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Rick’s Café April 2006
CLOVIS MANN
Clovis Mann EP
2005 Self-Release
www.clovismann.com
Style: Classic Rock/Blues
Comprised of three young Wisconsin natives, the heavy-gigging
Clovis Mann can’t be bothered with recent musical trends,
neither stylistic nor technological. They opt instead to take it
back to the beginning, and play a potent blend of classic rock and
blues, recorded live with virtually no effects or post-production.
The result is a fine balance of familiarity and exploration, a largely
successful attempt to stay true to bluesy rockers of old while simultaneously
making it sound fresh. Ultimately, it’s a testament to the
timelessness of the music that inspires them.
The influence that springs to mind when listening to the six songs
on their EP Clovis Mann is Jimi Hendrix. Sometimes Clovis Mann bite
pretty hard, most obviously on the spastic “War Child.”
But rather than feeling like derivative rehashings, the songs genuinely
reflect the ways in which Hendrix was great, resurrecting techniques
not often found in the newer musical climate. The live recording,
like Hendrix’s, has just the right amount of sloppiness; not
enough to detract from the songs, but just enough to give them life,
to let you know real people are making them, and a recording studio.
And like Hendrix, Clovis Mann are able to take the exhaustively
used 12-bar blues structure to places it’s never been on songs
like “Gravedigger.” Bassist Stosh Jonjak can’t
sit still, his lines ambling but precise. Oftentimes during singer/guitarist
Dan Walkner’s psychedelic solos, Jonjak seems to be providing
a counter-lead instead of merely playing a rhythm part. And speaking
of leads, Walkner revives one of Hendrix’s most endearing
techniques, playing lead lines and singing at the same time. He
exploits it very effectively, most noticeably on the aforementioned
“War Child.”
Most of Clovis Mann’s songs are relatively upbeat, but on
“Small Town Vice” they recall the darker moods of Led
Zeppelin as they prove they can play heavy without playing metal.
Though the music is heavy, the lyrics are even heavier, as they
follow the consequences of poor decisions made by old friends, lamenting,
“The gavel is deployed / And your freedom is destroyed”
before bursting into a massive riff during the chorus. It’s
moving and will put your shit in check.
The only real drawback of this demo is that it’s quite short
and leaves you wanting more. Fortunately, these boys play out long
and often and sound even better live, and are known to sometimes
have friends sit in on blues jams. This EP really only scratches
their surface.
Though they do pretty much everything well, the most impressive
attributes of Clovis Mann’s style are their refreshing ability
to jam without sounding like a jam band, and their unflappable commitment
to being thoroughly and brilliantly old-school. Though they express
a longing to someday “reach that holy ground,” as far
as their musical universe is concerned, if Hendrix is God they’re
already there.
~John Payne
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