Four star review by All Music Guide: http://www.allmusic.com
"Massachusetts native George Kelly has made his home in the Detroit area since 1995, which may account for the strong blues and soul base he brings to the songs on Lucid Intervals, his [+]Four star review by All Music Guide: http://www.allmusic.com
"Massachusetts native George Kelly has made his home in the Detroit area since 1995, which may account for the strong blues and soul base he brings to the songs on Lucid Intervals, his debut album. A fine slide guitarist, Kelly is also a careful and literate songwriter, somewhat in the John Hiatt vein, and his straight, unaffected vocals on these tracks allows each song room to breathe. The ensemble playing is crisp and full, and the overall tone and sound of the album is a bit like Steely Dan playing the blues. The standout track here is the six minute 'Otis Spann', which unfolds as an intimate homage to the great blues pianist. The concluding cut, 'Pyrrhic Victory', is also strong, and has an historic and epic reach that marks Kelly as an artist and writer to watch." - Steve Leggett, AMG, 11/03
From Blues On Stage http://www.mnblues.com/cdreview/2004/georgekelly-lucid-ja.html
"...Lucid Intervals, strictly speaking, is not a blues album, but it's a great album: a record of bluesy, heartland rock with serious songwriting aspiration. Intervals is Kelly's first album, and it serves notice that he's after big game. The opening track, "Get What U Pay For"... wearily recounts the price you pay to get to the top, and Kelly's slide guitar adds a dimension of resignation to the song's unfolding. The following tracks prove Kelly adept at love-lost balladry ("Bad memories of days gone by/Waste the present, God knows why"), but the album truly finds its groove midway through. "Bluesman" is the only 12-bar number on the album, and it's an effortless, gritty blues. The following cut, "Otis Spann," sounds like the long-lost cousin of "Sultans of Swing," as Kelly bemoans that the Muddy Waters pianist is "buried in an unmarked grave". The final three album tracks, "Love Interest", "Desert Island" and "Pyrrhic Victory" demonstrate just how powerful a base blues and jazz can be to writing pop songs; the jazzy arrangements here elevate the songs far above typical AOR fare, and the lyrics hold their own. Try to imagine what Dire Straits would sound like if Mark Knopfler played slide guitar, and you're on the right track.
Over the course of Lucid Intervals, we've heard, in addition to your basic band li
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