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| Southside Johnny Lyon |
In the early 1970s, the New Jersey shore's music club
circuit provided audiences, stages and stipends for the local pool of
musicians. These musicians formed countless variations of line-ups, as new
bands formed and split faster than most locals could track. The bigger-than-life
success of Bruce Springsteen in the mid-1970s
brought media and public attention to the New Jersey music scene and forced the
once-fluid musicians to solidify band memberships. Springsteen madness ruled
the rock world, and fans saw his imprint on Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes, led by John Lyon of Ocean Grove. Suddenly the Jukes
rose from house band at the Stone Pony
in Asbury Park to a recording act with international prominence. Nevertheless,
the Jersey brotherhood remained intact; the Jukes' first three albums were produced
by co-founder Steven Van Zandt, later
to become a full-time Springsteen cohort, and featured many songs written by
Van Zandt and/or Springsteen. Some 40 years later, the circle remains unbroken;
the most recent album by Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes is 2012's Men
Without Women, which features
songs written by Van Zandt and was recorded Live at the Stone Pony in
2011.
Tonight at B.B.
King's Blues Club & Grill , Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes consisted
of Lyon on vocals and harmonica, Jeff
Kazee on keyboards, John Conte
on bass, Glenn Alexander on
guitar, Tom Seguso on drums, John Isley on sax phones, Chris Anderson on trumpet and Neal Pawley on trombone. An urban
legend speculates that over 100 musicians have been members of the Jukes over
the past 40 years, including Jon Bon
Jovi, who joined as a special guest during a 1990 Jukes tour. Regardless of
whether that grand total is true or false, Southside Johnny & the Asbury
Jukes tonight sounded very much like the band sounded in its early days. The performance
comprised a timeless collection of rhythm & blues songs, sung soulfully by Lyon
and punctuated by a rally of guitar, keyboard and horn section spotlights. The
set opened with a cover of the Zombies'
"Time of the Season," with Lyon repeatedly asking his band mates and
the audience for help remembering the lyrics. This schtick, whether it was genuine
or fabricated, helped establish a light-hearted, good-time flair for the rest
of the evening. Lyon led the band through many of the Juke's signature songs,
including Van Zandt's "I Don't Want to Go Home" (in a medley with Ben E. King's "Spanish
Harlem") and Springsteen's "The Fever" (in a medley with Aretha Franklin's "Chain of
Fools"), "Talk to Me" and "You Mean So Much to Me." Even
the newer and less familiar songs felt like an escape to a time decades ago
when soul music ruled the airwaves with sweet rhythms, sentimental lyrics,
melodic bridges and smooth singing. Lyon's singing was significantly weaker
than in his early career, but his enthusiasm and passion ably supplemented and sparked
the festivities. Finally, Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes appropriately
ended two hours of great fun with a cover of Sam Cooke's "Having a Party," with opening act Ricky Byrd, former guitarist of Joan Jett & the Blackhearts, returning
to the stage to share the microphone.
Visit Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes at www.southsidejohnny.com.

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