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June 13, 2007
gb Leighton: Good Times on Red Bull
by Janie Frantz
originally posted online at
http://www.rockmusicreview.com/soapbox/2007/GB_Leighton%3A_Good_Times_on_Red_Bull
gb Leighton is probably Minnesota’s best kept
secret. Brian Leighton, the front man for the band, has been
playing clubs in the Minneapolis region for almost a decade
and a half, drawing huge crowds from an ever growing loyal
fan base. He’s also one of the most productive songwriters
coming out of the Twin Cities. His concerts are high octane
parties that get people up and out of their seats, dancing
and singing along.
In the early days, gb Leighton burned a path through the US,
playing such clubs as Tramps in New York, Howin’ Wolf in New
Orleans, Mississippi Nights in St. Louis, and Bohager’s in
Baltimore. The band has sold out in 800 to 1200 seat venues
but continues to draw eager fans to area clubs, becoming
overwhelmingly one of Minnesota’s top-drawing bar bands.
Though Leighton has toured nationally less frequently
lately, he does take his musical wares down to Acapulco
every January for a week of non-stop music and fun.
Leighton has also opened for the BoDeans and bluesman Jonny
Lang at the Minnesota State Fair. He also has opened for Joe
Cocker at the Minneapolis’ State Theatre. Leighton and his
band appeared in a cameo and on the soundtrack for the
independent film, “The Marksman,” which was viewed at the
prestigious Sundance Film Festival in 1997.
His new six-piece band stands solidly behind Leighton’s
originals and the handful of covers that have become
audience favorites. Luke Kramer has been with Leighton since
the early days of the band, providing blazing guitar licks
that keep up with Leighton’s own vocal energy. On the new
album, Shake Them Ghosts, due out at the end of May, Kramer
adds lap steel to a few tracks. Ryan Inselman, Leighton’s
new drummer, and Nick Salisbury on bass keep that solid
danceable beat. But Jason Perri on sax and fiddle and James
Patrick Carey on keys add even more color to these upbeat
tunes. At a recent concert, Perri pranced along the edge of
the stage, obviously moved by the music, while Carey
swiveled his keyboard on his solos so that the audience
could watch his skillful fingers.
Though Leighton respectably keeps his end up on rhythm
guitar and harmonica, it is his powerful vocals that lead
the band and the audience to musical ecstasy. This isn’t
screamer rock that makes ladies swoon, but it’s solid
singing, clear, understandable, and clenching. Audiences
want to hear the words; they want to sing along; they want
the songs and the singer to be something that they can
relate to.
Most often Leighton’s songs are about love in one form or
another. Sometimes, they’re break up songs, like “From Now
On,” but it’s with the good humor and empowerment of Grace
Potter’s “Toothbrush and My Table,” which is one of the
finest breakup songs ever written, though Leighton wrote his
a decade earlier. Others, like “Man in the Moon” tell of
constancy and protection. Though “Shag” may speak of a
casual encounter, it stresses using protection, which is
really responsible coming from a band that has played mainly
clubs in recent years.
But it is the songs on this new album, Shake Them Ghosts,
and how they are presented that move Leighton and his band
from just a bar band to a phenomenon that is capable of
moving hearts and lives. “Yeah, Yeah, Yeah,” co-written by
Billy Livsey (who has written for Lorrie Morgan and Mark
Chestnut) is a high energy testament to the strength of a
man’s love for a woman (or vice versa if a female singer
embraced this song). “Favorite,” a song about trying to get
back into the good graces of a woman, is fast becoming a fan
favorite, and “Twisted” is running a close second. “Twisted”
begins like a Primus track, rising up through the
floorboards of a honkytonk and morphing into a good-hearted
Mellencampish rock tune about the power of a woman to addict
a man. Though that song could be bitter, it combines
Leighton’s sense of humor and his natural optimism about
love. That song, co-authored by Clay Mills and Stephanie
Lewis, so impressed Mills he ran out of the studio at Still
Working Music in Nashville and grabbed Clay Myers who runs
the studio and said, “You’ve got to hear this,” something
that Mills has rarely done.
But it is “Wings Workin’ Overtime,” another collaboration
with Clay Mills, that shows the strength of this new album.
It is song about the transformative power of a woman’s love
that is seldom heard in this era. Leighton’s take on it is
fresh, human, and very believable. Any man would give
anything to have a woman like that or any woman to be that
person. There are few songs in the roots or country genre
that are that inspiring and it’s definitely something
missing in rock music. But leave it to Brian Leighton to
bring that good feeling across genres.
It should be noted that Inselman, Leighton’s new drummer,
had just joined the band when Shake Them Ghosts was
recorded. The skins were taken over by Kenny Aronoff,
considered rock music’s best session drummer and who has
played for John Mellencamp, Smashing Pumpkins, and Willie
Nelson. However, recently seeing gb Leighton live, Inselman
has shown that he has stepped into those big shoes with not
only grace but with exceptional skill.
gb Leighton is a band to experience. Find them and the party
at a venue near you or in their latest recording, Shake Them
Ghosts. Check out tourdates and CD info at
gbleighton.com
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