Gordy Garris
Acoustic strum
Garris
learned the hard way, feeling his way through a thicket of popsters from Andy
Reed, the Legal Matters, Chris Zehnder and Donny Brown. They own the crown of
creation in the backwoods of the Great Lakes Bay Region even when people are
not listening closely. This writer has heard the word and bows down to the
great wealth of music in our own backyards. Andy Reed is an icon to me and his
productions are incredibly intricate. The delicate soundscape he creates is
right on par with Alex Chilton, Big Star and the early power pop of The Frost,
an incredibly gifted band that included Dick Wagner, Donny Hartman, Gordy
Garris, and Bobby Rigg. As fate would
have Gordy Garris Jr. has inherited his father’s gift for music, harmony and
lyricism. This document is a testament to the abiding craft that has emerged in
the hills and valleys of Bay City, Midland and Saginaw.
Let me in is
a great opener. “It’s you – you will let me in”. Garris has a fine tenor that can reach the
high notes without any squawk’s and strain. The drum brings in a subtle
backbeat, followed with electric guitar, bass, piano, and Maiya Kauffman’s
understated violin. Nice Riff. Garris intones “No one there to save you now, just
to find your way.” This is a song of recovery and hope. The message is
powerful. “When your dreams all fail and you lost your way, don’t give up on
your dreams”. Good times open with a reggae beat and a throbbing bass guitar the
singer becomes the song and his lyrical scripts convey hope even when it is
painful. “If you waste your life thinking then you’ll miss out on the good
times. Don’t miss out”. In all that I want – Moving faster than
the speed of light but you can’t catch her. She’s out of sight; she’s all that
I want. Garris is in a funky Jones. He’s got it bad. The drummer provides a
vocal counterpoint; creates a colorful landscape with Reeds red hot guitar
clips. Nobody’s
there opens with what sounds like a church organ or a piano and violin. It
has an eloquence that is captivating;
“Through the mist I saw nothing at all until
I saw you standing there.
You’ve come along way – just to say –
I’ll be there for you”
Garris has a sweet tenor and he sings
like a bird. He’s grown in Leaps and Bounds as a singer/song writer. Andy Reed
is hovering over it all, his engineering is fabulous. He positions the bass
guitar for a thumping good bottom with a cool synth/guitar workout. Stole
my heart. Gordy’s piano trill is spare and tight; it gives Garris’ vocal
space to breathe. I wrote the song for you and it’s the only thing I can do to
let you know, know the truth you stole my heart. Garris’ tenor is strong and
evocative. Garris piano and Maiya Kaufmann’s violin gives it substance and a
major chord ambiance. Move me has an
acapella intro. “Give won’t give in.” Acoustic strum is followed by tight drums
and vocal aside, “The way you move me, the way you feel me.” His wondrous vocals
are up front, he’s loose and ready to riff. Reeds command of the vocal
harmonies is exquisite, incredible.
Space – Scratch picking opens the song.
It has a heavy bottom with a cool electric phantasm that leads to a heavy metal
power pop eye opener. There is a nice E-string workout in the middle. Dick Wagner
must be smiling up in those clouds. Garris goes environmental like Al Gore on an
iceberg that’s melting. He’s worried about this crazy life. He surrounds me.
Can’t you see (sings), what’s become of me?”
Wasted Man starts with a riff
that sounds like Carlos Santana praying to the Heavens. Reed sings counterpoint
to Garris and builds the harmonies with tremolo guitar accents and Kaufman’s
wall of sound violin is exquisite, brilliant. Remember me; Garris opens with acoustic strumming and vocal
harmonies with Reed. Garris recalls a past courtship that didn’t work out. Tears
were over the memories. He won’t give in but he’s sitting on the fence. It
doesn’t bode well. His tears were about fading memories. He does not want to
give-in though he’s sitting on the fence afraid the egg will crack. It doesn’t
bode well.
Out of my mind Garris opens the song
with electric guitar and a cool acoustic workout. The blended harmonies are
exquisite. The drummer does a powerful double time riff like Mick Fleetwood
pounding out the beat on Green Manalishi. There’s anger in the vocal. It’s
about a failed relationship. Garris sings, “I must be out of my mind”.
The Coda:
Believe
me. Sweet Piano trills and softened
bass bring the song into context. The singer’s righteous tenor scaffolds the
musical landscape of young love. Garris sings his heart out, “Don’t ever give
up on me no matter what you do, I won’t give up on you”.
Gordy Garris has written great material
that fits perfectly in this saga of love and loss . His singing is powerful.
His tenor is strong. His writing is accomplished. He was able to build lyrical
castles in each moment of this incredible song cycle. Garris is on his way up!
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