Born forty-six years after the King, yet raised on the same diet of
blues and R&B, Lang was crowned "child prodigy of the year"
shortly after the release of his 1997 debut, Lie To Me.
With the growl of a man and the guitar prowess of a John
Lee Hooker, the then sixteen-year-old wunderkind was
invited to open shows for Mt. Rushmore-worthy blues titans
Buddy Guy and B.B. King, as well
as the Rolling Stones and
Aerosmith.
Now a regular traveling bluesman with the road scars to prove it
(he pulled out of King's Blues Music Festival last month due to a
viral throat infection), Lang is preparing to introduce his second
A&M Records release, appropriately titled
Wander This World, on Oct. 20.
He can't legally drink, smoke or vote, but can do everything with a
guitar except have it bring in the morning paper. On Wander
This World, Lang explores nearly every important musical genre
of this century: gospel on "Leaving to Stay," R&B on "Angel of
Mercy," Stones-style rock on "Right Back" and even a little funk on
"I Am."
Originally composed by Prince more than five years
ago, "I Am" was never recorded or released before Lang made it his
own. "That song was also written by my producer, David
Z," Lang explains. "He just had a rough work tape, and the
song originally was really, really fast with all these Star
Wars gun samples. We slowed it down and made it greasier."
Another momentous track for Lang is "Cherry Red Wine" -- a song
originally recorded by the late great Chicago blues guitarist
Luther Allison, who died of lung cancer more than
a year ago. In a tribute to his friend and mentor, Lang recorded
the classic my-baby-done-me-wrong blues tune using Allison's very
own guitar.
"He was just a good friend, and a really good person," Lang says
about Allison. "And in almost all of his interviews he would
mention young musicians. He was just always really supportive of
me. There were a lot of people who weren't."
At first some dismissed Lang's work as a gimmicky rip-off of real
blues -- or worse, a Johnny-come-lately to a young-white-prodigy
field already inhabited by Kenny Wayne Shepherd
and Derek Trucks. The starry-eyed teenager barely
blinked. Instead, he studied masters like Stevie
Wonder and began concentrating more and more on
songwriting. Whereas only one Lie To Me song listed the
young guitarist in the songwriting credits, four Wander This
World tunes -- primarily soulful, anguished songs like
"Breakin' Me" and "Walking Away" -- were penned by Lang.
"These songs accentuate my voice better than blues stuff," he says.
"Soul stuff is more my bag, I was just too afraid to put soul songs
on Lie To Me because I got pigeonholed as a strictly blues
kind of guy."
This sophomore album was Lang's opportunity to make heads spin --
again. And just in case critics don't believe that the pained and
poetic man they hear on Wander This World is the same
scrawny boy they dismissed last year, Lang will continue his
relentless touring schedule in support of the new album. He will
perform more than a dozen European shows through November and then
will return home to support Wander This World this winter
-- perhaps with yet another arena-packing legend.
"Going out on the road with [Aerosmith and the Rolling Stones], the
biggest thing was being humbled," Lang says. "You know where you
stand, and you get an idea of what it takes to make it. Basically
what it boils down to is this: Great musicians are a dime a dozen,
but it's all the really nice guys who are still there."
ANNI LAYNE(September 15, 1998)
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