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Ten from the Road: Live

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Download links and information about Ten from the Road: Live by Matt Schofield. This album was released in 2012 and it belongs to Blues, Jazz, Rock genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 01:07:43 minutes.

Artist: Matt Schofield
Release date: 2012
Genre: Blues, Jazz, Rock
Tracks: 10
Duration: 01:07:43
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Ear to the Ground (Live) 6:14
2. Dont Know What I'd Do (Live) 6:26
3. Live Wire (Live) 5:30
4. Where Do I Have to Stand (Live) 9:02
5. Anything but Time (Live) 4:24
6. Dreaming of You (Live) 5:36
7. Shipwrecked (Live) 6:50
8. See Me Through (Live) 9:56
9. Siftin' Thru Ashes (Live) 7:55
10. Not Raining Now (Live) 5:50

Details

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Recorded live without overdubs or sweetening in the Netherlands, this 2007 date was first made available in 2010 to coincide with Matt Schofield's U.S. and Canadian tour. The trio format works efficiently for the U.K. guitarist as keyboardist Jonny Henderson also picks up the basslines. Henderson's organ lines mixed with Schofield's guitar are a combustible combination that makes this trio sound like a larger band. The effect is a blues-jazz hybrid, heavier on the former, that allows Schofield to strut his stuff on extended versions of songs. That's a distinct change from his studio albums, where his sharp guitar solos are compact and in service of the tune. While that's an appropriate avenue to follow in the more confined environment of the studio, the live setting lets Schofield unwind and show just how powerful and accomplished a soloist he is. He's impressive on relatively short, six-minute workouts such as the sleazy shuffle of "On My Way," but is nothing short of explosive when charging through a ten-minute version of Albert Collins' "Lights Are on But Nobody's Home" and a set-closing, near 20-minute cover of the Box Tops/Joe Cocker hit "The Letter." His tone shifts from smooth to biting, often within minutes, and his sense of timing makes his playing tough and taut yet fluid. He's a better guitarist than vocalist, but puts across the songs with conviction and never tries too hard or oversings. Echoes of Hendrix open "Siftin' Thru Ashes" and Schofield even references "Smoke on the Water"'s classic riff in the improv section of "The Letter," all of which shows how much fun he's having unwinding at his own pace. The sound is crisp and as sharp as the playing and the audience stays in the background where it belongs, making this a near-perfect live recording, even granting the practically inevitable drum solo. It's a terrific concert album that captures a hot band nailing its groove with intensity and professionalism.