Sugar Ray & the Bluetones
Boston, Massachusetts, United States | Established. Jan 01, 1979 | MAJOR
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Today, GuitarWorld.com presents the exclusive premiere of "Hungry But Happy," a new song by Sugar Ray and The Bluetones.
The track is from the band's new album, Living Tear to Tear, which will be released August 19 through Severn Records.
Sugar Ray and The Bluetones — a storied blues ensemble that has backed Otis Rush, Jimmy Rogers, Joe Turner, Roosevelt Sykes, Big Walter Horton, Big Mama Thornton and JB Hutto — are marking their 35th anniversary with this new album.
The hard-swinging band fully absorbed the lessons learned from Chicago blues masters, making them one of New England’s most beloved blues institutions. The Boston Phoenix called the band's frontman "a fixture on the national blues scene. [Sugar Ray] Norcia's elegant, emotive voice is his calling card [alongside his] rich, melodic harmonica blowing."
Besides Norcia, the band features Monster Mike Welch on guitar, bassist Mudcat Ward, pianist Anthony Geraci and drummer Neil Gouvin.
"'Hungry But Happy' features my Gretsch G5420T, Barber B-Custom Cool Overdrive, Strymon Flint Reverb, Strymon El Capistan Delay and a modified Fender Pro Junior amp," says Monster Mike Welch. For more about Welch's gear, head here.
Sugar Ray and The Bluetones have an incredible history, from early tours with Big Walter Horton; collaborations with Ronnie Earl; backing legendary artists in Cambridge and on tour; being invited for a residency at Chicago’s legendary South Side juke joint Theresa’s, musical home of Junior Wells (though they had to decline due to other commitments) and earning five Blues Music Awards nominations for their last album, Evening, including Band of the Year and Album of the Year. - Guitar World
Sugar Ray & the Bluetones kicked off their latest tour early last month, promoting the release of their upcoming album Living Tear to Tear, due out August 19. Celebrating their 35th year, the Bluetones boast a remarkable resume, including performances with Big Walter Horton, Joe Turner Jimmy Rogers and more, along with their five Blues Music Awards nominations for 2011’s Evening. Fronted by Grammy nominee Sugar Ray Norcia on vocals and harmonica, the Bluetones also include guitarist Monster Mike Welch, bassist Mudcat Ward, pianist Anthony Geraci and drummer Neil Gouvin.
Living Tear to Tear‘s “Here We Go,” a classic hard-driving blues number, finds Norcia right in his element. His voice is soulfully engaging, in sync with Welch’s guitar and his own masterful harmonica playing. Listen to “Here We Go” below, exclusively through Elmore. - Elmore Magazine
Sugar Ray Norcia has a soul depth to his voice. There are moments on Living Tear to Tear, like the slow drag in “It's Never as Bad as It Looks”, where Ray’s vocal dips down to a perfectly rounded grumble that is reminiscent of soul men like Brook Benton. There is a lot of soul coming from the tune, though the Blues is where the band took their name, and they never travel far from their source, evident on lines from the song such as ‘it’s never as bad as it looks, it’s never as bad as it seems.’ Things were put in motion in 1977, when Sugar Ray and Neil Gouvin were in southern Rhode Island while Ronnie Earl was up in Boston, all three making inroads for their Blues. When Ronnie and Michael ‘Mudcat’ Ward recruited Neil as drummer he brought along his buddy Sugar Ray for vocals and harmonica. The four-piece worked but adding Anthony Geraci on keyboards as a fifth member locked the sound and the group was name Sugar Ray and the Bluetones.
The Bluetones current line-up includes ‘Monster’ Mike Welch on lead guitar on their most recent Severn Records release, Living Tear to Tear. Mike blues guitar leads weave through a band that has a natural intuitiveness due to their long-time playing as a unit. Living Tear to Tear rips a hole to climb into the album with Ray’s harmonica and the band roll right on through with opener “Rat Trap”. Sugar Ray and the Bluetones dive low knowing the only way to get a little bit right is to ‘go out and get drunk again’ in “Misery”, they raise their heads a little bit to share that “I Dreamed Last Night” that love once again came back in only to leave again each morning on waking, and the guys saunter in to warn that sleep could be bad news but “Things Could Be Worse” when dreams become nightmares. The piano intros “Hungry But Happy” as organ chords surround and guitar notes light the way before laying out an instrumental spread for “Ribs” that will stick to you with the sweet harmonica sauce that Sugar Ray’s slathers on the song. Living Tear to Tear is an album from a band who have made their group an integral part of their fans lives and artists intent on keeping tradition alive by keeping it live. - The Alternate Root
Sugar Ray & the Bluetones have added an entertaining gem to their long list of album releases with Living Tear to Tear. From the first notes blown through Sugar Ray Norcia’s harmonica on “Rat Trap,” the album is a pleasure to hear.
