By Mike O’Cull
You know how sometimes you hear a new band that blows you away and you just know it’s bound for much bigger things? You’re about to have one of those times right now. Hailing from Natchez, Mississippi, Bishop Gunn makes tough, 21st Century Blues/Rock music from the primordial human elements of guitars, drums, and lyrics, elements that many music fans feel have been replaced by electronics and computers. What’s more, the band does it with style, grace, and originality equal to the biggest names of the Classic Rock era. Gunn’s debut album, Natchez, is modern and unique in both tone and energy but is packed with the type of timeless songwriting of which careers are made.
Natchez delivers sounds worthy of rocking out to as well as lyrics deserving of a close listen. The lineup of Travis McCready on vocals, Drew Smithers on guitar, Ben Lewis on bass and Burne Sharp on drums is a strong and articulate unit that grooves hard and tells tales of life down South and the dirt road wisdom it takes to survive there.
The opening cut, “Southern Discomfort,” features a syncopated power chord pocket that is an immediate attention-getter on the bottom and McCready’s hard-edged and inventive lyrics about living in a place where you “pray for the best but expect the worst” on the top. McCready radiates the authentic Southern feel that Steven Tyler has chased his entire career and it makes every word he sings believable.
“Anything You Want” is straight-up, swampy Southern rock done right, with a hit-single chorus and some impressive guitar tracks from Drew Smithers, who fills the entire album with his toneful and tasteful licks and rhythms. Bishop Gunn clearly has its rock and roll fully locked down and can punch with the best of them. What catches you by surprise is when BG easily shifts into Soul and R&B feels that are as compelling as its rock music. Mid-album songs like the blues-inspired ballad “Devil Is a Woman” and the Alabama Soul of “Shine” show an entirely different side of this crew that’s just as much fun as the three straight body blows that get this set going.
Speaking of Alabama, Bishop Gunn created Natchez with the help of Grammy-winning producers Casey Wasner and Mark Neill at the legendary Muscle Shoals Sound and FAME Studios, as well as at The Purple House in Leiper’s Fork, Tennessee. To its credit, the band stands on these giant shoulders and leaps forward, turning influence and tradition into a new generation of Southern music devoid of imitation. This high degree of realness has already put Bishop Gunn on stages with major artists including Mavis Staples, Justin Timberlake, Eddie Vedder, Gary Clark Jr. the Gregg Allman Band and debuting at #4 on the Billboard Blues charts.
Watch “Shine”
The album ends with a song called (what else?) “Alabama” that winds the Natchez experience down in a mournful, desperate way that is actually one of the record’s best moments. The track chronicles a truck stop encounter with a suicide blond who just might be a life-taker as well as a heartbreaker, a meeting the song’s narrator will be glad to escape alive.
McCready has the ability to pull listeners into the situations he sings about and hold them there hypnotized. It’s this level of songwriting skill that separates Bishop Gunn from most rock bands working today. The songs on Natchez reflect the fact that much of American music is a storytelling art, not just a vehicle for vocal or instrumental heroics, and that emphasis on big-picture thinking is what makes the album such a gem. It also makes this a record that works well as one long listening session and not just a grab bag of assorted singles. Cue it up and settle in for the duration. This one is worth every minute of your time.
Bishop Gunn is currently on tour in support of The Marcus King Band and will tour Europe in early 2019 with Slash.
For more information on Natchez by Bishop Gunn:
The real deal !
Jeremiah,
Perfect words for them. Thanks for your comment.
SO PROUD!!!
Saw them about 6 weeks ago and opened for Gov’t Mule at Jackson, MS’s Thalia Mara Hall. Outstanding show!
Southern Blues Rock is alive and well and in good hands for the future. Bishop Gunn is indeed the real deal, Travis McReady has got an outstanding stage presence and a voice to match. Drew Smithers was outstanding in his guitar work as well. They were a very fun act to watch and listen to. My wife and I have been steadily talking them up and turning folks on to Bishop Gunn. We have a little extra feeling of pride with them being from our home state. We will go see them again in the proverbial heartbeat no doubt!
John,
THat’s awesome. Thanks for the description of the show. That’s cool. Thanks for your comment.
Great vibe ! Some old school bluesy rock and roll !
Tim,
Yes indeed! Glad you enjoyed. Thanks for commenting.
Bishop Gunn is everything you described, and their Natchez album is comparable to my top 5 or 10 albums of all time. They are the best “new” band I’ve seen (or heard) since I saw Foo Fighters in a gymnasium in early 1997. One if a kind.
I’m from BG’s home town Natchez Miss. I watched these guys at one of the local pubs, Smoots, while they fine tuned their own niche in time. Travis McCready has the voice that singers long for. His songwriting skills are off the charts with more variations than you can shake a stick at, as we say in the south. Looking forward to watching them climb that ever allusive ladder to the top.
Ronnie,
Agree with you that McCready’s voice is enviable and songwriting skills are amazing. I’m looking forward to that myself. Thanks for commenting.
Just saw them a couple nights ago open for Whiskey Myers in a sold out show at The Stafford Palace Theater in Stafford, CT. They gave an impressive performance. Will be digging deeper into these guys
Todd,
That’s awesome. Go for it. You won’t regret it. Thanks for commenting,
Just took a listen. I’m hooked and will be watching for this group and also digging deeper for more to listen to.
Another new Sheriff in town…….Awesome groove.
Overall a very excellent album one of the best new southern rock bands I have come across in the last couple of years along with Otis and their Eyes of the Sun album
Have been following Bishop Gunn’s music and career path the last 2 years. They are the real deal: they play their instruments extremely well, they write their songs, and Travis McCready’s sizzling vocals just pull you in. In addition to ‘Natchez’, check out their self-titled 5-song EP from a few years ago, available in digital formats. If you want to dive deeper, check out bassist Ben Lewis’ solo album, ‘This Town’ recorded before he joined Bishop Gunn. It showcases his writing talents, and was recorded at drummer Burne Sharpe’s recording studio in Natchez and you’ll hear Travis McCready laying down some solid background vocals on a couple songs.
Wow.What a great album. Will see you guys in Utrecht march 3rd. Looking forward to it.
These guys are amazing, they need more recognition