All
Music Guide
July
2007
'MISTICO'
CD REVIEW
By Sean Westergaard
Despite
lineup changes, Charlie Hunter's trio has always
consisted of a sax player and a drummer in
addition to Hunter's seven- or eight-string
guitar heroics. After about a decade with that
template, John Ellis added a bit of keyboard
and melodica to his sax for Copperopolis, almost
presciently setting the stage for Mistico.
With Ellis moving on to concentrate on a solo
career, Hunter decided to form a brand new
trio, bringing in Simon Lott on drums and Erik
Deutsch on keyboards. That's right: no sax.
The varied keyboards vs. sax give the album
a sound that's less overtly jazz than previous
efforts, but Copperopolis also showcased Hunter
and company in more of a rock mood and that
trend continues on Mistico. Hunter also brought
in Scott Harding (aka Scotty Hard) to co-produce,
pushing the envelope a bit and bringing some
of the subtle magic studio touches he has used
with the likes of Sex Mob, DJ Logic and Medeski,
Martin & Wood. Hunter always gets great
tone, whether playing with tremolo ("Estranged"),
wah-wah/fuzz ("Special Shirt") or a nice distorted
twang ("Balls"). His whole playing concept
is totally unique and impressive from both
a technical and musical standpoint. Deutsch
switches freely between piano and Rhodes, sometimes
adding some more spaced out sounds via Casio
and acting as a worthy foil to Hunter's guitar.
Lott is in the pocket all the way, giving the
tunes just what they need rhythmically (and
even getting a brief solo on "Spoken Word").
And it's another great set of songs too, from
the soul-influenced "Speakers Built In" to
the slow and slinky title cut (with cool dub
effects) to the rocking "Balls" and the loopy
melody of "Wizard Sleeve." Mistico is another
winner from a guy with an uncommonly consistent
track record of quality releases. The Charlie
Hunter Trio is dead. Long live the Charlie
Hunter Trio.
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