1. Desert Heat
2. Pokuscabadabra
3. Cold Duck Time
4. I’ll Close My Eyes
5. Tune 88
6. What Now My Love
7. The House of the Rising Sun
8. Fields
Papa John DeFrancesco – Hammond B3 organ
Joey DeFrancesco – Keyboards
Tony Banda – Bass
Ramon Banda – Drums, percussion
Like
father, like son. And I like this father –
Papa John DeFrancesco – and his son, Joey.
Both men can play the Hammond organ with the
necessary gutsiness and blues feeling, although
here Joey supports his Dad on various other
keyboards including the electric piano. They
are ably supported by the Banda brothers –
a bassist and drummer whose experience playing
for Poncho Sanchez ensures some fiery music.
The
album opens suitably with an original blues
written by John, and we know we are in for
a set of no-nonsense swinging organ music
in the fine tradition of Jimmy Smith or Groove
Holmes. The slow-burning version of I’ll
Close My Eyes is certainly in the laid-back
style of Holmes, with Joey laying down washes
of drifting colour on the synthesizer. What
Now My Love is given a more propulsive
but still relaxed feel, while The House
of the Rising Sun burns with a slow but
intense flame.
Eddie
Harris’s Cold Duck Time catches the
right funky sense, propelled by Ramon Banda’s
mixed percussion. Jeff Lorber’s Tune 88
has a similarly funky rhythm, albeit with
more straightforward drumming. The two other
tunes on the album are originals by John:
the extrovert Fields, dedicated to
Joe Fields (for whose labels John has recorded
all his albums), plus a lilting jazz-waltz
called Pokuscabadabra (a tribute to
Bugs Bunny and Warner Brothers cartoons!)
with an excellent drum solo from Ramon Banda.
Joey mostly stays discreetly in the background,
as he did on Legacy (Concord) the album
he made with Jimmy Smith shortly before Smith
died – and I’m still listening to that
irresistible mixture of keyboard instruments.
The
album gets its title from the fact that Papa
John recently moved to the hot desert state
of Arizona, where his son already resides.
They are sure to keep things simmering.
Tony Augarde