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United States

Quality music requires an extra effort to find in this era

July 22, 2012
United States
Mighty Tone

Steve Morse, The Boston Globe

Quality music requires an extra effort to find in this era of declining record labels and transitional scenes. A fruitful discovery is this outstanding new album by the Mystix, an Americana-minded posse of all-star Bostonians whose cast includes singer Jo Lily (Duke & the Drivers), guitarist Bobby Keyes (Jerry Lee Lewis), keyboardist Tom West (Susan Tedeschi), harp ace Jerry Portnoy (Eric Clapton), and the rhythm section of bassist Marty Ballou and Marty Richards, who have backed Peter Wolf. Anchoring the gang is Lily, who wrote three new songs that fit snugly with the vintage blues, gospel, country and old-timey covers that are given a fresh, invigorating visit. With Levon Helm having passed away, fans who love rural Americana music should look this way because the Mystix are poised to make your acquaintance. Lily’s voice grows ever more soulful through the years and now sounds like a cross between a latter-day Bob Dylan and John Lee Hooker. His own songs feature the chooglin’ “Mighty Love” and the funky and timeless “Keep on Walkin’.” The Mystix also go deep on such forgotten gems as Jimmie Rodgers’ “Blues #4” (about an Amazonian woman who is “tailor- made/ she ain’t no hand-me-down”), Ernest Tubb’s “Mean Woman Blues” (an acoustic blues standout), and the traditional “Too Close,” which has a Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee feel with gospel overtones. It adds up to a connoisseur’s delight. You can play it over and over. Just don’t expect to be satiated any time soon. It’s that good.

—STEVE MORSE, former longtime staff critic at the Boston Globe who has also contributed to Billboard and Rolling Stone and is now teaching an online course in Rock History at Berklee College of Music.

Live album that has been recorded at various locations over the last two years

September 25, 2010
United States
Blue Morning

Warren Allen, PERFORMER Magazine

Boston-based band The Mystix has produced some good Southern fried soul music with the new release BLUE MORNING. Made up of Massachusetts and New York musicians, the group makes roots music with an ecstatic and loving sound. Singer and guitarist Jo Lily’s hoarse field calls practically beg to be heard in open air. He growls, purrs and shouts with a sound that isn’t quite country, isn’t quite New Orleans blues, but draws on both, with a helping of gospel thrown in.

The sound of warbling slide guitar in “Yolanda” and the groovy “Another Kind of Love” get the album started right. There are also covers of Jimmy Reed’s “I’m a Love You” and the Traveling Wilburys’ “Rattled”, both well-done, though not as memorable as the energetic originals by Lily and Bobby Keyes. Clumsy fade-outs mar a few tracks just when things seem to be getting good, but by the end the songs are given a chance to say all that they need to.

Bobby Keyes on electric guitar takes some adventurous solos and really grabs at the best parts of the blues. There are tunes (the lonesome country ballad “Which Side of Heartache” being one) that could fare better if it was just Keyes and Lily at work, without backing vocals or the rhythm section. That said, Marty Ballou on bass and Marty Richards and Dennis McDermott on drums do a fine job of laying roots and groove. Without them, the album would lose a healthy dose of honky-tonk bounce.

This is fun music that’ll have you wishing for summer, a cheap radio and a station that puts this kind of tasty stuff on the air. (MYSTIX EYES RECORDS) – Warren Allen

Twangy surf guitar

September 19, 2010
United States
Blue Morning

Mike Loce, The Noise

As the Mystix intrudes upon my morning awakening, I really can’t grab the words at first. This band, as early morning, go-to-the-job background, well, it really leaves a space between the mind and brain. For those who work the early, or “normal” shift of slavery to acquire the monies to pay thy rent and booze, I heartily recommend this. Okay, enough weird talk, this album GROOVES in the CCR way, funky low down blues-grooves with slide guitar-really great songs that could serve as an ass-kickin’ smooth drivin’ soundtrack for some new classic American film. Real pro musician quality (whatever that may be; make your own decision) permeates every song, and I love that twangy surf guitar. These guys know how to play, and they know how to play together. It’s refreshing to hear a veteran band like this in the midst of the Boston scene. Some bands got it, and the Mystix has it and uses it.

Haunting ballad

August 12, 2010
United States
Blue Morning

Jay N. Miller, The Patriot Ledger

The Mystix – who were known as The Mystics before they discovered how many soothsayers that would conjure up on the Internet – have been together less than three years, but they have plenty of experience.