It’s not surprising that harpist Sugar Ray Norcia, a former member of Roomful of Blues, is a master at his craft. Roomful of Blues, a fine outfit in its own right, has become a stamp of quality for its alumni. The lexicon of blues masters who, along with Norcia, have been affiliated with Roomful of Blues include guitarists Duke Robillard and Ronnie Earl, trumpeter/cornetist Al Basile, and pianists Al Copley and Ron Levy – all musical standouts.
Norcia, who founded the first version of the Bluetones in the late 1970s, formally became a member of Roomful of Blues in the early 1990s. But he had been playing with those guys for years. Ronnie Earl, who took over from Duke Robillard as lead guitar, had been one of the original Bluetones. Norcia’s decades of experience playing with great musicians ala Roomful of Blues shows on Living Tear to Tear. The album includes a collection of original tunes written not only by Norcia but also by Bluetones Monster Mike Welch, Michael “Mudcat” Ward, and Anthony Geraci, with a couple of standards added in. “Here We Go,” which you can stream below, was written by Welch.
On Living Tear to Tear, the Bluetones’ tight lineup includes Welch on guitar, Ward on bass, Geraci on piano, and Neil Gouvin on drums. - Twangville
We’ve all heard the adage “The more things change, the more they stay the same”, and perhaps no blues band today more resembles that comment than the storied Sugar Ray and the Bluetones, who have certainly seen their share of change in the now three and a half decades since their formation. Among those changes of course have been numerous shufflings in personnel, with the Bluetones’ founding guitarist – a fellow by the name of Ronnie Earl – leaving the band relatively early in its history to replace Duke Robillard in another New England-based outfit, Roomful of Blues, and original drummer Neil Gouvin making a similarly hasty exit, going on to record with the likes of Luther Allison, Otis Grand, Debbie Davies, and former bandmate Earl. And even bandleader, vocalist and harmonica player Sugar Ray Norcia spent some time with another band during the 1990s when he served as lead singer for Roomful of Blues (with former bandmate Earl having already set off on his own by Norcia’s arrival).
Sugar_Ray_Bluetones_Living_Tear_to_Tear (240x240)So it’s pretty amazing really that four of the five musicians who play on the Bluetones’ new album Living Tear to Tear (Severn Records) also happen to be four of the band’s original members – finding Norcia on vocals and harmonica, Michael “Mudcat” Ward on bass, Anthony Geraci on keyboards, and Gouvin back on drums, all of whom celebrate their 60th birthdays in 2014 – with Earl’s spot on guitar having been filled by a series of other faces through the years until the band brought on its current guitarist in 2001, a brilliant young player in Monster Mike Welch.
As you might expect from a band that’s played together for so long (even the “new” member Welch has been with them now for more than a decade), the Bluetones are about as tight a band musically as you could ask for, both live (as we had the chance to observe when we caught them this winter during the Lancaster Roots & Blues Festival, where we shot these pics) as well as in the studio, as Living Tear to Tear once again proves. Whether you attribute it to their many years of experience playing together, the professionalism of its individual members, or both, the band is also one of the best we’ve seen or heard at being able to grab a listener’s attention and maintain it, tearing from one great song to the next with ease.
Sugar Ray Norcia & Monster Mike Welch
Sugar Ray Norcia & Monster Mike Welch
Take, for example, this latest CD: it all kicks off with the raucous roadhouse swing of “Rat Trap”, followed by the swaying, soulful Mike Welch-penned “Here We Go”, and then on to the gritty midtempo cooker “Things Could Be Worse”, which really helps put things into perspective with its chorus of “you should quit your complainin’, and be thankful first/ because for every bad, I know there’s a worse”.
From there, they move to the shuffling, steady groove of the album’s title track, while perhaps no tune better says the blues than the tough sounds, vocals and lyrics of the slow, simmering “Misery”, which, clocking in at just over eight minutes, ensures that listeners get their money’s worth in every way.
One other way the band does that is by including songs written by four of the five musicians, with bassist Mudcat Ward’s contribution coming in the deep, swaying, somewhat autobiographical thought-provoker “It’s Never as Bad as It Looks” detailing some of the extremes the band has seen through the years (the second part of the chorus being “ain’t never as good as it seems”).
