Create account Log in

Gratitude

[Edit]

Download links and information about Gratitude by Tommy Castro. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues, Rock genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 57:00 minutes.

Artist: Tommy Castro
Release date: 2003
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues, Rock
Tracks: 12
Duration: 57:00
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. I Take What I Want 4:00
2. Come Back Baby 5:39
3. Lovey Dovey 4:44
4. 44 4:42
5. Bad Case of Love 4:53
6. Tulane 4:10
7. It Serves You Right to Suffer 6:51
8. I Feel That Old Feeling Coming On 4:21
9. Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven 4:56
10. I Found a Love 4:13
11. I Want to Be Loved 2:16
12. When My Left Eye Jumps 6:15

Details

[Edit]

As its title suggests, Tommy Castro's seventh album is a note of thanks to the artists who inspired the West Coast guitarist/vocalist. While rocking R&B and blues greats like B.B. and Albert King, Chuck Berry and Buddy Guy are obvious choices, Castro digs deep into their catalogs. He covers B.B. King's "Bad Case of Love," Albert King's "Everybody Want to Go to Heaven," Berry's "Tulane," and Guy's version of Willie Dixon's "When My Left Eye Jumps." More interesting, though, are Castro's '60s soul roots which he acknowledges in versions of songs made popular by Wilson Pickett (a powerful "I Found a Love"), Sam & Dave (Curtis Salgado joins in on a duet of "I Take What I Want"), Otis Redding (a thumping "Lovey Dovey" with Sista Monica Parker taking the Carla Thomas part) and James Brown (a swinging "I Feel That Old Feeling Coming On," which is a departure from Brown's usual funky work). Less successful are Castro's takes on Howlin' Wolf's "44" where his direct approach loses the original's voodoo marching vibe. John Lee Hooker's "Serve You Right to Suffer" sounds more like the J. Geils Band's cover than Hooker's spooky approach, with an ill-advised rocking middle section that misses the song's intent. Much better is Castro's succinct, sharp cover of Muddy Waters' "I Wants to Be Loved" where he toughens up the attack but maintains the tune's defiant drive. Pianist John Turk helps fatten the sound, keeping it raw with his work on the album's slow blues workouts such as Guy's "...Left Eye" and Ray Charles' "Come Back Baby." Castro is loose and tough, with his gritty voice and thick, clean guitar lines sounding confident and assertive. More than just a holding pattern until he writes new tunes, Gratitude is not only an enjoyable peek inside Tommy Castro's influences but a fascinating compilation of generally underexposed material from blues, soul and R&B greats.