2X BLUES MUSIC AWARD WINNER & “MAGNIFICENT VOICE” (NO DEPRESSION)
JOHN NEMETH FRONTS 10-PIECE BAND ALONGSIDE MEMBERS OF THE BO-KEYS
1ST SINGLE “LOVE & HAPPINESS” RECASTS AL GREEN HIT AS EARLY RHYTHM & BLUES
MEMPHIS PRE-RELEASE SHOW OCT 12 AT LEVITT SHELL
Fans of Pokey LaFarge, the California Honeydrops, the Dustbowl Revival,
and Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats will delight in the debut
album by The Love Light Orchestra, a group of the best Memphis has to
offer. The self-titled debut album was recorded live in concert to a
full house at Bar DKDC in their hometown by Matt Ross-Spang, who
produced Margo Price’s breakout album ‘Midwest Farmer’s Daughter’ and
whose other credits include Jason Isbell, Brent Cobb, The Drive-By
Truckers, and Corb Lund. It comes out November 17 on Blue Barrel
Records.
Two-time Blues Music Award winner John Nemeth fronts The Love Light
Orchestra. Esquire said, “There aren't many true soul men left in the
world, but John Nemeth is one of 'em.” No Depression raved about his
“magnificent voice.”
Meanwhile, band arranger, co-founder, and trumpet man Marc Franklin has
previously lent his talents to recordings by Robert Cray, Melissa
Etheridge, Jim Lauderdale, and Solomon Burke and toured with Bobby
“Blue” Bland, a chief inspiration to the Orchestra. Franklin and
guitarist Joe Restivo are also members of the “funky” (Wall Street
Journal) and “fiery” (LA Times) “masters of the Memphis sound” (NPR) The
Bo-Keys.
Bland and his longtime arranger Joe Scott are a chief inspiration behind
the formation of the band, which seeks to distill the sounds of the
‘40s and ‘50s rhythm & blues and blues and was named for Bland’s
1961 hit “Turn On Your Love Light.” Saxophonist Art Edmaiston and
drummer Earl Lowe also did stints touring with Bland. Additionaly, The
Love Light Orchestra draws from the horn-driven Memphis blues sound of
B.B. King, Little Milton, and “Junior” Parker. The band brilliantly
recasts Al Green’s iconic hit “Love and Happiness” as a shuffle, with
parts inspired by Charles Mingus’ “Fables of Faubus.”
Nemeth says, “The Memphis sound of the ‘50s put in the sophistication
with the horns, but it never lost that gritty aspect of the blues. And
the spirituality in the vocals was tremendous—the melodies have such
great movements, and the lyrical rhythms are perfect.”
The band will perform at the Levitt Shell in Memphis, TN on October 12.
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