
since have
thrown up personal, modern blues songwriting, then a turn into something
uncategorisable: literary songs of hurt played in a tight but improvised
spirit by a top notch band. It's a right-angled career turn typical
of two
musicians Phelps loves, Miles Davis and Bob Dylan, and of Phelps'
own
questing, wrestling approach to musical and spiritual questions
that made
even his "purest" blues more than pastiche." - Nick
Hasted The Independent
BLUES-INFLUENCED
TROUBADOUR’S BEST YET
" The transformation of KJP from revivalist bluesman to contemporary
singer-songwriter continues on his fifth album. His songs are now
mini-stories, populated by seekers of truth and peddlers of dreams.
His guitar style is exemplary, his voice has a heartfelt rich patina
and the backing musician including Bill Frisell create a folk-jazz
accompaniment of almost spiritual empathy. “Knock Louder”
revisits his blues roots, but only serves to remind us how far he
has since come." - Nigel Williamson, Uncut
"And
so, he continues to grow. Album number five, 'Slingshot Professionals'
is a very wonderful thing. Richly acoustic tunes of poetic haunt
and verse. Guitars, harmonica, piano, accordion, violin, mandolin
and more. Luxuriant textures and variant hues, elegantly woven and
softly spun. And that husky voice -- well worn, emoting good and
getting better all the time. If at times he recalls 'Bop Until You
Drop' -- era Ry Cooder – cut through with a shot of Beat and
belt of Waits - still he is very much his own man. Indeed, he is
memorably possessed of hose own fully formed, richly realised, yet
still developing sound. As a guitar player Phelps typically eschews
the showy in lieu of the subtle, and is all the more affecting for
it. Increasingly, too, his words have taken on a rare, imagistic
thrall all their own. On the new album, such crooked mystery, eloquently
wrought, with snapshots and vignettes of ache and wonder and enigma
hewn, he is a shadowy master of gnawing, crafted song." - Ross
Fortune, Time Out
"Kelly
Joe Phelps has been widening his musical vision of late, bringing
on board an array of backing musicians to flesh out his immaculately
picked-out folk blues. His fourth Rykodisc album continues this
progression, with electric guitar from Bill Frisell, lightly brushed
percussion from Scott Amendola, streaks of organ and accordian and
additional vocals from Petra Haden, all tracking Phelps's mesmerising
finger work. But for all its technical articulation, this mighty
fine record feels as artless as an improvisation." - Metro
FOLK
ROOTS BEAUTY
"No one ever got rich by overestimating the record-buying public’s
capacity to get off on high literary style set to delicate musical
accompaniment. That’s Kelly Joe’s cross to bear. His
songs are short stories, winkled out of his observations of the
liminal, the outside, the sad, the infant, which he sings with a
blurry, furry tenor of outstanding warmth. When his melodies fly,
you weep of your inability to sing your own children such lullabies."
- NC, The Sunday Independent
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