After years of earning respect
from peers and audiences for playing behind better-known artists, noted
mandolinist/guitarist Tom Corbett stepped into the spotlight as bandleader
and songwriter with his warmly received 2001 solo album Upstairs at Charlie’s.
Since then, while remaining a popular sideman, he’s become a frequent
presence as frontman of his own well-regarded trio on the coffeehouse,
listening room and house concert circuits. Now, with his second album,
Cloudless Blue Sky, he’s further establishing himself as one of
the most versatile acoustic artists on the West Coast Americana scene.
Cloudless Blue Sky declares its distinctions right from the cover, with
a sterling list of folk, rock, blues and bluegrass pickers and singers,
including first-call players such as multi-instrumentalist Greg Leisz,
Los Lobos’ David Hidalgo and Victor Bisetti, harmony master Herb
Pedersen and critics’ darlings Robin & Linda Williams. Together
with former Desert Rose Band bassist Bill Bryson, harmonicat Tom Ball,
singer Jonathan McEuen, bassist Randy Tico, fiddler Phil Salazar, and
banjoist Bill Knopf and guitarist David Ferguson from Corbett’s
trio, they weave a dynamic musical tapestry with Corbett as he plays in
familiar fields of folk, acoustic swing and bluegrass. Longtime fans may
be surprised to hear him also venture into blues and reggae. Those only
familiar with his good-humored onstage persona will be even more surprised
to hear the sober “Hello Dad,” a deeply personal ballad he
wrote following his father’s death.
It was his father’s Vega banjo-mandolin that inspired 11-year-old
Corbett to start picking on old-time standards and absorbing the sounds
of Bill Monroe as well as newgrass mando gods like Sam Bush and David
Grisman. Those seminal influences can still be heard in his soulful playing.
After relocating from his native Ohio to California, high-profile stints
with acclaimed folk-bluegrass festival faves the Acousticats and Nitty
Gritty Dirt Band multi-instrumentalist John McEuen’s entertaining
String Wizards band earned him accolades and a loyal following. He’s
consistently active on L.A.’s acoustic music scene, playing mandolin
and guitar with numerous acts onstage and in the studio; he recorded several
tracks on Social Distortion frontman Mike Ness’ rootsy solo album
Cheating at Solitaire and joined McEuen, Jimmy Ibbotson, singer Jennifer
Warnes and Laurie Lewis in the award-winning 2002 DVD Nitty Gritty Surround.
More recently he took on one of those only-in-L.A. jobs: teaching TV/film
star Tom Selleck how to play ukulele for a role in a play.
All of those experiences inform Corbett’s confident performance
on the 12 songs comprising Cloudless Blue Sky. Against a backdrop of guitars,
hidalguera, Weissenborn, fiddles, mandolin, Dobro, accordion, banjo, harmonica,
congas and other percussion, he explores reggae (“Island Calypso”),
blues (“Something ’Bout the Blues”), mountain music
(Joe Stuart and Mitch Jaynes’ “The Whole World ’Round”)
and more familiar bluegrassy-folk. Throughout, he indulges his generous
sense of humor, particularly on upbeat numbers like “When I Get
My Wheels,” the requinto-flavored “Raging Bull” and
Scott Foxx’s “Fishin’” (a goofy attempt to share
his love of the sport with his beloved). He also revamps a song he contributed
to the Acousticats’ 1994 album Cat’s Meow “Rear View
Mirror,” and quietly shows off his dexterous command of guitar and
tenor banjo as well as his beloved mandolin on the instrumental “Mary’s
Kissin’ the Quaker.” It all adds up to an enjoyably eclectic
musical experience that’s a fine reflection of Corbett himself.©2001
Roundhole Records all rights reserved
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