Music Review: Kenny Wayne Shepherd — ‘Lay It on Down’
On his last album, Kenny Wayne Shepherd turned a Louisiana homecoming into a moving tribute to his early blues influences. For his latest release, Shepherd shows that heĢƵ at the top of his musical game by dishing out a fervent set of new arrangements infused with rock, blues, R&B and country seasonings.
“Lay It on Down” is fueled by a fresh vibe as a result of recording the tracks live in the studio to allow the band to feed off each otherĢƵ energy and musical strengths. Shepherd began writing the new material two years ago with some new songwriting collaborations. As a result, the songs possess a vibrant range of diversity with a contemporary feel as ShepherdĢƵ fiery guitar licks burn a blazing path for the rest of the band to follow.
On his eighth studio release, the 40-year-old guitarist is joined by vocalist Noah Hunt, former Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble drummer Chris Layton, well-traveled keyboardist Jimmy McGorman and the impressive Kevin McCormick laying down some weighty bass grooves.
“Baby Got Gone” opens the set with Shepherd handling the lead vocals and driving guitar riffs meant to peel the paint off the vibrating walls. Stevie Ray Vaughan would be proud.
From there, a blazing horn section ushers a little funk into the house as ShepherdĢƵ soulful vocals match his smooth guitar playing and McCormickĢƵ solid rhythm foundation on “Diamonds and Gold.”
HuntĢƵ vocals highlight the straightforward blues-rock numbers “Nothing But the Night,” “Down for Love” and “How Low Can You Go.”
As good as Shepherd is at tearing it up, he is equally impressive when he slows it down to catch his breath. The title track gently rolls along under the direction of ShepherdĢƵ guitar and expressive vocals, while the country leanings of “Hard Lesson Learned” are perfectly tailored for HuntĢƵ powerful, earthy voice.
Additional country influences can be witnessed on “Louisiana Rain” with Hunt offering up a memorable vocal performance on a tender tribute to ShepherdĢƵ home state.
The band lays it all down with a vigorous close as the album finishes with “Ride of Your Life.”
With a recording career that started at the age of 16, Shepherd continues to marry his life experiences with his distinct musicianship to form his very own unique sound of blues and rock that satisfies again and again.
Shepherd brings his guitar prowess to Pittsburgh for a performance on Sept. 24.