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2 years ago
Dennis Jones 2009
Dennis Jones Band
Contact: Betsie Brown, Blind Raccon
(901) 278-6850
www.blindraccoon.com
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About Dennis Jones Band
Dennis Jones Band
Blind Raccoon
Contact: Betsie Brown, Publicist
(901) 278-6850
www.blindraccoon.com
Check out Dennis Jones Band and new CD "Pleasure & Pain" plus other two CD's, "Passion for the Blues" and "Falling Up" at:
www.dennisjonescentral.com
www.MySpace.com/dennisjonesband
www.CDBaby.com
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Dennis Jones Band
Blind Raccoon
Contact: Betsie Brown, Publicist
(901) 278-6850
www.blindraccoon.com
Check out Dennis Jones Band and new CD "Pleasure & Pain" plus other two CD's, "Passion for the Blues" and "Falling Up" at:
www.dennisjon...
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dennisjonesbandLatest Activity
Jul 30, 2009Date Joined
Mar 14, 2007
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DENNIS JONES - PLEASURE & PAINBlues guitar heroes are like a major hurricane that blows down everything in their path, changing the musical landscape as surely as category 5 tropical storms alter the terra firma. Since Stevie Ray Vaughan perished tragically in 1990, the winds of change have been brief squalls at best ~ until now. Dennis Jones, with his third release Pleasure & Pain (Blue Rock Records), has the explosive guitar power, voice and songs to make his contemporaries quake in their boots.
Jones was born in Baltimore, Maryland. The drums were his first passion and they still form his relentless grooves. He started playing guitar at 13, took a few informal lessons from a friend who taught him House of the Rising Sun and was rocking out with his Marshall stack two years later in a band with older cats. His tastes evolved in tandem with his skills in rock from the Rolling Stones, The Who, Bob Dylan and Santana influencing him profoundly, along with 60s guitar greats Jimi Hendrix, Johnny Winter and Jimmy Page. Combined with the blues legends B.B., Albert and Freddie King and the R&B of Al Green, James Brown and Motown, the results are a human music machine who can fry the strings of his Strat while singing deep from his soul.
From 1977-80, Jones was in the service and stationed in Germany where he gained further experience with a variety of bands. In 1985, he made Los Angeles his home and headed a Led Zeppelin-meets-Funkadelic band called Blackhead that attracted industry attention. In the early 90s Dennis formed the Dennis Jones Band, followed his passion and made a commitment to house rockin blues.
Pleasure & Pain contains 11 blazing intense original numbers. Brand New Day does not just swing the shuffle; it kicks it all over the lot as Jones exhorts Dance your blues away! Dont Worry About Me adds an element of contemporary vocal harmony, reminiscent of the Sopranos theme song, to the booty-bumping minor funk. He engages in some winking braggadocio by singing no beg, no way in Im Good over the hardest pounding shuffle rhythm highlighted by his stirring punishing picking. Jones changes tack in Kill the Pain with a slow, raunchy boogie exposing the futility of cocaine abuse and featuring low down country blues licks elevated to inflammatory levels. Blue Over You finds him playing infectious, funky lead/rhythm guitar, with a nod to the Voodoo Child, in a hook-laden number that has hit radio potential. Sunday Morning Rain takes yet a different turn as a pop rock ballad that would not be out of place in Nashville as Jones croons his melancholy tale of romantic woe. The driving minor key rocker Home Tonight displays an urgency that permeates the entire album.
Try Not to Lie rocks the blues like a certain trio from Texas as Jones addresses a common theme with the ironic, If you try not to lie, I will try to do the same. I Want It Yesterday is a nasty slice of ominous, heavy riff rock while Him or Me channels Jimi in an impressive display of trio rock that rumbles and roars with fury. Closing the astounding set is the charging and lusty musical locomotive called Hot Sauce that fittingly has Jones quoting Third Rock from the Sun with the dynamic call and response frame work.
When not writing songs for his own use, Jones dedicates his time to writing songs for his friends and guitar heroes. Guitar Shorty in his next album coming out on Alligator Records 2009 or 2010 is covering one such song, Temporary Man.
It is risky to make predictions, but if anyone has a legitimate shot at filing the blues guitar hero void it is Dennis Jones. He has the head, heart and hands to do it.
Dave Ruban, 2005 KBA Award Winner in Journalism
Country
United States
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