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Audio CD review:
The Jeff Healey Band - The Jeff Healey Band - Live at Montreux 1999

Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all The Jeff Healey Band reviews here, or go back to the The Jeff Healey Band tabs.

     

The Jeff Healey Band - The Jeff Healey Band - Live at Montreux 1999
The Jeff Healey Band Band: The Jeff Healey Band
Title: The Jeff Healey Band - Live at Montreux 1999
Rating:
Release Date: 2005-05-03
Media: Audio CD

Tracks: 1: While My Guitar Gently Weeps 2: My Little Girl 3: Stop Breakin’ Down 4: Third Degree 5: I Think I Love You Too Much 6: That’s What They Say 7: I Can’t Get My Hands On You 8: Yer Blues 9: Angel Eyes 10: Roadhouse Blues 11: See The Light 12: Hoochie Coochie Man


Not Bad at All, Mates
It's a sign of professionalism that he can still inject passion and soul into music that doesn't otherwise inspire him. Despite Healey's preference for playing brass and singing traditional jazz, he sure can make that blues-rock guitar sing, despite admitting to inebriation and jetlag during this live performance.

Audiophiles may be scared off by the earlier tracks, but "Roadhouse Blues", "See The Light" and "Hoochie Coochie Man" are worth the price of the disc on their own. Drummer Tom Stephen and bassist Joe Rockman were right on top of their game here.

The tremendously talented Pat Rush played second guitar in 1999, but erstwhile feral guitarist Philip Sayce (Melissa Etheridge) appears on two 1997 insertions - Harrison's "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" and Healey's own "That's What They Say".

Other standouts were Robert Johnson's "Stop Breakin' Down" (featuring "Paddy" on slide guitar) and the requisite slow-blues of "Third Degree" (Boyd/Dixon). Healey's penchant for singing "visual" songs continues to inspire fans fascinated by his obviously non-debilitating blindness.

Jeff even outdoes himself on his classic interpretation of Mark Knopfler's "I Think I Love You Too Much". Although he denigrates his own songwriting skills, "See The Light" and "Can't Get My Hands on You" are ingenious compositions. The latter features a kick-ass drum solo outro by Stephen.

John Lennon's emotionally revealing "Yer Blues" begins the heavy-duty blowout, but there's a momentary breath-catcher on Koller/Hiatt's "Angel Eyes", with which Healey will forever be identified and possibly cursed.

From there on, it's almost a half-hour of full-tilt boogie! Healey may have had his fill of rock'n'roll, but fans of this outfit will fall in love with him all over again, particularly during the guitar-lick crescendos with Pat Rush on "Roadhouse Blues", where he concedes it's "not bad for a couple of jetlagged idiots".

Diane Wells

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You can see a complete list of all The Jeff Healey Band discography, or go back to the The Jeff Healey Band tabs

 



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