Jon Cleary & The Absolute Monster Gentlemen - Pin Your
  • Pin Your Spin
  • Agent 00 Funk
  • Oh No No No
  • Aint Nuttin Nice
  • Smile In A While
  • Doin Bad Feelin Good
  • Best Aint Good Enuff
  • Funky Munky Biznis
  • Is It Any Wonder
  • Got To Be More Careful
  • Caught Red Handed
  • Zulu Strut
  • Pin Your Spin
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (03:11) [7.28 MB]
  • Agent 00 Funk
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (05:17) [12.1 MB]
  • Oh No No No
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (04:18) [9.86 MB]
  • Aint Nuttin Nice
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (03:54) [8.93 MB]
  • Smile In A While
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (03:40) [8.41 MB]
  • Doin Bad Feelin Good
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (04:20) [9.91 MB]
  • Best Aint Good Enuff
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (03:10) [7.23 MB]
  • Funky Munky Biznis
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (02:48) [6.42 MB]
  • Is It Any Wonder
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (05:04) [11.58 MB]
  • Got To Be More Careful
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (06:42) [15.34 MB]
  • Caught Red Handed
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (04:13) [9.67 MB]
  • Zulu Strut
    Genre: Funk
    MP3 (04:52) [11.15 MB]
Biography
For more information email info@basinstreetrecords.com or visit Basin Street Records AirplayDirect homepage.

Pin Your Spin Description
Produced by John Porter. Combining compelling songwriting and scorching funk, Pin Your Spin marks one of Cleary's strongest creative works to date.
“Cleary can be an absolute monster on his own…But Cleary’s full combo R&B is a broad, deep and roiling as the Mississippi River” – Rolling Stone

Track Listing
1. Pin Your Spin
2. Agent 00 Funk
3. Oh No No No
4. Ain't Nuttin' Nice
5. Smile In A While
6. Doin' Bad Feelin' Good
7. Best Ain't Good Enuff
8. Funky Munky Biznis
9. Is It Any Wonder
10. Got To Be More Careful
11. Caught Red Handed
12. Zulu Strut


Personnel
Jon Cleary - Vocals, Keyboards, Lead Guitar, Bass
Derwin Perkins - Vocals, Guitar
Cornell C. Williams - Vocals, Bass
Daniel Sadownick - Percussion
Raymond Weber - Drums
Jamal Batiste - Drums on Zulu Strut
Philip Manuel - Background Vocals on Pin Your Spin, Doin' Bad Feelin' Good, Funky Munky Biznis
Ivan Neville - Background Vocals on Oh No No No, Doin' Bad Feelin' Good, Got To Be More Careful, Smile In A While

Credits
Produced By John Porter
Co-Produced by Jon Cleary
Executive Producer: Mark Samuels
Engineered by Erik Flettrich and Jon Cleary
Mixed by John Porter and Jon Cleary
Mastered by John Porter and Steven Marcussen
Mastered at Marcussen Mastering, Hollywood, CA
Tracking at Piety Street Studios, New Orleans, LA

Design By Harry Villiers
Prepress by Diana Thornton
Photography by Jenny Bagert

Special Thanks To: Mark Samuels, Will Samuels and Basin Street Records (Alyssa Wilcox, Hal Braden), Shawn Hall, Mark Bingham, John Fischbach, Jenny Bagert, Harry Villiers, Adam Shipley, Bill Penney, Tip's 8th Floor Studios, Chris Finney, Tien Laurence and Mesa Ami's, Brandon Mann and Partners in Music, Marci Millington (What A Trip Travel), Ginger Noah, Andy Mortensen, Bonnie Raitt, Kathy Kane, KY Cabot, Ron Stone, Diana Thornton.

