Tracy Nelson has always brought a wealth of blues feeling to her work, but being bluesy doesn't necessarily mean that one is actually singing the blues -- one can certainly bring the feeling of the blues to rock, R&B, reggae, country, bluegrass, zydeco, or jazz (all of which have been affected by the blues). In fact,
Nelson has often showed listeners just how blues-minded rock, soul, or country can be.
In the Here and Now, however, isn't just bluesy -- it is blues-oriented, and this time, there are plenty of tracks that actually have 12 bars.
Nelson, who was 45 when this album came out in 1993, really soars on passionate performances of "Motherless Child Blues" and "Go Down Sunshine" as well as Chicago blues gems like
Elmore James' "It Hurts Me Too" and
Willie Dixon's "Whatever I Am, You Made Me." And
Nelson never sounded more confident than she does on "Please Send Me Someone to Love," which finds her performing a duet with veteran New Orleans soul great
Irma Thomas. This
Percy Mayfield classic, which was first recorded in 1950, is one of those standards that has been beaten to death over the years -- as great as the song is, there is such a thing as overkill. But
Nelson and
Thomas manage to make the tune sound fresh and vital, which is impressive because their 1993 version was recorded 43 years after the original version.
Nelson, in fact, was only two years old when
Mayfield first recorded "Please Send Me Someone to Love."
In the Here and Now is hardly the only
Nelson CD that is worth owning, but it is safe to say that it is among the strongest albums that she provided in the '90s. ~ Alex Henderson