Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Lydia Pense & The Generation I'm A Good Woman


Lydia Pense with Cold Blood 1969

Lydia Pense & The Generation I'm A Good Woman

I re-aquainted myself with the above track while listening to the Golden State Soul CD issued by Kent in 2000. The Generation were a San Mateo outfit led by Larry Fields and featured the dynamite singing of Lydia Pense who went on to lead the Bay Area band Cold Blood.

Lydia is still producing good music and you can find out more about Lydia at her band's MySpace:

Lydia Pense and Cold Blood are Bay Area music pioneers with an amazing history and an exciting future. Lydia and the band debuted when the Fillmore was at its peak as one of the nation’s musical Mecca’s. Owner Bill Graham was so impressed with Lydia’s voice and the sound of the band that he immediately signed Cold Blood to his new record label. During the span of six original late-60’s, early-70’s albums, Lydia Pense and Cold Blood helped, along with Tower Of Power, forge their own specific brand of funk/soul and R&B which came to be know as East Bay Grease. That music still holds up today, proving that great music is timeless and will continue to inspire generations to come. Lydia Pense and Cold Blood packed the San Francisco Ballrooms in their heyday, but that was then and this is now. In the now, Lydia Pense and Cold Blood still fill halls with cheering, dancing, foot-stomping fans. Far from fading over the years, Cold Blood has flourished.

The word legend certainly applies to Lydia Pense and Cold Blood…and not in some past tense-make-a-living-as-an-oldies-act sort of way either. Pense can still shout like a 60’s soul diva and purr a slow blues tune with spine-tingling subtlety. Cold Blood, as a whole, features a stellar group of musicians who have been playing together for nearly 20 years including Steve Dunne on guitar, Steve Salinas ..boards, a gritty-growling horn section comprised of Rich Armstrong and Rob Zuckerman along with a stellar rhythm section featuring Evan Palmerston on bass and Donny Baldwin on drums.

The band members are all veteran Bay Area musicians who have played with many great artists including Boz Skaggs, Elvin Bishop, Starship, Thomas Dolby, Eddie Money, Michelle Shocked, Albert Collins and more. Of course there is Lydia who still has the chops with the patina of a seasoned veteran who’s done and seen it all. Together she and the band continue to twist together R&B, (both Old School and New School); into something that doesn’t have a label... On any given night, Lydia Pense and Cold Blood power through their historic essentials, like “You Got Me Hummin’,” “I Just Want To Make Love To You,” “I’m A Good Woman,” and “Down to the Bone.” But now, there’s a whole new CD of future classics that draws on their heritage but is not stifled by the past. Now able to draw from the first new Cold Blood album in three decades, Lydia and the band blast out a set that covers 40 years of thumping, throbbing, East Bay funk.

Several of the new tracks that make it on to the set list each night come from original Cold Blood alum Skip Mesquite. Another tune of particular note, “Face the Music,” is written by guitar ace Steve Dunne. All this fresh music makes any Cold Blood show invigorating. And, of course, anything Lydia sings is sung well. She has a list of famous admirers that includes Bonnie Raitt, Michelle Shocked, David Lee Roth, even Janis Joplin back in the day.

It’s been a long road, over 40 years to be exact with a break somewhere in the middle. But, Lydia and the band are living proof that a little time off can be a really good thing. With their new CD, “Transfusion” (DIG 116) turning heads across the country, fans are remembering just what has been missing from music in the last few decades. The 12 songs exemplify how a performer can take great strides forward, without forgetting her roots. Using “Transfusion” as their muse there is a renewed interest in live performances, from both the band, and venue owners. Cold Blood is booking dozens of shows across the country, entertaining generations of club, theatre and festival goers.

Cold Blood has been blessed with the ability to reach backwards for original influences and the creativity to reach forward, working with new approaches. The music they play is ageless, and can still fill any room to the rafters.
Cold Blood currently consist of Lydia Pense, lead vocals; Donny Baldwin, Drums;
Rich Armstrong, trumpet and flugelhorn, vocals, percussion; Rob Zuckerman, tenor sax, flute; Steve Salinas, keys, vocals; Evan Palmerston, bass; Steve Dunne, lead guitar; Joel Behrman, trombone, trumpet.

I just picked a message up from the band:

We're off to Tokyo, Japan and our favorite club out there- the Cotton Club. And we're very excited to announce a new album- a live album called "Live Blood". I've got a copy and it's smokin'- full of old and new tunes. My favorite is a new tune we just started playing live called 'Can't Take It'. It was originally recorded by the fantastic blues singer, Lavelle White, and was brought in as an example of the direction the writing the next album should go in. The band liked the mix of horn driven funk and blues that seems to suit Lydia's voice so well that we started playing it live and now it's on the album!

You can see an interview with Lydia here:

Lydia Pense Interview with Jon Hammond

No comments:

Post a Comment