John Porter Thanks: The Girls, Jim Mona, Shure Bros, D'Addario Strings & Nettwerk MGMT, Image Consultants & Ambience: Henry & Daisy

Jon Cleary Thanks: John Porter, Chris, Lee and Mark for all the hard work behind the scenes; To Linda, Henry and Daisy for putting up with all the noise; Muchos Kelenos to Harry Y Los Chavalleros De Espagna; Trish the Dish; Chris Finney, Anne Maze, David Hirschland, Greg and Lucy Lou; Alex and Debski; Nell for the funk beyond the call of duty; Johnny G; Arthur Guinness and Pataks Curry Paste; Doug Belote for the drum groove on Oh No No No; Dominic for the suggestion of cutting an acapella tune; Jason Kern & Kyle Waters of Hibernia Bank; And Er... That's about it (apart from all those there wasn't room to include)

All Songs Written by Jon Cleary except
"Ain't Nuttin' Nice" - Cleary, Williams, Perkins
"Agent 00 Funk" - Cleary, Perkins

TourDates

Jon Cleary Bio
Jon Cleary’s love and affinity for New Orleans music goes back to the rural British village of Cranbrook, Kent, where he was raised in a musical family. Cleary’s maternal grandparents performed under the respective stage names Sweet Dolly Daydream and Frank Neville, ‘The Little Fellow With The Educated Feet’ – she as a singer, and he as a tap dancer. His father was a 50’s skiffle man and taught him the rudiments as soon as he was big enough to reach around the neck of his guitar. Upon attaining double-digit age Cleary became avidly interested in funk-filled music, buying records and intently studying their labels and album covers in order to glean as much information as possible. Such perusal revealed that three songs he especially loved — LaBelle’s “Lady Marmalade,” Robert Palmer’s version of “Sneakin’ Sally Through the Alley” and Frankie Miller’s rendition of “Brickyard Blues” – were attributed to Allen Toussaint as either the songwriter, the producer, or both. Cleary’s knowledge expanded significantly when his Uncle, musician Johnny Johnson returned from a sojourn in New Orleans in the early 70’s and brought back two suitcases of rare and obscure local 45s, which allowed the adolescent Cleary to pursue his study of R&B in great depth, with special attention to the New Orleans sound that increasingly captivated him.

As soon as he was old enough to leave school in 1980 Cleary took off for the Crescent City. When his flight touched down a taxi took him straight to the Maple Leaf, a funky Uptown bar which then featured such New Orleans piano legends as Roosevelt Sykes and James Booker. Cleary got a job painting the club, and lived a few doors down for a time, allowing him unlimited free access to all the great New Orleans music performed within. One night when James Booker didn’t show up, the club’s manager insisted that Jon get up and play before the paying customers demanded a refund. Thrust suddenly into the spotlight Jon was ready, willing and able to play his first paying gig in New Orleans – and although he had come to town as a guitarist, this debut was also the first step of his career as a pianist.

Soon Cleary reached the existential crossroads of either devoting his life to the city’s music, or returning to England. Cleary chose New Orleans, and before long he began to land sideman gigs with the venerable likes of such New Orleans R&B legends (and his childhood heroes) as guitarists Snooks Eaglin, and Earl “Trick Bag” King, and singers Johnny Adams, and Jessie Hill.

By 1989, Cleary had recorded his first album of eight including the new GoGo Juice. His increasingly high-profile performances revealed a level of proficient versatility that led to recording sessions and international touring work – in an appropriately wide stylistic range – in the bands of Taj Mahal, John Scofield, Dr. John and, most notably, Bonnie Raitt. As a songwriter, he has written and co-written songs with and for Bonnie Raitt and Taj Mahal and the decade that he spent working with Raitt inspired her to unabashedly dub Cleary “the ninth wonder of the world.”

Jon Cleary left Bonnie Raitt’s band in 2009 to concentrate on his own music. And now, 35 years since he arrived in New Orleans, Cleary has made an eloquent, definitive and future-classic artistic statement. “Funk is the ethnic folk music of New Orleans,” Cleary says, "and I wanted to infuse GoGo Juice with a sound that was true to the city I love. It's the kind of record that could only be made in New Orleans."
5
  • Members:
    Jon Cleary, Derwin Perkins, Cornell C. Williams, Daniel Sadownick, Raymond Weber
  • Sounds Like:
    The Neville Brothers, The Meters, Bonnie Raitt, Ivan Neville
  • Influences:
    Dr. John, Professor Longhair, James Booker, Allen Toussaint, Lee Dorsey
  • AirPlay Direct Member Since:
    10/28/16
  • Profile Last Updated:
    08/14/23 15:30:17

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