Grandpa Elliott Small's Sugar Sweet To Hit Stores in April
. After nearly sixty years of captivating crowds on the streets of New Orleans, Grandpa Elliott will make his debut at the 2010 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival on April 24. His popularity has gone global in the last year after the Playing for Change hit viral video for "Stand By Me," featuring 37 musicians from around the world, received over 30 million views on sites like YouTube and Vimeo. After so many years persevering through incredible hardships and performing for free on the streets of New Orleans, Grandpa Elliott has become an unlikely cultural icon. He has performed as part of the Playing for Change Band twice on NBC's The Tonight Show, The Bonnie Hunt Show and has led the band in an emotional rendition of "Stand By Me" on Comedy Central's The Colbert Report. Sugar Sweet is produced by Playing For Change founder Mark Johnson and Reggie McBride and was recorded in New Orleans with the Playing For Change Band. Their ability to lay down sturdy, elastic grooves is evident throughout the album, adding sympathetic backing to Elliott's soulful vocals and sinuous harmonica. "Grandpa Elliott embodies everything the Playing For Change project is about," Johnson says. "Soul, talent, and perseverance. He brought the rawness of the street into the studio and cut the tunes in one take, with no set list and made every song his own. There's a line in 'Sugar Sweet' that says 'I love you more than the blood that runs through my veins.' That's how Grandpa feels about music. You can hear it in every note he sings." On the title track, the guitars of Jason Tamba from the DR Congo and Zimbabwe's Louis Mhlanga play a New Orleans style Rumba with a hint of Ska, while drummer Peter Bunetta lays down subtle percussion fills. Grandpa Elliott's voice is fluid, with quicksilver phrasing that falls before and behind the beat, playing with rhythm and meter. "Ain't Nothing You Can Do," an early hit for Bobby "Blue" Bland, gets a makeover that combines the swing of Tamba and Mhlanga, with an R&B feel, Elliott's vocal slips from a buoyant tenor to a playful, bluesy growl as he adds subtle harmonica accents. Grandpa Elliott learned "Share Your Love With Me" from an Aretha Franklin recording and the band gives it a stripped down, old school R&B reading. "Fannie Mae" was cut at a rousing live concert performance with Keb' Mo' sitting in on electric guitar. It includes a blazing harp solo from Grandpa Elliott and lets the band show off its considerable instrumental prowess. Click here to read today's full Day in Pop report Preview and Purchase Elliott Small CDs |
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