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John Mayer Trio Live

John Mayer Trio Live in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $9.99
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Size: CD
What got into
John Mayer
? Sometime after the release of his 2003 sophomore album,
Heavier Things
, a perfectly pleasant affair that expanded on the dreamy, mellow
adult pop
of his breakthrough hit,
"Your Body Is a Wonderland,"
he decided that he just didn't want to follow that direction anymore. He started penning a monthly column for
Esquire
magazine, within which he hinted that his musical tastes were far broader than his recordings suggested, and then he started cameoing all over the place, appearing on albums by
Buddy Guy
,
Herbie Hancock
B.B. King
Eric Clapton
, and
John Scofield
-- heavy hitters one and all, yet none of them seemed to have much to do with
Mayer
's music, at least on the surface. These veterans recognized something within
's playing, but more importantly, he realized that he needed to push himself further and decided to expand his horizons by seizing the opportunity to play with these masters and then incorporating what he learned into his own music. He toured as a power trio with studio pros
Steve Jordan
and
Pino Palladino
and recorded the live album
Try!
while on the road. There are no two ways about it: anybody who dismissed
as a lite
Dave Matthews
wannabe based on his first two records will be forced to reassess him on the basis of this excellent record. While he still has some vocal tics that bring to mind
Matthews
and certainly shares an affection for lengthy live jams,
has developed serious chops that transcend boilerplate
jam band
rock
, where the groove and feel is more important than what's played. Here,
is pushed by
Jordan
Palladino
-- and he pays back the favor by giving them equal billing on the album's front cover, which is unusual for any
pop/rock
star of his popularity (the cover also marks the second
Blue Note
allusion in
's oeuvre, which is surely not a coincidence) -- and he rises to the challenge with muscular playing that's his best playing on record. Not just that, but there's a palpable grit to
-- and a sultry smoothness to the mellow numbers -- unheard on his previous studio albums. That alone would make
not just noteworthy, but a step forward for
. But what makes it more remarkable is that
takes an even greater risk by relying on new material for this album. There are two older songs --
"Something's Missing"
and the hit
"Daughters,"
both from
-- but the rest consists of covers of
Jimi Hendrix
Ray Charles
(
"Wait Until Tomorrow"
"I Got a Woman,"
respectively) and new songs that showcase
's earthier,
blues-rock
direction. Although he sometimes dips into
cliches -- particularly on the slow-crawling
"Out of My Mind"
-- it's only on occasion (and when he does tread that familiar ground, he does so with conviction), and the songs overall are his strongest, most ambitious set of tunes yet. And that's what's most impressive about
--
has expanded what he can do as a musician and a writer and in the process has definitively separated himself from the pack of sensitive, jammy modern singer/songwriters. Based on this, he has more heart, soul, ambition, and chops than the rest of them combined. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
John Mayer
? Sometime after the release of his 2003 sophomore album,
Heavier Things
, a perfectly pleasant affair that expanded on the dreamy, mellow
adult pop
of his breakthrough hit,
"Your Body Is a Wonderland,"
he decided that he just didn't want to follow that direction anymore. He started penning a monthly column for
Esquire
magazine, within which he hinted that his musical tastes were far broader than his recordings suggested, and then he started cameoing all over the place, appearing on albums by
Buddy Guy
,
Herbie Hancock
B.B. King
Eric Clapton
, and
John Scofield
-- heavy hitters one and all, yet none of them seemed to have much to do with
Mayer
's music, at least on the surface. These veterans recognized something within
's playing, but more importantly, he realized that he needed to push himself further and decided to expand his horizons by seizing the opportunity to play with these masters and then incorporating what he learned into his own music. He toured as a power trio with studio pros
Steve Jordan
and
Pino Palladino
and recorded the live album
Try!
while on the road. There are no two ways about it: anybody who dismissed
as a lite
Dave Matthews
wannabe based on his first two records will be forced to reassess him on the basis of this excellent record. While he still has some vocal tics that bring to mind
Matthews
and certainly shares an affection for lengthy live jams,
has developed serious chops that transcend boilerplate
jam band
rock
, where the groove and feel is more important than what's played. Here,
is pushed by
Jordan
Palladino
-- and he pays back the favor by giving them equal billing on the album's front cover, which is unusual for any
pop/rock
star of his popularity (the cover also marks the second
Blue Note
allusion in
's oeuvre, which is surely not a coincidence) -- and he rises to the challenge with muscular playing that's his best playing on record. Not just that, but there's a palpable grit to
-- and a sultry smoothness to the mellow numbers -- unheard on his previous studio albums. That alone would make
not just noteworthy, but a step forward for
. But what makes it more remarkable is that
takes an even greater risk by relying on new material for this album. There are two older songs --
"Something's Missing"
and the hit
"Daughters,"
both from
-- but the rest consists of covers of
Jimi Hendrix
Ray Charles
(
"Wait Until Tomorrow"
"I Got a Woman,"
respectively) and new songs that showcase
's earthier,
blues-rock
direction. Although he sometimes dips into
cliches -- particularly on the slow-crawling
"Out of My Mind"
-- it's only on occasion (and when he does tread that familiar ground, he does so with conviction), and the songs overall are his strongest, most ambitious set of tunes yet. And that's what's most impressive about
--
has expanded what he can do as a musician and a writer and in the process has definitively separated himself from the pack of sensitive, jammy modern singer/songwriters. Based on this, he has more heart, soul, ambition, and chops than the rest of them combined. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine