Vintage rock and rock and roll / Ameripolitan rockabilly
outfit, Mighty Joe Castro & The Gravamen will release their debut LP, Come On Angels! on July 31st. The album was produced by Brian McTear (Sharon Van Etten, Dr. Dog, War on Drugs, Dead Milkmen) at Miner Street Recordings in the band's hometown of Philadelphia.
Influenced by 50's Rock and Roll, Mighty Joe Castro (The Situation, The Lift Up) takes a modern lyrical approach to songwriting while The Gravamen add a healthy dose of post-modern guitar effects, booming percussion and driving bass to the ten original songs that make up the album. Consider them a house that resides at the crossroads where Sun Records and Creation Records meet.
The majority of the songs on Come on Angels! were written by Castro who, after years playing guitar in semi-successful alt rock bands and fed up with the business side of the industry and decided to give up music for good to focus on his visual art career. That is, until his wife bought him an acoustic guitar in 2010 to play for their newborn daughter and unattached to a band, Castro started writing songs.
"I had no experience with singing and playing guitar at the same time, so I began teaching myself old rock-n-roll songs -- Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, Bob Dylan, Dion, The Ramones, etc. -- because the chords are so simple. I fell back in love with playing music again, and, when I realized I could sing, that opened up a whole new world for me.The album opens with "There Are No Secrets Here" and segues into the title track, "Come on Angles!" which has the feel of a Eddie Cochran or Buddy Holly acoustic rocker with the instantly memorable chorus, "come on angels, pour the whiskey, come on angel, sing it with me tonight..." "They reinterpret Ted Hawkin's classic "Cold and Bitter Tears" soul tune into the guitar style of early Johnny Cash and "Whispering Hell (The Finish Line)," would be at home in any dance hall. "For Every Setting Sun" is a lamenting waltz followed by "June (90 Degrees)," a dark rocker about a love gone wrong and "Why Not Just Give In This Time" claims, "I never wanted you to pack up and move on...why not just give in this time?" The album winds down with "Better Hold Tight" featuring Ritchie Valens-esque guitar lines and the dark rumble of "Angeline" before closing with country vibes of, "You've Got It All (So What Are You Looking For?)"
"I think that, by the end of the 1990s, rock had been pushed to every limit possible," says Castro. "And when you get to the end of a road, sometimes you need to turn around and head back to the start to clear a new path. Take what we've learned, everything great that's come after and go apply it to that original sound. That's the ethos of the band. But for me, it was about falling in love with music again. Back to the roots." As soon as the world opens up again and live concerts happen, Mighty Joe Castro & The Gravamen will play select dates in support of "Come on Angels!"Videos