Album Review: Bees Deluxe – Hallucinate

photo courtesy of Bees Deluxe

Album Review of Bees Deluxe: Hallucinate

Bees Deluxe‘s music is a unique, progressive combination of blues, jazz, and funky rock. On the band’s newest album Hallucinate, Conrad Warre (guitar, bass, vocals, trumpet, kaossilator, strings, keyboards), Carol Band (keyboards, vocals, harmonica), Paul Giovine (drums, percussion), and Adam Sankowski (bass guitar) are joined by a half-dozen additional musicians to round out the sound on various tracks. You can read the liner notes via this link for a glimpse at the other exceptional instrumentalists involved in this project.

The album has a cohesive sound, with an experimental bent permeating throughout, giving a jazz feeling and even an alternative progressive rock flavor to what is, if you dig deeply, primarily a blues album. The band refers to itself as Boston’s British/American acid blues, the “British” referring to guitarist Warre’s British origin, and who am I to argue with the description? I certainly can’t concoct a better description to this high-brow mélange of musical influences.

Bees Deluxe opens Hallucinate coolly with the rhythmically catchy “Sharkskin Suit,” then follows it immediately with the funky grooves of “When Is Yesterday.”

There’s a familiarity I feel for Bees Deluxe’s sound, and it comes from an entirely different – or seemingly entirely different – musical style. At least, there’s a similarity to an artist I’ve always thought of as a different genre. Notably, “Houdini” and “What’s Wrong with Me” both remind me of the Les Paul’s (The Paul’s) albums I’ve previously reviewed, and Warre’s vocals throughout hint just a bit (or quite a bit, as the case may be) at the vocal stylings found on Les Paul’s (The Paul’s)’s releases.

photo courtesy of Bees Deluxe

Back to Bees Deluxe, though, and there’s an originality in the band’s sound that makes its music difficult to categorize (blues and jazz with a bit of an old-school alt-pop-rock energy) but easy to enjoy. “Queen Midas” stands out as a song that might have stood a chance as a crossover song, with a soft-edged but still clearly punk attitude and aggression intertwined with the smoother overall music bed.

I’m especially drawn to a song that stands out by being so different, the smooth, keyboard-driven instrumental piece, “How to Play 96 Tears,” that lacks the edginess of the surrounding tracks. It’s just a really good, short piano number. The other instrumental piece on the record, “Gary Burton’s ex-Guitar Player Stole My Highschool Girlfriend and Now I Can’t Stop Dreaming About Her,” features some cool, contemplative guitar noodling, something you’ll need to replay the song to notice, since you spent the whole three minutes the first time through just reading the song title.

photo courtesy of Bees Deluxe

And finally, if you ever hear me call a song “hep,” as in “cool-but-old school,” it’d have to sound a lot like Bees Deluxe’s “Call Me Frank.”

I’ve already mentioned the two final songs on the album, “Houdini” and “What’s Wrong with Me,” the latter a catchy pop-jazz-blues groove that’ll leave you wanting more. Or, at least, to start over and play the album again.

Hallucinate is a solid entry from this I-suppose-they-must-be-blues-maybe outfit, one of the more unique – and uniquely talented – groups on the Boston music scene. I’m guessing it’ll be a groovy live performance; hopefully, I’ll find my way to one of their gigs one of these days.

 

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