The same soil is David Michael Miller's second solo album and last year's poison Sipped follow-up. The sound is best described as "modern tradition." With a mix of blues, gospel and soul effects, Same Soil is a celebration of traditional root style. The album begins with the acoustic guitar-driven "All the Blues to You", which lays the foundation for the soulful songs of the entire album full of related themes. There is always enough familiarity to make you feel at home and enough to make you interested, but this is the second power of Same Soil. The first is the voice of David Michael Miller. This person has a voice that rarely matches. Dynamically he is always on the right mark, not sounding like his show off. Every line can complete his tongue completely easily. From the highest, most intense passages to the passages that have never been said; the characters of each melody and the soul of lyrics.
David explored songs by Muddy Waters, Jimmy Reed and Bo Diddley. The main paragraph of the fallen and dirty "Make me wrong, do me wrong" reference "Manish Boy" has taken a more modern transformation, which will make Muddy proud. "Getting their blues" is a fast-paced gospel of Bruce Jam, not just a nod to Robert Randolph. "My Friend" is an affectionate blues ballad with saxophone and guitar works, reminiscent of the early Tom Waits. When David's voice filled Robert Cray's soul and spirit and Al Green's suggestion, Goosebumps really started. He absorbed a lot of influences and styles, but still sounds very natural and always simple. This may sound a bit exaggerated but every track on the same soil is a total winner. This is one of the rare albums and you won't skip looking for good songs. "Just Ride" is a great blues rocker. "Shoes To Shine" is a dynamic horror/soul number with amazing chord changes, as well as a solo part of the limbs trading with saxophone and guitar.
If you don't mention the band led by David to give life to the song, including keyboard players Jim Ehinger [Bonnie, Raitt, Albert Collins, Billy Vera and The Beaters], saxophonist Jason Moynihan [Buddy Guy] and drummer Carlton Campbell [Campbell Brothers] ]. Everyone gives 100%, but no one is "over-blowing" and they can perfectly serve the production of songs, David's voice and roots.
David Michael Miller has the potential to go anywhere and do anything in the business he wants. He can easily become the next great blues superstar, Robert Cray or Bonnie Reiter. At the same time, we can lean toward the same soil while seeing future development.
Orignal From: David Michael Miller: The same soil review
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