Feel So Good: Albert Cummings Live

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (66 ratings)
Feel So Good: Albert Cummings Live album cover
Album Information
LIVE

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 58:43

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Great Live Album!

pizzajoker

Friend of mine in NH saw Albert live in concert about a month ago and thought he was spectacular! Agree with "FEEL GREAT!!" I (and you won't either) was not disappointed. Definitely worth the download!

user avatar

FEEL GREAT!!

EMUSIC-008F66C9

Albert Cummings is at his best live!! His leads and vocals are untouchable. Most of all not only do the crowd have a great time so do the band!

user avatar

Albert certainly knows how............

RichieS

Albert certainly knows how to knock it out. First time I've heard him. Will not be the last. R

user avatar

Blues with a bit of raunch to it!!

Alpsman

This is the third album I have purchased by Albert and having listened to it I can't wait to see him live.Well worth using a few of your downloads especially on Barrelhouse Blues and Hoochie Coochie Man

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

New England’s Albert Cummings has been hailed as the next Stevie Ray Vaughan, and certainly Cummings’ explosive, soulful, and emotional guitar style adds credence to that claim, but Cummings, a carpenter from Williamston, MA, has a completely different blues approach, tackling themes that would be familiar to any working stiff trying to support a family in an uncertain economy, sounding in this live set like a man who is more than glad that the weekend is here and he finally gets to make some noise. In this context, Cummings’ blazing guitar breaks function as deliverance. Recorded in March of 2008 at the Colonial Theater in Pittsfield, MA before an enthusiastic hometown crowd, Feel So Good gives a glimpse of Cummings in his natural setting, and this is a straight-ahead rocking show that opens with the Friday night anthem “Party Right Here” and just keeps rolling from there. Locked in tight with drummer Aaron Scapin and bassist Daniel Broad, Cummings plays a hot hand on his Fender Strat as he tears through fine versions of B.B. King’s “Rock Me Baby” and Led Zeppelin’s “Rock and Roll,” slowing things down a bit for a beautifully sung version of his own “Together as One.” Live albums are often holding patterns for recording artists, and this one has that feel, but Cummings is such a down-home player and singer, and performing live on-stage is so obviously his sweet point, that Feel So Good seems like a perfectly natural career move. It sounds like it was one hell of a party that night, and in the end, that’s how Cummings approaches the blues, by using it to catch a little bit of freedom and running off into the night with it, understanding that the blues is really all about the need for joy. – Steve Leggett

more »