This blues-roots rock supergroup of sorts features musicians bred, if not always born, in the South. The only real royalty would be singer/songwriter/percussionist
Cyril Neville, who shares lead vocals with younger but still established blues-rock journeymen guitarists
Mike Zito and
Devon Allman. Bassist
Charlie Wooton from
Zydefunk and ex-
Derek Trucks drummer
Yonrico Scott comprise the solid rhythm section rounding out this quintet. With all this instrumental and vocal firepower, the musical possibilities of mixing
Neville's familial, funky New Orleans swamp with
Zito's soulful blues and
Allman's tougher rock are enticing. While there is plenty to whet your appetite, there is a surprising lack of top-quality songs for these guys to dig into. A few corkers such as the Latin-tinged "Fired Up!" and the rubbery groove of "Moonlight Over the Mississippi," both sung by
Neville, and
Zito's terrific ballad "Ways About You" show the band can coalesce around a great tune. The problem is there just aren't enough of them.
Zito,
Neville, and
Allman write the bulk of the material in various combinations but tunes such as "Gotta Keep Rockin'" and "Hurts My Heart" are as simplistic as their titles. Going outside to cover
the Dead's reggae-tinged "Fire on the Mountain" -- the album's only non-original -- makes sense and it's an inspired performance, especially by the always impressive
Neville, whose traditionally gutsy singing is the band's secret weapon. But an aimless
Santana-styled closing instrumental jam credited to all the members is filler, something first albums should not have. In concert the three songwriters can fall back on their own catalogs to pick and choose quality tunes, and the sheer instrumental talents of the players carry them through. Yet compositionally, this is a tentative debut that shows tons of promise but feels rushed and not completely baked. Some tough guitar soloing and
Jim Gaines' always professional production keeps the sound hot, but with the enormous potential of the members, it's disappointing. Perhaps with some roadwork and more time together the next release will fulfill
the Brotherhood's possibilities. ~ Hal Horowitz