After two albums with his jam band
Honeytribe and co-founding the blues rock supergroup
Royal Southern Brotherhood,
Devon Allman issued a fine solo album in 2013 with
Turquoise. While that record focused on his skills as a songwriter as much as it did his considerable ability as a guitarist,
Ragged & Dirty changes up the game again by heading north to the wellspring of electric blues: Chicago. Produced by noted drummer, songwriter, and arranger
Tom Hambridge -- who has worked with everyone from
Joe Louis Walker and
Susan Tedeschi to
George Thorogood and
Johnny Winter -- this is not a set of hard boogie blooooooz numbers, but a skilled, nuanced, yet kinetic reflection on the murky terrain where Chicago's signature electric style meets vintage R&B and rock.
Allman the guitar slinger is back in a big way here, fronting a small ensemble that includes the drummer, bassist
Felton Crews, B-3 player
Marty Sammon, and guitarist
Giles Cory.
Hambridge contributed four excellent tunes to the set,
Allman five, and there are three choice covers. The latter include a burning read of the title track (a funky blues scorcher by
Luther Allison off his 1972
Motown set,
Bad News Is Coming), an emotionally resonant reading of
the Spinners' hit, "I'll Be Around" -- which showcases
Allman's considerable gifts as a singer -- and a poignant, thoroughly electrified take on
Otis Taylor's "Ten Million Slaves." There's a hint of the
Allman Brothers Band's blues attack on
Hambridge's "Can't Lose 'Em All," with
Cory twinning the lead guitar line. "Midnight Lake Michigan" is a long, slow instrumental where
Allman gets to show off his chops, his phrasing purposely reflecting the influences of
Buddy Guy and
Jimi Hendrix. His own "Traveling" gives free play to his nasty, funky wah-wah pedal and melds Southern rock to Windy City soul blues, while "Blackjack Heart Attack" is a burning rocker whose gritty vamps and stinging leads are adorned by careening B-3 and bass fills.
Ragged & Dirty is the first time in
Allman's recording career that all of his strengths have been on full display.
Hambridge's production is polished, yet never rounds off the edges; sounds and dynamics encounter one another spontaneously and naturally.
Allman is inspired; he reveals the myriad aspects of his musical persona -- so full of contrasting yet complementary voices -- free expression, resulting in the finest thing he's ever put his name on. ~ Thom Jurek