Anthony Geraci
Anthony Geraci
There’s also a tasty instrumental in “Short Ribs” while the creeping “I Dreamed Last Night” is another impressive slow blues tune, one of two songs – along with the terrific title track – written by keyboardist Geraci, whose exquisite work on piano also nicely complements Welch’s passionate guitar and the plaintive wails of Norcia’s harmonica. That’s followed by a solid take on the Sonny Boy Williamson classic “Ninety Nine”, a bit of a country ballad in “Our Story”, and the jazzy “Hungry But Happy” with its moral of “Give me a cold dinner with some lovin’, not a good hot meal and a cold, cold wife” before the album concludes on the distorted vocals and sweltering blues of “Nothing But the Devil” (Lightnin’ Slim, Johnny Winter).
As usual with this band of brothers, the solos are modest and well-chosen, with the mixing and mastering (or lack of it, according to Ward, who told us in our exclusive interview with him that Living Tear to Tear may represent the best example of the band’s abilities yet, recorded live in the studio in “mostly first – and only – takes”) allowing each of these talented musicians to be heard distinctly without drowning out any of their colleagues.
Michael "Mudcat" Ward
Michael “Mudcat” Ward
Here’s our full Q&A with the band’s longtime bassist Michael “Mudcat” Ward, who has appeared on more than 50 albums to-date, including Hubert Sumlin’s Grammy-nominated About Them Shoes, where we talk about the band’s history, some of the artists with whom he’s played – and one he never had the chance to – over the years, and how he got his start on the bass, among other topics.
The BluesPowR Blog (BluesPowR): Hi, Mudcat. Thanks for taking the time to answer some questions. First, how’d you get the nickname “Mudcat”?
Michael “Mudcat” Ward (MMW): “Mudcat” is simply a nickname, with no real significance.
During one of his stays with Ronnie Earl and me in 1979 to play Massachusetts and Rhode Island, over a bottle of Seagrams VO, we asked Big Walter Horton if he had an idea for a nickname for me. He proffered “Shorty” off the top of his head, perhaps thinking of the great Chicago bassist Lafayette “Shorty” Gilbert (Howlin’ Wolf, Eddie Shaw). Odd choice for me, measuring in at 5’11” in my stocking feet at the time. Needless to say, that name didn’t stick.
I opted for Mudcat (or Mud or Cat) and it’s been a name I’ve been answering to ever since. Seems like a befitting and respectable handle for a bass player holding down the bottom.
BluesPowR: The band is celebrating its 35th anniversary in 2014 with the release of your sixth album on Severn Records, Living Tear to Tear. Do you have a favorite song off the new album?
MMW: My favorite cut on the most recent CD is “Misery”, written by Sugar Ray Norcia, and fully improvised by every player in the moment of the recording session. It’s a slow blues in B natural, but beyond that generic description, it exemplifies what contemporaneous, improvisational blues playing is all about. Reactions from each player in different spaces, calls and responses, goading, playing off of, responding – the fundamental interaction of all the players creates a viscerally exciting experience and is a deep part of the tradition which, in my view, has seen a lot of loss in recent times.
BluesPowR: Four of the five musicians who play on this album are original members of the band, with guitarist Monster Mike Welch having joined the rest of you in 2001. What is it about this particular group of guys that has kept you together/coming back together this long, and what has Welch brought to the band? How does he compare to the band’s original guitarist, Ronnie Earl?
MMW: The four “original members” were on the road before Monster Mike was even born. That’s truly hard to fathom. But we’ve known him an awfully long time.
Monster Mike Welch
Monster Mike Welch
Drummer Neil Gouvin and I were involved in a recording session set up for Mike in Memphis when he was very young, under the auspices of the original House of Blues. We worked with Jim Dickinson, great producer and great piano player. The famous Memphis Horns were also a part of it, and it was indeed an incredible experience. The recording, alas, never was released.
I wrote a song for Mike for that session inspired by the recent death of Albert King (“Memphis Mourns Albert”) on which Jim Dickinson played exquisite piano. I knew even then that Mike would become an important part of the American blues lineage, so to speak.
I can’t compare him to Ronnie Earl nor can I compare Ronnie Earl to Mike Welch. They are very different players, different types of players, both with an unbending respect for all styles of blues and the players who created and create it. They carry on the tradition with relentless dignity.
BluesPowR: You nicely document the band’s early history on the Bluetones website, in which you relate such stories as the whole band having to share a single motel room and limiting your survival to a diet of potato chips and coffee, having to enlist a U.S. consulate official’s help to get paid for a gig in Spain, and being cheated out of royalty payments by a record label; what kept you and the band going through these kinds of challenges and since?
