Single Review: Pat Smillie – “Lovers & the Leavers”

Pat Smillie – Lovers & the Leavers album cover

image courtesy of Pat Smillie

by Eric Harabadian, Contributing Blogger

Single Review of Pat Smillie: “Lovers & the Leavers”

“Lovers & the Leavers” is the first in a series of singles Detroit-born and raised singer-songwriter Pat Smillie is releasing through Fat Bank Music. And the song fits comfortably in Smillie’s wheelhouse of blues and soul-infused rock. The veteran raspy-voiced soul man belts out an acoustic-based ballad that speaks to his rich observations on love and the games people play.

The track is co-written and produced by Smillie’s main man, guitarist Josh Ford. Also on board are Johnny Rhoades (acoustic guitar/electric guitar), Dale Grisa (keyboards), Rocco Popielarski (bass), Todd Glass (drums), Tina Howell (backing vocals), and Ashley Stevenson (backing vocals). This is, primarily, the studio group that Smillie has been using the past few years, and they certainly have risen to the occasion here.

Perhaps the first thing you glean, a few notes in, is Smillie’s sincerity and innate ability to spin a yarn. He’s a master storyteller and will stop you in your tracks with his authentic points of view. It’s a tight, radio-ready single that harkens back to the days of AM radio superstations like Windsor-Detroit’s CKLW. Smillie has all the vocal command and bluster of Bob Seger, Rod Stewart, and Frankie Miller combined. And the sweet sustained sounds of Ford’s slide work blended with Grisa’s Floyd Cramer-like piano trills set all the emotions of Smillie’s lyrics ablaze.

Pat Smillie and company are the future of Detroit music and carry the torch led by all those classic Motown artists, past and present, that have come before.

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