The Falcones was
a sibling band that played conjunto music in southern Texas during the 1970s
and 1980s. After the Falcones split apart, Ringo
Garza, Sr. went solo, backed by his three adolescent sons. The family
relocated to Nashville in the 1990s, and gradually the sons emerged as a second
generation sibling trio separate from their father, performing their own
material as a trio. Guitarist Henry
Garza, bassist JoJo Garza, and
drummer Ringo Garza, Jr. formed Los Lonely Boys, playing a style of
music they call "Texican Rock n' Roll." They combined elements of
rock and roll, Texas blues, brown eyed soul, country, Tex-Mex, conjunto and tejano
music. Los Lonely Boys moved back to San Angelo, Texas, and recorded an
eponymous debut album in 2003. The debut single, "Heaven," was a
number one hit on the Billboard adult
contemporary chart in 2004 and eventually won a Grammy Award for Best Pop
Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal. In March 2010, the group was awarded
Best Rock Band in the Austin Music Awards. During a 2010 tour, however, JoJo developed
lesions on his vocal cords and his physicians recommended that he rest them. Later,
on a 2013 tour, Henry fell and sustained a spinal injury, necessitating a
lengthy recovery period. The band recently resumed touring in support of the
most recent album, Revelation, which
was released on January 21.
Ten years after their 2004 breakthrough, the Garza brothers
sounded as fresh and lively as a hungry new band. They outlived the
one-hit-wonder death trap because the brothers have much more to offer. At City Winery tonight, Los Lonely Boys specialized
in feel-good songs, weaving melodies and close-knit three-part harmonies that
sounded like a sunny California summer. Yet this was not merely a pop concert.
The Boys' music sounded light, but it originated from deep roots. Each of the Garzas
crooned like soft Lionel Richie-type
rhythm and blues singers, but it was the chunky instrumental portions of the
songs that saved Los Lonely Boys from sounding like a wedding band. Balancing
Tex-Mex sounds and 1960s British blues traditions in a sparse power trio format,
Los Lonely Boys were equal parts Los Lobos,
Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jimi Hendrix and Cream. Henry played a splendid blues-influenced guitar, bending
notes with his fingers and channeling textured wah-wahs with his feet, the
leads always subtly nuanced and always appealing. JoJo played a thick-necked
six-string bass guitar, maintaining the bottom range with heavy yet melodic
funk lines, while Ringo sweetly punched the rhythms on his drums. Together,
they grooved on rock, soul, blues and even one reggae song. Many of the songs
were not especially memorable, indicating that the Boys' songcraft may need
bolstering, but instrumentally the music was as tasteful as possible.
Visit Los Lonely Boys at www.loslonelyboys.com.

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