MMW: Our love of the music, of blues, quite simply has kept us going amidst all the challenges. We love to play. In my case, I still feel I need to play.
BluesPowR: You wrote the song “It’s Never as Bad as It Looks” that appears on the new album. This is obviously somewhat autobiograhical – talking about driving in broke-down clunkers and traveling from Maine to California one week and then on to Canada to New Orleans the following – as well as a good way of approaching life. Is there anything more you’d care to offer on that song’s lyrics or songwriting in general?
MMW: It may be that all blues songs are autobiographical, some to more of a degree than others. When I wrote “(I’m Gonna Break Into) Folsom Prison” (Hands Across the Table), obviously I wasn’t writing in a literal sense, but the underlying message of the devastation of outsourcing is what I meant to convey, if figuratively.
Or, to take another example, when I wrote “Burial Season” (from Sugar Ray and the Bluetones featuring Monster Mike Welch), it was infused by very real events in the world at that time, including the deaths of my sister-in-law, the Boston blues disc jockey Mai Cramer, and the mother of a friend, the late harmonica player, John McGrath. An instrumental, inspired by what took place in NYC – “From Now On This Morning (11 September)” (from the same album), has a very personal connection with me. In a different sense, I wrote “Hope Valley” (heard on the Bluetones’ first album Knockout on Rounder Records) about Sugar’s hometown. All autobiographical but in not-so-similar ways.
BluesPowR: Is there any one particular song from the band’s history you most enjoy playing live?
MMW: There really isn’t a song I like playing best. I do like when Sugar Ray decides to call off a number we haven’t played in ten or even twenty years, which can happen, and which is an amazing thing to be able to do when you think about it. Right now we are consciously trying to play the material off the latest CD, but there is an immense amount of songs that we have played over the years—more than we can remember, actually. There’s a lot to draw from.
Also, Sugar isn’t afraid to play a traditional blues number we might know from hearing in the past or in the van, say, but one we may never have performed before. Believe me when I say it is usually an incredible performance and speaks volumes to the mastery of the idiom by these five consummate blues players.
BluesPowR: Through the band and individually, you’ve had the opportunity to support such artists as Hubert Sumlin, Junior Wells, Buddy Guy, Memphis Slim, James Cotton, Lowell Fulson, Otis Rush, Big Mama Thornton, Big Walter Horton, J.B. Hutto, and Big Joe Turner. Is there one artist with whom you never got a chance to play that you wish you could have?
MMW: I never had the chance to play with Otis Spann, and I just wasn’t born soon enough to make that possible. I did make two CDs with another Muddy Waters piano-playing alumnus, Pinetop Perkins, which was an honor indeed.
(In addition to the impressive list of musicians noted above, Mudcat has recorded and performed with such artists as Roosevelt Sykes, Lazy Lester, Charlie Musselwhite, David Honeyboy Edwards, Snooky Pryor, Carey Bell, Irma Thomas, Billy Branch, Kim Wilson, Jimmie Vaughan, Willie “Big Eyes” Smith, Chuck Berry, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, Maria Muldaur, John Hammond, Jerry Portnoy, Eddie “Cleanhead” Vinson, Robert Lockwood Jr., Billy Boy Arnold, Levon Helm, Jimmy Rogers, Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Rory Block, Eric Bibb, Duke Robillard, Bob Margolin, J. Geils, Zora Young, Van Morrison, Jimmy McGriff, and Jay McShann.)
BluesPowR: Any advice for aspiring young blues artists? Is there anything else you’d care to add?
MMW: I can’t offer much in the way of advice. I owe a lot to guitarist Ronnie Earl, obviously perhaps, and pianist/organist Benmont Tench of Tom Petty’s Heartbreakers, not so obviously, perhaps. Here’s why: I went to a boarding school in the 10th grade. I had some gigging experience as a piano player, and in the new school, searched for blues players of any sort that I could play with. The best (and only) band of musicians with any desire to play blues included Ben Tench, whose piano-playing abilities far outshined mine back then (and still do.) The group needed a bass player, and Ben told me if I could exchange my electric piano for a bass guitar during the Thanksgiving break, I could have the gig. I followed his instructions, made the switch in a pawn shop in Lewiston, Maine, and returned to find I was holding down the bass chair that very next weekend. I had to learn fast. That was the humble beginning of my journey playing blues bass.
