[NEW WORLD SOUL ORDER] Dirty Revival technically has five (give or take) members, but an illustration of frontwoman Sarah Clarkeâs profile dominates the cover of the bandâs self-titled, self-released debut. Itâs representative of how Clarkeâwho can channel Alabama Shakesâ Brittany Howard as easily as Aretha Franklin or even Mary J. Bligeâleads the bandâs sound, which bounces between soul, funk and hip-hop. But when guitarist and MC Evan âevvânâfloâ Simko, drummer Terry Drysdale, keyboardist Karl Ludwigsen and bassist Jon Shaw combine their forces and find a sense of unity among the rotating cast of local horn players and backup singers, Dirty Revival transcends its gallery of influences. The spoken-word elements, in particular, differentiate the band from other neo-soul revival acts, especially on opening track âDirty Loveâ and âLately,â both highlighted by Simkoâs rhythmic delivery. The electric violin-based blues ballad âShe Canât Waitâ ends with an empowering soliloquy that positions Clarke as the Carla Thomas to Otis Reddingâs âTramp.â And âBreathe,â a proper protest song with a sermon-like outro on what is otherwise a party record, proves Dirty Revival has emotional depth to counter its deep grooves.
SEE IT: Dirty Revival plays Mississippi Studios, 3939 N Mississippi Ave., with Redray Frazier and DJ Weather, on Friday, Sept. 11. 9 pm. $12 advance, $15 day of show. 21+.
WWeek 2015