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Paul Mark & The Van Dorens | Americana Roots

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Paul Mark & the Van Dorens- Blood & Treasure

Category : Music, Reviews

Paul Mark & the Van DorensI love getting a cd in the mail by an artist I’ve never heard of and getting a pleasant surprise when I listen to it. Such was the case with the new cd Blood and Treasure by Paul Mark and his band The Van Dorens. Well, as I’ve been accused of many times, I must’ve been under a rock as this is the 7th cd for the NYC native, who has toured extensively with his band for over 15 years. Paul is also the principle woner of Radiation Records which has released the disc.

Although Mark hails from New York the disc was recorded in Memphis and definitely has a Memphis sound to it. When asked about the CD Mark says “our plan for Blood & Treasure was to grow a high-octane roots rock sound that draws on a variety of complementary southern styles …all of which would be lyrically unified by my lunatic ruminations on the state of the body public.” A very apt description; “lunatic ruminations” and humor abound, backed by some great music. My favorite track on the disc is the opener; “Everything is Nothing,” a rambling ode to someone that must be pretty damn special:

“The Redwood Forest, that’s just a patch of sticks.

The Taj Mahal, that’s nothing but a stack of bricks

And today’s headlines, sure sound like old news.

Everything is nothing after you…”

Both “Don’t Get Me Started” and “Raise the Roof” add a nice touch of Stax soul sound highlighted by the background harmony vocals of Susan Marshall and Jackie Johnson. So as to not be thought of as an insensitive bluesman, Mark adds an excellent solo piano/vocal tune called “Extraordinary Measures,” which is reminiscent of some of Randy Newman’s great soundtrack tunes. Of course, to end things he wants us to know that first and foremost, he’s a bluesman, and ends with a great electric blues instrumental “Ruff House.” This disc was truly a great find for me; I hope you will check it out as well.

Paul Mark & the Van Dorens’ Trick Fiction

Category : Reviews

While I�m fully capable of cooking myself some healthy meals, I find that when my family�s gone I tend to be like a bottom-feeder, a catfish sucking up the easy junk that falls from drive-thru windows. I suppose actually I�d have to change Mark�s lyric to �Tostitos, Taco Bell, and Mountain Dew,� as those have been my standbys this week, but the song certainly taps into the gastronomical slumming I sink to when she�s gone.
Mark�s song goes with his wife thinking he�s at home cheating on her; �On day five she shouts, �I�m coming home to cleanse our house of sin,�/She found me face down on the couch/With my three special friends/You might call it cheating, call it lying but it�s not/The good book�s got no rules about/Fritos, BBQ, and Scotch.�
Now, of course, the Bible does talk about drinking alcohol in moderation, taking care of the body that God made, and other such rules, but when you�re alone, it�s hard to resist the temptation of just eating and drinking those things that�ll eat a hole in your stomach.
Musically, Mark�s blues comes out of a Chicago blues taken through some factory floors like Tommy Castro (�Fritos�), dragged back to Memphis to pick up some old Jerry Lee Lewis rockabilly (�Never Again�), but then sent down the river to the Louisiana swamp to grab some Creedence Clearwater (�Big Glass Building�). Then there�s �Conspiracy� with the Animals� �House of the Rising Sun� being the sound behind the master plot.
Distorted slide guitar greets you for some �Wholly Rollin�,� like a hint of North Mississippi Allstars, but that gives way to the preacher�s boogie-woogie. The song undoes any concept of divine presence as the chorus declares, �You�re wholly on your own.� With a lyric construction similar to Bob Dylan�s �Everything is Broken,� it�s a song that pulls apart faith, but judging by the liner notes reference to �40 days and 40 nights,� it may just be a perfect reference to what Jesus experienced as He was tempted by Satan in the wilderness.
Finally, let the boys lay down the instrumental jive and wail of �Stake Out,� and you�ll see that you�re in good hands for experiencing a wide-range of blues elements.
For More info: www.paulmark.com
Benjamin Squires writes the review site, Music Spectrum.  He lives with his wife and two sons in Manitowoc, Wisconsin, where his day gig is being Associate Pastor of Redeemer Lutheran Church.  He�s so dedicated to Americana that he once preached a whole sermon about an Old 97s show.
 

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