Album review: ROBIN TROWER – Something’s About To Change
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Robin Trower Special – 1 March 2015 by Get Ready To Rock! Radio on Mixcloud
Our one-hour radio special was first broadcast on 1 March 2015. Robin Trower chats to David Randall about his career and chooses some of those songs that have inspired him over the years, plus tracks from ‘Something’s About To Change’. (57:52)
More interviews/features/music at our Mixcloud page
Gig review (March 2015)
Manhaton [Released 12.03.15]
‘Something’s About To Change’ is almost a contrary title for an album cemented in Robin Trower’s unchanging world of brooding grooves, deep tones and whispered, world weary vocals.
It’s a unique combination given extra depth by heartfelt songs, a lightness of touch and his deep tones, timbre and textures, as evidenced by delicate tracks such as ‘Fallen’ and the atmospheric ‘Dreams That Shone Like Diamonds’.
The latter track adds poetic lyrics to the kind of ethereal guitar work that he first explored on Procol’s ‘Song for a Dreamer’. You could argue his essential DNA imprint was always been there of course, before he became enthralled by Hendrix and headed into American stadium based rock.
‘Something’s About To Change’ is almost a repost to that part of his career. It’s the work of a mature artist and a sonic explorer who long ago embraced the blues and indulges himself in a dreamy languor to search out feel, tone and deeply wrought emotion.
The dozen tracks on the album flesh out a bigger picture that offers a portal into the interrelationship between Robin’s tone colour and his lyrics.
He’s a player’s player, who has the ability to bring something special to a standard slow blues such as ‘Good Morning Midnight’. He does so by making the most of the spaces that the subtle arrangement offers him. His delicate vibrato offers a potent suggestion of myriad possibilities, over a subtly mixed drifting organ and brush stroked percussion.
This album makes little concession to anything outside of Robin’s sacrosanct belief in the primacy and expressive ability of his tonal emphasis. The sultry tempos rarely extend beyond the laid back, while the band’s accompaniment is precisely that, creating the framework for Robin to lean into his solo’s in a manner that would surely make Peter Green smile.
‘Something’s About To Change’ also marks the point at which he has finally found his own voice outside of his guitar playing. In the past his vocals were at best passable, whereas on this album his phrasing hovers gently over slowly evolving weighty grooves.
Each composition reveals different layers incrementally, in the manner you might expect from an expressionist painter applying thick and deliberate brush strokes. And in the absence of a defining solo, Trower frequently lets a note vibrate and fill the room before it slowly descends to draw the listener in sequentially.
The power riff trio and explosive solo’s have long been laid to bed and replaced by slowly evolving textures that wrap their way round you and lodge in your subconscious.
However, there is a brief career flashback on the slightly more up tempo ‘Riff no.7 (still alive)’, as he reaches back to his riff driven hey-day. You suspect he’s happiest on mid-tempo numbers such as ‘Strange Love’, an unremarkable track given real presence by that same combination of confessional lyrics, hoarse vocals and a subtle guitar part that again draws the listener in.
The bristling intro to ‘The One Saving Grace’ is a successful attempt to give the album a fleeting uplifting feel, before it settles into a subtle funky groove, over which he delivers a conversational solo. The concluding after hours feel of ‘Up And Gone’ and ‘Til I Reach Home’ offers the kind of understated resolution wholly in keeping with a laid back album that smoulders with intense introspection. ****
Review by Pete Feenstra
Gig review (March 2015)
UK Tour dates 2015
Thu March 26 LINCOLN Drill Hall
Fri March 27 BURY Apex
Sat March 28 BIRMINGHAM Town Hall
Sun March 29 SALFORD Lowry
Thu April 02 CHESTER Live Rooms
Fri April 03 GATESHEAD Sage
Sat April 04 GLASGOW Arches
Sun April 05 ABERDEEN Lemon Tree
Tue April 07 STOCKTON Arts Centre
Wed April 08 HARROGATE Theatre
Thu April 09 SHEFFIELD City Hall
Fri April 10 HOLMFIRTH Picturedrome
Sat April 11 LONDON O2 Shepherds Bush Empire
Tue April 14 CRAWLEY Hawth Theatre
Wed April 15 EXETER Corn Exchange
Thu April 16 SALISBURY City Hall
Fri April 17 MILTON KEYNES Stables
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions, streamed via Facebook.
In 2023 he signed a recording deal with Sony in Canada and released a new single on 15 September.
Next session: Sunday 1 December
Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio
David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 3 November 2024.
UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). This show was first broadcast 29 October 2024.
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Power Plays w/c 11 November 2024
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S8NT ELEKTRIC XTC (Long Branch Records)
ARCANA KINGS Here We Go (Curtain Call Records)
KLOGR face The Unknown (Zeta Factory)
BEYOND UNBROKEN Dance With The Dead (FiXT)
REVENGIN Decadent Feeling (Wormholedeath)
Featured Albums w/c 11 November 2024
09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003-2023 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003-2023 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003-2023 (Singer Songwriter)
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