This CD opens with “Come Back Home,” the tune that also
opens Homemade Music. It’s a nice
dose of blues rock, with a cool lead on electric guitar during the instrumental
section. There is some wonderful energy here, and the CD is off to a fantastic
start, going full steam ahead. “You’ve
been gone a month/It don’t seem right/I’ve got to hug my pillow at night/Hey
baby, won’t you come on back home/I can’t get no sleep, baby/You’ve been gone
too long.” Oh yes, I totally understand the feeling. Then on “Hard Time,”
the music gets a bit heavier in its groove and its approach. And why not?
Clearly he has cause to be angry. After all, as he says, “You only needed me to share your misery/You spent my money/Now you
drink your wine.” And then, “Loving
you, baby, is like doing hard time.” “Hard Time” is also from Handmade Music.
The album’s only cover is Robert Johnson’s “Traveling
Riverside Blues,” a song that Lance Lopez included on Handmade Music. This is obviously a heavier version than Robert
Johnson’s original. Lance’s guitar at times reminds me of Led Zeppelin, which
makes sense as Zeppelin took a lot of inspiration from older blues numbers, in
many cases flat-out stealing them. In fact, Led Zeppelin took lines from this
song and stuck them in “The Lemon Song,” a tune which itself is a rip-off of
Howlin’ Wolf’s “Killing Floor.” And actually Led Zeppelin covered “Traveling
Riverside Blues” as well (you can hear it on the BBC Sessions CD).
I find it a bit odd that in the introduction to “Lowdown
Ways,” Lance asks the crowd, “Can I play
a little blues for you all right now, is that all right?” After all, isn’t
that what he’s been doing? Well, no matter. “Lowdown Ways” is a slower, very
cool blues number in which Lance sings, “You’ve
got to change, baby/You’ve got to change your lowdown ways.” Ah, you know a
relationship is doomed if you feel the other person has to change in some way.
But hell, maybe she will change. If anything can convince her, it will be that
wild, fantastic electric guitar work during the jam. Holy moly! And he lets
loose for quite a while. This tune is more than ten minutes long, and is my
favorite of the CD. There are band introductions at the end of the track. By
the way, “Lowdown Ways” was also included on Handmade Music.
The CD ends with a couple of tunes not from Handmade Music: “Tell The Truth” (a song
that is supposedly going to be included on Lance’s next studio release, Texas Prophecies, an album that is a
long time coming) and “El Paso Sugar” (from 2007’s Higher Ground). “El Paso Sugar” is a cool tune that begins with
some good work on guitar. Then after a minute or so it kicks in to become a
louder, more rocking tune. And Lance extends this one a bit too, nearly doubling the length of the album version. “I can’t get your taste out of my mouth.”
CD Track List
- Come Back Home
- Hard Time
- Get Out And Walk
- Traveling Riverside Blues
- Lowdown Ways
- Tell The Truth
- El Paso Sugar
Live in NYC was
released on April 15, 2016 on Cleopatra Records.
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