eMusic Review 0
Pushing 60 now, Texas songwriter and bandleader Alejandro Escovedo hasn't exactly mellowed in his later years. Quite the contrary, in fact: 2008's Real Animal and now Street Songs Of Love are easily the hardest-rocking records he has ever made.
That's partly due to his collaborators: Chuck Prophet returns as co-writer on the majority of the material, and the album's sonic palette again benefits from producer Tony Visconti's David Bowie/T. Rex pedigree. Hard-charging guitars, sassy female backup singers and pounding rhythms propel Escovedo's confident sneering on opening triptych "Anchor," "Silver Cloud" and "This Bed Is Getting Crowded." Things take a jazzier turn on the title track, but it's "Down in The Bowery" that is the record's beating heart. It has an aching, wistful melody and boasts a soulful vocal cameo by the great Ian Hunter, one of Escovedo's lifelong role models. A bigger-name guest-star shows up later, when Bruce Springsteen sings along on "Faith," an unflinching, anthemic declaration of rock 'n' roll commitment and belief.
The album's exquisite instrumental closer, "Fort Worth Blue," is Escovedo's nod to Santo & Johnny's classic "Sleepwalk," but spiritually, is dedicated to his late producer and close friend, Fort Worth native Stephen Bruton.… read more »