The Blue Jukebox
The Blue Jukebox is the twentieth studio album by British singer-songwriter Chris Rea, released in 2004 by his independent record label Jazzee Blue.[1] The cover artwork is inspired by Edward Hopper's Nighthawks painting.[2] Compared to the Dancing Down the Stony Road (2002) has a smoother and jazzier take on the blues.[5] SummaryIt is Rea's fourth studio album released since the founding of his independent record label Jazzee Blue in 2002 and release of Dancing Down the Stony Road, with which changed his music style from rock to blues oriented after his life-saving medic operation in the early 2000s.[6][7][8] It was released with cardboard packaging, matt paper, reproduction of illustrations, and 20-page booklet.[5][1] ReceptionIn The Press joint review with Eric Clapton's Me and Mr. Johnson, the album was given 5/5 stars considering it as "superb fusion of jazz and blues" in which guitar and piano are blended with saxophone among other instruments, highlighting the songs "Steel River Blues", "Restless Soul", "Long Is The Time", and "Hard Is The Road", and it is a "tribute to the influence Ry Cooder's style of guitar work" on his early career.[3] Giuliano Benassi in a 4/5 star review for laut.de considered that "the result is a mix of blues and jazz that goes well with the cover: in fact, it gives the impression of listening to an endless loop in a rainy night of a jukebox. There is no gap filler or inferior material here".[2] Music in Belgium also gave it the same score and concluded "it is an excellent CD with very dark climate. A special mention to the saxophonist who distills his masterful play throughout this album, but all the musicians are excellent".[9] Jörn Schlüter for German edition of Rolling Stone gave it 2/5 stars.[4] A reviewer of The Times commented, "The Blue Jukebox never matches, or tries to match, the raw intensity of Rea's Dancing Down the Stony Road. Instead, we get a smoother, jazzier take on the blues, although still with plenty of grit supplied by Rea's voice and his vibrant slide guitar, which slithers through."[10] Track listingAll songs written and composed by Chris Rea
PersonnelMusicians
Production
Charts
References
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