For over thirty years now the Fabulous Thunderbirds have reigned as the kings of rockin' blues, becoming an institution in the genre. Although the line-up has changed a time or two - frontman Kim Wilson being the only constant - the T-Birds have managed to weather musical currents with a revolving door of great guitarists (Jimmie Vaughan, Duke Robillard, Kid Ramos) and Wilsons distinctive, original and highly personal interpretation of the blues.
Thunderbirds Return To The Studio
Painted On is both the bands first studio album in eight years (ten if you dismiss the session-player dominated High Water) as well as the debut of new six-string tandem Nick Curran and Kirk Fletcher. Curran, known as a bit of a blues/rockabilly prodigy after stints with Kim Lenz and Ronnie Dawson, is a successful solo artist in his own right, and proves to be a good fit into the Thunderbirds sound. The other band members help provide a depth the Thunderbirds have not enjoyed since their mid-1980s heyday.
Fletcher, from Wilsons solo band, is a quality musician of some subtlety, easily playing off Currans hellraising leads. Ronnie James Weber is a solid bassist and another veteran of Wilsons solo work while drummer Jimi Bott is an in-demand sideman with over 60 entries on his session discography. Rounding out the sound is pianist Gene Taylor, with the longest tenure of any band member, drawing on experience earned as a member of Canned Heat and the Blasters.
Painted On Blues
The resulting chemistry between Wilson and these bandmates is nothing short of astounding. Painted On showcases the bands musical muscles as they flex their way through a dozen songs that run the gamut from heavy blooze-rock ("Hard Knock" and "Got To Get Out") to Doug Sahm-inspired Tex-Mex ("Two Time Fool"). Along the way, the Thunderbirds try their collective hand at honky-tonk country ("Only Daddy Thatll Walk The Line") and New Orleans-flavored R&B ("Feeling My Way Around") with great results.
The highest peaks reached by Painted On, however, are Wilsons energetic duet with the Detroit Cobras Rachel Nagy on the soul rave-up "Love Speaks Louder Than Words" and on Currans original tune "You Torture Me," a guitar-driven rocker that displays both Currans six-string prowess and Wilsons legendary mouth harp work.
The Reverend's Bottom Line
For long-time fans of the Fabulous Thunderbirds, Painted On represents a welcome return to form, easily the bands best effort since Tuff Enuff twenty years ago as well as a creative high point in the T-Birds legendary career. The mix of new players has clearly re-energized Wilson, leading to as potent and powerful a collection of performances as has ever been featured under the Fabulous Thunderbirds name. (Tone-Cool Records)





