John Mayer Trio Live John Mayer

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CD

  • Release Date: 11/22/2005
  • 2 Disc Set
  • Sales Rank: 2,760
  • Label: SONY
  • UPC: 827969511527
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Vinyl LP$23.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Once upon a time, chart-topping artists took musical risks with dizzying regularity, with concept albums and stylistic shifts peppering the pop landscape like palm trees on a California highway. The fact that such curveballs are pitched so rarely these days adds to the allure of Try!, John Mayer’s attempt to re-create the blues-rock power-trio vibe of bands like Cream and the Jimi Hendrix Experience. But the live disc’s main selling point isn’t the concept but the music. There’s little evidence of the mellow congeniality that’s marked Mayer’s studio output to date; even the version of “Daughters” presented here takes on added heft thanks in the stark, sinewy instrumental interplay. Some credit for the brew’s potency has to go to the rhythm section that Mayer put together -- bassist Pino Palladino (the Who) adds a sensual touch to “Good Love Is on the Way,” while drummer Steve Jordan pushes “Vultures” into overdrive -- but Mayer shows that he belongs in the driver’s seat. The new originals he penned for this context range from the overtly bluesy (“Who Did You Think I Was?”) to jazzier material that lets him showcase his voice more effectively. Mayer’s soloing is credible enough, though he falls a bit short in trying to recapture Hendrix’s alchemy on “Wait Until Tomorrow,” and his motives are admirable. Having promised Heavier Things on his last album, Mayer loads this disc up with just that -- and shoulders the weight admirably. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

You'll Wish You'd Called Itby Anonymous

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July 17, 2007: This album is pivotal. And, sadly if you're not aware of what's going on in music you'll not get it. You'll wish you'd paid attention and you'll wish you were hip enough to get it. Wake up and realize music is not enclosed only to the artist but because of the whole movement taking place within our cultures. I say cultures and not culture because whether or not anyone knows or recognizes it the "cross over" artist doesn't exactly exist alone any longer. It's all "cross over" because it's all art. It's all music and all humanity. At least if it's good it will be. It certainly should be. Like the sixties and seventies, man. Get over yourself and get into the music already. John Mayer knows what he's doing. Those of you you are a bit frightened to trust the artist with his or her art? Go back and check out John's portfolio. He does know what he's doing. We have to at one time or another realize as fans we don't know it all. We have to find a place that allows us to sit back comfortably and let the artist deliver the art...straight to our doorsteps instead of hunting. Well, they call me the hunter...

Great Albumby Anonymous

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January 16, 2006: This is when John Mayer really shines in my opinion. This is the music he was meant to play and its only going to get better with his new studio cd to come out soon. Watch out for it people, its gonna be hot.


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