BluesPowR: Are there any albums you feel best represent the band’s abilities or sound, particularly for new listeners?
MMW: I think this latest CD, Living Tear To Tear, is the best example of the band for a couple of reasons. One, it was recorded “live” in the studio, mostly first (and only) takes, and it is real, sincere, heartfelt and unaltered or undoctored from an engineering standpoint. The second reason: the CD experience is a very close representation to hearing the current band – not always the case for bands, or for us. Earlier CDs, however great musically, do not all accurately reflect the band you can expect to see live in concert, with either maybe a different guitarist, or perhaps a horn section. We do appear live on occasion with horns, but that is infrequent (and depends upon the gig and its finances).
And third, the contents of the music, whether original or the few covers, are, in my view, blue and traditional, and manifestly without efforts to be commercial. The identity of the band the Bluetones really is present. - Blueu PowR
Discography
Knockout - 1989 - Varrick
Don't Stand in My Way - 1991 - Bullseye Blues
Rockin' Sugar Daddy - 2001 - Records
Sugar Ray & the Bluetones Featuring Monster Mike Welch - 2003 - Severn Records
Hands Across the Table - 2005 - Severn Records
My Life, My Friends, My Music - 2007 - Severn Records
Evening - 2011 - Severn Records
Living Tear to Tear - 2015 - Severn Records
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Bio
Sugar Ray and the Bluetones begin their 35th year of bringing you the best in blues music with their 2014 release Living Tear to Tear (Severn) which debuted at #1 on the Living Blues Album Chart.
Singer, harmonica player, and songwriter Sugar Ray Norcia has been leading this exciting band since its inception–but also spent seven years fronting Roomful of Blues, and was a part of the original line-up of Ronnie Earl and the Broadcasters. You can hear him on noteworthy recordings with these two great bands as well as on recordings with Michelle Willson, Pinetop Perkins, Big Walter Horton and over fifty other artists. Sugar Ray earned his third Grammy nomination (2014) for his acclaimed performance on Remembering Little Walter (Blind Pig) which garnered two Blues Music Awards (Memphis, TN). Sugar Ray’s composition “Last Words Of A Fool” was nominated for “Best Song” by the Blues Foundation (Memphis, TN.)
“Monster” Mike Welch, aptly named by Dan Aykroyd at the original House of Blues in Cambridge, MA, at the ripe old age of 13, has been wowing audiences the world over. This youngest member of the band has held the guitar chair with the Bluetones for now over thirteen years, longer than any other guitarist in the band’s history. With a well-established recording career of his own, the guitarist/singer and composer continues to do solo projects and is in demand for recordings with many other artists. Most recently, he can be heard on releases by The Mannish Boys (Delta Groove), Duke Robillard (Stoney Plain), Sugaray Rayford (Delta Groove), and has also been featured on a recording with the late singer/guitarist Johnny Winter.
If you were to think of any modern blues legend chances are that pianist/organist Anthony Geraci has backed him or her up, including B.B. King, Otis Rush, Big Mama Thornton, Chuck Berry, Big Water Horton and countless others, all embellished by Anthony’s fiery piano accompaniment. Mr. Geraci was nominated for a Grammy in 2000 for his work on Super Harps I (Telarc) that also features James Cotton, Charlie Musselwhite, Billy Branch and Sugar Ray Norcia. He can be heard on Super Harps II (Telarc), on Ronnie Earl’s first two albums, the modern-day classics Smokin’ and They Call Me Mr. Earl (Black Top), and on CDs in which Anthony takes on the role of bandleader, composer, arranger and, of course, performer extraordinaire.
Bassist Michael Mudcat Ward’s recording legacy is extensive. A partial list includes Jimmy Rogers, Big Walter Horton, Hubert Sumlin (along with Eric Clapton and Keith Richards), Levon Helm, Pinetop Perkins, Ronnie Earl, Sleepy LaBeef, and J. Geils’ & Magic Dick’s Bluestime. Mudcat, who doubles on standup and Fender bass, has performed with legends such as Big Joe Turner, Eddie “Cleanhead” Vinson, Buddy Guy & Jr. Wells, and blues pianists Memphis Slim, Sunnyland Slim, Lloyd Glenn and Roosevelt Sykes.
Drummer Neil Gouvin has been with Sugar Ray since they were both in high school together. In addition to playing on all the Bluetones’ recordings, Neil has been featured on John Hammond Jr.’s Grammy-nominated CD Found True Love (Virgin). Neil has also recorded with Otis Grand, Ike Turner, Joe Houston, and others.
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