Growing up in the small town of Round Rock, Texas, Joe Lewis was more inclined to playing
football than to playing rock and funk music. Then one day, working in a pawn
shop, he took home a guitar and began teaching himself to play it. Friends
encouraged him to perform as a solo artist in the local open mic circuit. Seeking
to connect with other musicians, Lewis then immersed himself in the local Red
River blues/garage scene. He recorded EPs and albums, but nothing clicked until
he met Zach Ernst in 2007. Ernst formed
the Honeybears around Lewis, naming the band after a crusted container of honey
they found on the floor of their rehearsal room. Four weeks later, the
Austin-based Black Joe Lewis & The
Honeybears played its first gig. The band played its blend of contemporary
rock and vintage soul music at many festivals and gained a following, leading
to the band's most recent album, 2013's Electric
Slave.
At Irving Plaza
tonight, Lewis commanded the stage with charisma and showmanship. As the
Honeybears churned out ragged blues and funk rhythms behind him, Lewis launched
a love affair with his guitar and microphone. Despite a recent foot injury, he hopped
and boogied hard to his own rhythms, and sang, grunted and shredded his throat like
Wilson Pickett or similar 1960s soul
singers. By the second song, Lewis was playing the guitar strings with his
teeth. Later he played the guitar with it held over his head. His shirt was
drenched in sweat by the end of the set. The rhythm section and three-piece
horn section kept an eye on Lewis and took their supporting cues from his
dynamics.
The band's 16-song set, which featured 10 songs from the
most recent album, had a swamp rock southern character. Both the vocals and the
instrumentation lacked polish and finesse, and this rawness seemed to grant the
songs greater integrity. There was no intention of making, nice pleasant music;
the band rocked with grit, grime and grease all over the songs. Lewis kept it
raucous through distortion-heavy and feedback play. Building grooves that had
booties moving in the audience, the cornerstone of each song was to support
Lewis' shouts with repetitive guitar chords and horn riffs, and then mine the guts
of the rhythms with jolts of electric guitar riffs and punctuating sonic blasts
from the saxophone, trumpet and trombone trio. The songs simmered and seethed,
and seemed to end only when Lewis felt ready to get a new groove on. Just when
it seemed that the band exhausted its vault, the musicians walked off stage,
only to come back on stage to play two more grooves.
Visit Black Joe Lewis at www.blackjoelewis.com.

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