Nearly a year in the making and brimming with a newfound focus on original material, Already Free is The Derek Trucks Band's natural evolution as they move forward integrating influences that span a variety of musical genr... more »es. Known for their blues roots, the group takes this album well beyond blues to incorporate the larger sounds of rock & soul. Already Free, features a stirring cover of Bob Dylan's Down In The Flood as well as the new songs, Down Don't Bother Me and Get What You Deserve. Guest appearances on the album include vocals from Susan Tedeschi and Doyle Bramhall II.« less
Nearly a year in the making and brimming with a newfound focus on original material, Already Free is The Derek Trucks Band's natural evolution as they move forward integrating influences that span a variety of musical genres. Known for their blues roots, the group takes this album well beyond blues to incorporate the larger sounds of rock & soul. Already Free, features a stirring cover of Bob Dylan's Down In The Flood as well as the new songs, Down Don't Bother Me and Get What You Deserve. Guest appearances on the album include vocals from Susan Tedeschi and Doyle Bramhall II.
"Warm, soulful, bluesy, relaxed: this describes the vibe here. Yet, this is the least Derek Trucks-like the guitarist has ever sounded. The focus has shifted onto the songs and their vocalists; Mike Mattison, Susan Tedeschi, and Doyle Bramhall III, abandoning the more interesting jamming of the past. Mostly, Derek takes a back seat, only really letting loose on three or four cuts. Gone are the elements of Jazz and World music associated with 2006's "Songlines" and other albums. All told, this outing is pleasant enough, yet most fans will find it overly restrained, if not a little stale. Upon repeated listening it simply lacks the payoff of Derek's earlier albums. It seems to be crafted with a more adult-contemporary, or mainstream, audience in mind. It suffers as a result."
Phenomenal
M. Lenda | Boulder, CO | 01/21/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)
"After having read the reviews here and elsewhere, I feel I have to voice a few disagreements... and a few agreements, of course.
Given the two-year hiatus between "Songlines" and "Already Free," I actually had less hope for "Already Free." I wasn't particularly a fan of "Songlines," though it had its moments for me. The live shows were where it was at for me; I have seen Derek Trucks with the Allman Brothers 3 times and with DTB 2 times, each show being a spectacle. I remember one in particular, last summer in Boulder, CO: My buddy took his brother with us, and after a 12-minute cover of "The Weight" (paying homage to Duane Allman's work with Aretha Franklin's version of the song), the kid goes, "... that's f***ing outrageous."
I was convinced that after "Songlines," the studio cuts that this band would put out would be more for the mainstream audience. Hell, I don't disagree that it would be a bad path to take: More people need to hear this man and his band. But to some extent we should wonder if the members of DTB really don't care.
So here's what I think of "Already Free": It's got to be the most wholesome album they've ever put out. (If not, it's a close second to "Joyful Noise.")
One thing that really put me off were the reviews that were expecting Derek to just go absolutely nuts, to rip up the scene and bring back the glory that he so eloquently brought to the slide guitar, and then saying he didn't do any of that on the entire album. (Yes, I found a few reviews like that.) That begs the question, did they just forget half of the album? Derek shines and delivers on well over half of the songs on "Already Free," and if you think he doesn't, just compare it to what he did on his other albums. Simply great work, and the rest of the band is tight as ever. I don't see how anyone could be disappointed.
Another I have to ask the columnists and reviewers that expected a "Soul Serenade" or some such slew of instrumental prowess: Do you even read the inserts in the CDs you probably get for free? It says right in the insert that "Already Free" is about togetherness, about family, about good music. This was recorded in Trucks' home studio, with family and friends abound. Why would this album be anything but what it is?
This is another successful step for DTB. It's just a natural progression: the debut instrumental insanity of "The Derek Trucks Band"; the ridiculously true blues of "Out of the Madness"; the simply phenomenal "Joyful Noise"; the jazzy "Soul Serenade"; the elemental live work on "Live At Georgia Theater"; the wordly "Songlines"; and finally, the wholesome "Already Free." Whether or not the band was shooting for the "mainstream" audience is irrelevant. They just want to write music, and that they do.
Particular favorites/highlights: "Down Don't Bother Me"; "I Know"
Particular lowlights: Doyle Bramhall II. Never really liked his voice, but the songwriting is still there.
And if you lost faith between "Songlines" and "Already Free," just go to a DTB concert. Your faith will be restored!"
ALREADY FREE 4 1/2 *'S
S. Finefrock | Raleigh, NC | 01/14/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)
"After releasing the tour de force album SONGLINES in 2006, I have eagerly awaited the follow up from the very talented Derek Trucks Band. While the newly released ALREADY FREE does not match the majesty of SONGLINES, it's still is a very good album by one of the best working bands out there.