Frontman Jo Lilly was better known as Sam DeLuxe when he was fronting legendary Boston rockers Duke and the Drivers. Guitarist Bobby Keyes has worked with a long list of bands, often behind the scenes, but his most visible gig was probably with New Kids on the Block, although he’s also worked with rock ‘n’ roll legend Darlene Love, soul man Ben E. King and Jerry Lee Lewis.

More recently, Keyes’ NKOTB connections led to a relationship with popster Robin Thicke, whose album last year “The Evolution of Robin Thicke” featured a lot of Keyes’ songwriting and studio help. That in turn led to more studio work, with artists as diverse as soul queen Mary J. Blige and rapper Li’l Wayne.

For the Mystix, Lilly writes most of the songs in rough versions, and then brings them in to Keyes’ Saugus studio where the two polish them into finished products.

The Mystix rhythm section features the two Martys: drummer Marty Richards (Peter Wolf, Gary Burton, Duke Robillard) and bassist Marty Ballou (John Hammond, Robillard, Roomful of Blues). Keyboardist Tom West is another Beantown music vet who’s worked with Wolf, Susan Tedeschi, Duke Levine and Barrence Whitfield. As this lineup might suggest, the Mystix sound is a panoply of American roots music, but mostly a swampy, groove-oriented kind of rock, blues melting into country, New Orleans cruising through Nashville on the way to Chicago.

A new CD

The new album has much to recommend it, with “Yolanda” evoking Little Feat as Lilly/s gravelly vocal tells a world-weary love story, riding a slide guitar figure that is contrasted with tart bent note runs.

The guitars on “Another Kind of Love” suggest a spy movie theme, as Lilly sings with a 1960s pop feel and mock drama a la Chris Isaak. “Change in Jane” has a definite electric Dylan feel, a bittersweet love song with exquisite keyboard work.

Elsewhere the CD has the syncopated slide guitar romp “New Orleans” and the haunting ballad that is the title cut, “Blue Morning,” a simmering tune with swirling rhythms and a Springsteen-like gravitas.

“Rattled” is a delightful cover from the Traveling Wilburys catalog, done here as a fast-paced shuffle with superb tongue-in-cheek tone. “Which Side of Heartache” is a tearjerker country ballad, kind of like a Charlie Rich song sung by Merle Haggard, but it is one of Lilly’s most unforgettable outings.

Lunch-bucket roots rock with a working-class ethos

August 10, 2010
United States
Blue Morning

Kevin R. Convey —Boston Herald

Boston-based Mystix makes lunch-bucket roots rock with a working-class ethos – lots of heavy lifting but no wasted motion. Fronted by Jo Lily (aka Sam Deluxe of Duke and the Drivers), the band of guitarist Bobby Keyes, drummer Marty Richards, bassist Marty Ballou and keyboardist Tom West is a collection of erstwhile hired guns who have backed local luminaries such as Peter Wolf, Susan Tedeschi, Duke Robillard and Barrence Whitfield. While Lily’s apocalyptic croak is so Dylanesque as to inspire confusion, there’s nothing confusing about the passion, commitment and economy the Mystix brings to its mix of blues, r & b and country.

Live album that has been recorded at various locations over the last two years

September 1, 2008
United States
Satisfy You

Tom Hyslop – Blues Revue: The World’s Blues Magazine

Boston’s well-traveled Mystics boast vitae that include stints with Ben E. King, Jerry Lee Lewis, Duke Robillard, and just about every recording artist, due to the presence of guest Crispin Cioe, saxophonist for the Uptown Horns. Singer Jo Lily, whose Eddie Hinton-esque vocal quality thrills, has for years fronted Duke & the Drivers as Sam Deluxe. Satisfy You (Mystic Eyes 322) offers a delightful range of styles, from Sam Cooke R&B (“Can’t Say Enough”) to deep soul (“Some Things About Love”) to Spanish Harlem balladry (“A Little Bit of Soap”). The title track opens the disc on an eerie, minor-key note. Uptempo numbers are scarce, with the exception of the truck-driving country of “Change My Mind” and the roots-rocker “Ding Dong.”

Transcends all genres

August 23, 2008
United States
Satisfy You

Pat Benny —Southbound Beat Magazine

. . . “Satisfy You” is a stunningly moving, brilliantly executed CD by six of the best journeymen musicians in the industry. The original compositions are indescribably powerful, emotionally exhausting and perfectly executed. The cover tunes are reborn with a depth and texture that can only be achieved when artists of this skill and experience collaborate.

This is a recording that transcends all genres, all trends and fashions. This record is hip. Visit www.sonicbids.com/TheMystics and buy this CD at: www.cdbaby.com/cd/mysticsmusic

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