Chris Duarte's name is nearly always mentioned alongside those of the late, great guitar gods
Stevie Ray Vaughan and
Jimi Hendrix. There is some validity to the comparison, as
Duarte does specialize in that high-octane, lightning-bright, raw but intelligent brand of playing that
Hendrix and
Vaughan had so definitively put their names on, and he does quite often favor their tones and draw on their trademark licks. But those comparisons were only partially true even when
Duarte emerged from Austin in the mid-'90s as a promising craftsman, and they're approaching irrelevancy now that he's working his way toward seasoned vet.
Duarte has painstakingly absorbed his influences to develop his own signature style and gained his own coterie of fans, and
Blue Velocity,
Duarte's first release since 2003's
Romp, is where it all comes together. With Dustin Sargent on bass and Damien Lewis pounding drums,
Duarte emerges here as more of a total artist than in the past -- the guitar brilliance serves the songs, rather than the other way around. From the thudding, crunching opener "Amy Lee" to the lengthy, melodic mid-tempo showcase "Something Wicked" (OK, he does owe
Hendrix big-time for the approach on that one) to the punky screamer "Never Gonna Change" and the roughly
Johnny Winter-esque "Out in the Rain," each track is packed with ace musicianship, solid songwriting, impassioned vocals from
Duarte and whole lot of fire. But let's face it, in the end, it's that guitar that his fans are going to be gripping onto, and yes,
Duarte delivers. On
Blue Velocity he transcends those abovementioned names to offer consistently superb, no-frills, ballsy axemanship that will more than satisfy those craving something new in the blues-rock arena.
Duarte may never be considered one of the great innovators, but he's certainly one of blues-rock's most impressive current practitioners. ~ Jeff Tamarkin