To me, this album represents a tightening of their eclectic approach to music, no doubt trying to consolidate their fame as a great live group. ALREADY FREE focuses on the blues/soul side of the band at the expense jazz/world fusion side. While I miss the expansive jams that have highlighted their previous releases, the focus on songcraft and tight ensemble playing does not diminish the joy factor too much. Derek and the band provide a solid set of tunes in a swamp-funk blues style while expanding their songwriting chops and serving up some choice covers. My favorites include the opening semi-obscure Dylan tune DOWN IN THE FLOOD, BACK WHERE I STARTED which features a great vocal turn by Mrs. Trucks, Susan Tedeshi, GET WHAT YOU DESERVE and the slide guitar showcase I KNOW. Actually, all the songs are pretty good, to my ears, there's no real weak link here. The copy that I received also has 3 bonus tracks including a back porch blues called THE CHICKEN ROBBER SONG and a slow simmering instrumental SWAMP, another highlight. Throughout the album the band provides solid backing and provides good space for Trucks to solo. With all his chops, Trucks does not showboat as a soloist. He articulates his message short and sweet and always perfectly within the context of the song.
I hope that by taking a more conservative direction on this release that the DTB can gain some more well deserved recognition. I also hope that with that recognition that the band does on occasion revisit the wide ranging influences that have made their previous albums such a treat for music lovers. In the meantime, I'm sure I'll be getting plenty of listening pleasure from this one.
"
This album is amazing, obviously
Adam Briggs | Burlington, VT | 01/13/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The Derek Trucks band continue to develop into an entity in and of itself, not just a solo offshoot of The Allman Brothers Band. Everything about this album is inspiring, starting with the cover itself. I sense a very intentional theme of rising above the fray of life, and the ridiculousness of life in America in 2008/2009. It's a very forward thinking album, and looks more to the horizon than to the past. "It's always darker before the dawn" reads a line in "Maybe It's time." It's as eclectic as Songlines, and only time will tell which one I'll come to like better. The cohesiveness of this band is very apparent and you get a sense of brothers of the road making music that feeds the desires of their souls. Songlines have been an obsession of mine ever since I first heard it, and I have been waiting not-so-patiently for the follow up ever since. This band takes their music in the direction I wish music in general would go towards in the last part of this horrible, failed decade that has started out the new millennium. Overall, the music scene in America has been an embarrassment for a very long time. But real art in the form of music is starting to make a come-back, and I only hope it overwhelms the mainstream to replace [...] like American Idol, 50 Cent, Hinder, Nickelback, and the endless supply of generic manufactured bands that has helped destroy America's soul and intellect. The age of the "mega rock star" is over, or so we should all hope."
My favorite studio album yet
Robert B. Young | Denver, CO United States | 01/25/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I am already a Derek Trucks band fan. The band is extremely diverse musically, playing everything from Delta blues, R&B, latin, soul, gospel, and jazz fusion to Pakistani qawwali ... and they continually reinvent the songs they play (e.g., the many versions of Soul Serenade). Already Free seems more focused, and more polished, than the band's other studio work ... perhaps because they had all the time they wanted in the new Trucks/Tedeschi home studio.
Already Free has a throwback feel, and seems to build on the Soul Stew Revival theme that Derek and his wife (Susan Tedeschi) were promoting in their recent tour. In an interview with Ryan Sparks, Derek described it as domestic/American roots, and less "in your face and obvious" than prior work. In his words: "It doesn't feel like there's something to prove or that it has to have extended guitar solos all over the place. Not that the next record won't have that, but I feel this was a nice diversion from that and a much more song oriented record."
I bought the "Down in the Flood" MP3 before the album's release, and loved it from the start. The song (a Bob Dylan cover) starts out acoustic and soulful, shifts to electric and funky, and builds to a crescendo (i.e., second guitar solo) like many of my favorite DTB tunes. Other immediate favorites: "I Know", "Down Don't Bother Me" (very different from past live performances) and "Sweet Inspiration" (a classic that Carlos Santana apparently convinced the band to play). The remainder of the album ... particularly "Something to Make You Happy", "Days is Almost Gone" and "Our Love" ... grew on me the more I listened and adjusted to the different tone of this new album.
Already Free has been criticized as a step back from Songlines, and for having a "mainstream" or "commercial" sound. Personally, excluding "Chevrolet" and "Crow Jane", I think that the best of Songlines was drawn from material that the band was already performing and/or had already recorded on Live at the Georgia Theatre. Already Free is a clear departure from the band's previous work (even if they have been performing "Down Don't Bother Me" in live shows for a while). In my opinion, Already Free is not a step back from Songlines, just a step in a different direction ... like many of the band's past releases (compare 2002's Joyful Noise to 2003's Soul Serenade). Already Free does sound more polished than Songlines, but I think it sounds retro more than mainstream or commercial, particularly when compared to "Revolution" on Songlines (the band's most commercial song to date).
If you're already a fan, I suggest that you forget Songlines, forget the Allman Brothers Band, and forget DTB's live shows ... just for a while ... and listen to Already Free on its own merit. The more you listen to Already Free, the more it will grow on you. In my case, Already Free grew from an album I "liked" (3-4 stars) to my favorite DTB studio album to date (5 stars)."