Anyone who has spent time listening to Canada-born, Austin-based guitar slinger
Sue Foley knows "Pinky" is her signature paisley-print pink Fender Telecaster.
Pinky's Blues is her second offering for
Stony Plain.
Foley and her band -- bassist
Jon Penner, drummer
Chris Layton (of
Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble fame), and Hammond B-3 organist, producer
Mike Flanigin -- got together with engineer
Chris Bell over three days in a San Marcos, Texas studio and cut these 12 tracks live on the floor.
Foley's focus is the Texas blues and the artists who embody them in a set of covers and originals. She captures the Lone Star blues styles with raw energy, passion, and stellar musicianship.
Foley penned the title-track instrumental, a sweet, swinging, slow blues with stinging leads and lyric phrasing. It's followed by "Two Bit Texas Town," one of two tunes by
Angela Strehli. It's a swamp blues shout-out that name-checks blues heroes. When
Foley sings "Back when radio/Could turn your life around/I know what it did to me ..." she's singing its truth as her own, adding snarling fills and a cracking snare shuffle.
Foley's riff in "Dallas Man" is equal parts
Slim Harpo,
Johnny Winter, and
ZZ Top. She shifts gears on
Strehli's glorious "Say It Ain't So." Over the band's sweet, simmering, vintage R&B groove,
Foley's delivers the lyrics with aching tenderness. Her guitar accents, fills, and solo are melodic and committed. On
Lavelle White's "Stop These Teardrops,"
Foley's voice rides the lyric into the guitar boogie as
Flanigin's organ fills paint the margins. "Boogie Real Low" is a revised reading of
Frankie Lee Sims' 1957 roadhouse jump blues "She Likes to Boogie."
Foley rocks it up with blazing lead breaks, a sexy vocal, and a fingerpopping vamp. She reveals her love of vintage Texas R&B again in
Lillie Mae Donley's 1962 hit "Think it Over." Guided by
Flanigin's B-3,
Foley summons all the pathos and desperation in the original and injects it with a gritty underbelly that heightens the emotional tumult.
Clarence Gatemouth Brown's seminal "Okie Dokie Stomp" finds
Foley's fat, sweeping chord boogie meeting the rhythm section head and nearly burns the joint down. The original "Hurricane Girl" features guest
Jimmie Vaughan on rhythm guitar. Inspired by
Elmore James' signature slide boogie,
Foley celebrates her musical and character bona fides as a force of nature. Two tracks are only available on CD and via the LP's download card, including a Texas-sized version of
Willie Dixon's "When the Cat Is Gone, The Mice Play," (written for
Junior Wells in 1965; it copies the vamp from the Chicago singer's 1960 hit "Messin' with the Kid"). The band digs deep into its slippery, bubbling groove and brings the record home.
Pinky's Blues is unruly, wooly, joyful, and unprocessed. Its looseness is possible because
Foley enlisted musicians who know the tradition and trust one another to deliver it with unvarnished intensity, without artifice. ~ Thom Jurek