Album Results

Save My Soul 

Big Bad Voodoo Daddy

Save My Soul

Genre: ROCK/POP
Label: Big Bad Records
Release date: 2003

Album Reviews

For their first album in four years, Big Bad Voodoo Daddy realized they needed to switch gears since the freak, late-'90s big band craze had become about as hot as yesterday's scrambled eggs. Thankfully, a trip down to New Orleans to play Jazzfest (recounted in this album's title track) reinvigorated and reinvented the group's sound. Gone are the smarmy Vegas charts, replaced with a swampy Crescent City, slinky Bourbon Street swagger. Add Latin mambo on the percussive "I Like It" and "You Know You're Wrong," along with some second-line funk straight out of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band on "Zig Zaggity Woop Woop, Pt. 2" and you've got a swinging, finger-popping disc that should keep the band's established fans happy, while expanding their previously limited, and nearly dead-ended scope. Most of the tunes are originals -- if derivative ones -- except for a cover of Blue Lu Barker's ""Don't You"" Feel My Leg" (also a moderate '70s hit for Maria Muldaur). However, the barroom swagger turned Dixieland jazz of "Simple Songs" seems a bit forced and frontman Scotty Morris' voice hasn't improved. This material would benefit from a gruffer approach. But Save My Soul is a surprisingly enjoyable and fresh album from a band many might have written off as already expending their allotted 15 minutes of fame. The disc's CD-ROM content includes three live tracks, information, pictures of each band member, and shots from the making of the album. ~ Hal Horowitz, All Music Guide

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Track Listing


1.  Zig Zaggity Woop Woop: PART ONE more
2.  You Know You Wrong more
3.  Always Gonna Get Ya more
4.  Don't You Feel My Leg more
5.  Oh Yeah more
6.  Simple Songs more
7.  Next Week Sometime more
8.  Save My Soul more
9.  I Like It more
10.  Zig Zaggity Woop Woop: part two more
11.  Bonus more
Featured Review
Gives You Hell Gives You Hell
All-American Rejects
Boy meets girl, boy and girl break up due to one guilty party....and then the wrath ensues. It's well trodden ground for the All American Rejects, who sound less like rejects and more like exactly what I would expect from Middle American white frat rock. 3 albums in I would hope to see more progression on topic from this mid-twenties Oklahoma 4 piece. That said, the hook is catchy and the production is amazing, meaning that this will be a guaranteed hit even if it feels a bit paint by numbers for those of us who have heard it all before. Copyright ©2008 Shazam Entertainment Limited. All rights reserved.
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