“John Street” is an extremely special and well-made project that is by far the best album Mike Montrey ever has made, including the two with Water.
I’ve always liked how Mike Montrey Band can get soulful and funky like Prince, then downright down home, like Neil Young, depending on the track and its arrangement.
Montrey does that with his new masterpiece, John Street, but particularly flexes his Young muscles with the help of sought-after session player Dave Pearlman on pedal steel and dobro. An exceptional lead guitarist in his own right, Montrey leaves most of the lead parts to Pearlman and focuses on some tasty pickin’ ‘n’ strummin’ on acoustic and the best use of a whistle since Otis Redding’s “(Sittin’ on) The Dock of the Bay.”
A great deal of help also comes from Grammy-winning producer-engineer Jim Scott (Wilco, Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, Santana, Tedeschi Trucks Band) and keyboardist John Ginty (Robert Randolph & the Family Band, Citizen Cope).
With his signature Hammond B3, Ginty helps Montrey pour his soul into this record, while Scott also gets fantastic performances out of longtime Montrey bassist Anthony Duca, co-vocalist Jen Augustine and new drummer Rob Smith. He weaves them all together nicely with a wonderful sense of timing that heightens the emotions of each song, such as with the steel guitar and whistle that come in after a cacophony that seems like a false ending on “Slow and Easy.” Scott also contributes a fun toy piano on some tracks.
The many excellent duets and counterharmonies Augustine offers on about half of the 11-song album is another strength. Her smoky alto complements Montrey’s soulful, scratchy falsetto beautifully, especially on the fun-hearted “Coffee and Suspenders,” the call-and-response of “Everytime the Sun Begins to Show,” the aforementioned “Slow and Easy,” the Neil Young-inspired “Aether and Chaos, Beauty and Wine,” and “I Am a Freight Train,” which recalls Kid Rock and Sheryl Crow.
John Street also features some of Montrey’s strongest lyrics, such as on the opening angst of “Blanket Full of Dust”: “So can you hear me now, I’m screaming with my voice worn down. My soul is tired, but it’s full of hope, and leaps and bounds. I need a railing to hold onto before I hit the ground. I need a chisel and some sandpaper to scrape away the rust and stagger towards my blanket full of dust.”
I also like the visual line in “Coffee and Suspenders”: “Like chameleons in the forest haze, we’re dancing in our own charade, disguised in the afternoon.”
And then there’s a harvest of gold in two Neil Young-inspired tracks. In the aforementioned “Aether,” Montrey shares, “Sometimes I think that it’s all just a sham/Hour by hour, minute by minute, through each grain of sand/One second you’re older, one second you told her, one second you ran/And in an instant he grew up, before you knew what, who, where or when.” And then in “For Her,” he pines, “You leave that window closed for rain, always ready for the doom, impending pain. But you left your dreams outside to rot, like it or not.”
This is the first album of the year to make me think about my Top 10 list. I am very confident that John Street will sit there all year long.
Check it out with Mike Montrey Band’s new live pedal steel player, Steve Benson, when they celebrate the release of John Street on March 2 at the Wonder Bar in Asbury Park, opening for Gregg Allman Band guitarist Scott Sharrard; and March 3 at John & Peter’s in New Hope, Pa.
Tour dates will include March 14-15 at SXSW in Austin, Texas; March 23-24 at the Cape May Singer-Songwriter Festival; and March 28 at the Bitter End in New York.
Bob Makin is the reporter for MyCentralJersey.com/entertainment and a former managing editor of The Aquarian Weekly, which launched this column in 1988. Contact him at makinwaves64@yahoo.com. Like Makin Waves at facebook.com/makinwavescolumn.
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