St Paul & the Broken Bones - Sea of Noise CD
Grit, elemental rhythm, tight-as-a-drumhead playing, and a profound depth of feeling: these are the promises of a great soul band. And St. Paul & The Broken Bones deliver on those promises.
Front man Paul Janeway's handle "St. Paul" is a wry allusion to the vocalist's grounding in the church. Like many a legendary soul singer, Janeway, a native of the small town of Chelsea, Alabama, was raised on the gospel side, in a non-denominational, Pentecostal-leaning local church. Virtually no non-religious music could be heard in his devout household. Janeway says, "The only secular music that I heard at all was a '70s group called the Stylistics, and Sam Cooke. That was about it. The rest of it was all gospel music. When I was about 10 years old, I was groomed to be a minister. My goal in life until I was about 18 years old was to be a preacher."
The other members of the Broken Bones are all drawn from Alabama's deep talent pool. Guitarist Browan Lollar, from the Muscle Shoals area about 100 miles north of Birmingham, previously played with Jason Isbell's 400 Unit. "We never thought Browan would ever be interested in this band - he was too big-time for us," says Janeway. "Jesse had met him while he was on tour with another band out of Birmingham. He asked Browan to come to the studio, and he showed up. I think we caught him at the right time. He wasn't busy, and he said, 'Man, I really want to be a part of this.'"
Jasper, Alabama, native Andrew Lee signed on via his acquaintance with Phillips. "We just picked him up on the way to the studio," Janeway recalls. "Jesse said, 'I know this guy, why don't I just call him.' And 30 minutes later, he's sitting there playing drums on 'Sugar Dyed.' Andrew's just a hell of a drummer." Brass players Allen Bransetter and Ben Griner are both graduates of the music program at Birmingham's Samford University. Janeway says his vision of the band always called for a two-man horn section, a la the celebrated Memphis Horns, and he approached Griner, although the latter's main instrument was tuba. "I told Ben, 'Man, I've got to have horns. Do you think you can play trombone?' He said, 'I'll give it a shot.' And he brought Allen with him."
All six members share writing credit on 10 of the songs on Half The City, with Janeway contributing lyrics. "We firmly believe in a shared, communal writing process," the singer says. "These guys are extremely talented. The drummer wrote horn parts. Browan threw something in. It's very collective. We just get in a room. Sometimes we'll have the scales for a song, or sometimes we'll have this little riff. That's how we do it."
In Tanner -- who logged time at Muscle Shoals' aptly named FAME Studios, where scores of memorable soul records were cut -- St. Paul and the Broken Bones found a like-minded producer and label boss. Half The City is among the first releases on Single Lock Records, the imprint co-founded by Tanner, John Paul White of the Civil Wars, and Will Trapp
"When we started getting cranked up and nobody really knew who the hell we were, we got Ben to mix our original four-song EP," says Janeway. "We just hit it off. He said, 'Hey, guys, I'm in the process of starting this label. Obviously you can say no, but we'd love for you to be a part of it.' And we said, 'Hell, yeah.'"
Reaching back nearly 50 years to methods employed the great epoch of deep Southern soul, Tanner and the group eschewed studio trickery for an in-the-moment approach during sessions at the Nutthouse in Muscle Shoals, AL. Fittingly, the album was mixed at FAME. Janeway explains, "We said, 'We're doing this as old-school as we can.' We did it to tape. We did it live. What you hear is taken from about three takes, and we took the best take. I love it. It's raw. You hear all the scrapes." Special guests include Al Gamble on piano, organ and wurlitzer, Daniel Stoddard on pedal steel, Jamie Harper on baritone sax and Tanner on piano, organ and background vocals.
Half The City - vital, direct, emotionally affecting - presents the same engaged, high-voltage, in-the-pocket sound that St. Paul & The Broken Bones produce at their live dates, where Janeway's extroverted performing style enraptures his audiences.
"I'm going to be dancing, getting in the aisles, climbing on tables," he says. "That's just the way we do it. It really takes me back to church. There's not a lot of difference. When I get on stage, it's, 'All right, it's time to pour it on.'"
Track List:
1. Crumbling Light Posts, Pt. 1
2. Flow with It (You Got Me Feeling Like)
3. Midnight on the Earth
4. I'll Be Your Woman
5. All I Ever Wonder
6. Sanctify
7. Crumbling Light Posts, Pt. 2
8. Waves
9. Brain Matter
10. Burning Rome
11. Tears in the Diamond
12. Is It Me
13. Crumbling Light Posts, Pt. 3