Ryan Shaw is a man with a mission.
This 26-year-old singer/songwriter
from Decatur, Georgia is out to revive the
passion and soul of the Golden Age of Rhythm & Blues
(1960-1972) for a new generation. His debut
album, This
Is Ryan Shaw, combines a powerfully expressive
voice with a clutch of great songs both classic
and new—and a state-of-the-art, in-your-face
sound that makes it impossible to sit still.
Working with player/producers Jimmy Bralower
and Johnny Gale, Ryan dug deep into the “soul
mine” for overlooked gems by obscure
artists like the Combo Kings and the Sharpees
along with more familiar songs made famous
by Wilson Pickett, Jackie Wilson, and Bobby
Womack. Ryan’s original tunes—“Nobody” (the
first single), “We Got Love,” and “Over
and Done” —are most definitely
of the moment but built on the old-school values
of strong melodies and meaningful lyrics.
Ryan delivers every song
with the kind of emotional commitment and
vocal panache that have nearly vanished from the mainstream
musical landscape. Compositional craft and
studio technology blend in an album of irresistible
appeal from the opening dance blast of “Do
the 45” to the heart-wrenching ballad “I
Am Your Man” and “Over and Done,” the
upbeat Ryan Shaw original that closes the set
on a joyful, triumphant note.
On stage, Ryan brings
it all together with a combination of Southern
warmth and New York vitality. Using just
a small rhythm section and two male backing
vocalists, he’s
able to effectively reproduce the sound of
his album while stretching some tunes into
full-on vocal rave-ups. Ryan’s thrilling
voice and charismatic presence are all that
he needs to get over with an audience.
There’s no posturing or mindless booty-shaking,
no need for contrived antics: Ryan Shaw is
the real deal.
About The Artist
Ryan Shaw was born December
26, 1980 in Decatur, Georgia and grew up
in a deeply religious Pentecostal family.
He began singing in church at the age of
five and later formed a family group with
his four brothers called the Shaw Boys. “We
didn’t listen to secular or pop music
either in or out of our house,” he
explains. “So my early musical influences
are all from the gospel world—singers
like Darryl Coley, Keith Brooks, James Moore,
and the Pace Sisters.”
After briefly attending Georgia State University,
Ryan successfully auditioned for the gospel
musical A Good Man Is Hard to Find (Part
II). In 1998, he joined the cast of I
Know I’ve Been Changed, written
and directed by Tyler Perry (Diary of a
Mad Black Woman). Ryan came to New York
with this production and performed to
sold-out crowds at the Beacon Theater.
After the closing of I
Know I’ve
Been Changed, Ryan joined the resident
cast of the Motown Café on West 57thStreet
where he performed Detroit soul favorites
by the Four Tops and Marvin Gaye. Later he
found another steady gig with a group that
he says played “just about anything
from the Fifties and Sixties that you could
dance to—Frank Sinatra and Nat King
Cole, Stax and Motown, Dion & the Belmonts,
you name it.”
“With my church background, a lot of
this material was new to me. But when I saw
how those songs affected people, I began to
understand how their own memories and emotions
were invested in the music. Now that was
pretty cool.”
The more Ryan heard of
the sounds of the Fifties, Sixties, and Seventies,
the more aware he became of the missing ingredients
in contemporary music. “I’m into chords, melodies,
lyrics, arrangements—I’m into music in
all its aspects. It seems like the late Eighties
were the last time we really had all these
elements in Black music, with artists like
Anita Baker and Luther Vandross. By the mid-Nineties,
we were down to two chords and a drum loop.”
In 2004 Ryan was recruited
into the Fabulous Soul Shakers, a vocal group
specializing in classic soul and doo-wop. Johnny Gale,
the group’s guitarist, is a New York
music veteran who’s worked with everyone
from Hank Ballard to the Ramones. Deeply impressed
by Ryan’s talent, Johnny urged his old
friend Jimmy Bralower to check him out. As
a percussionist and drum programmer, Jimmy
was among the city’s most in-demand session
players, having worked with superstars like
Madonna, Peter Gabriel, and Steve Winwood.
One night in 2006, Bralower
came down to hear Ryan sing at a small Lower
East Side club…and
was blown away by what he heard. He and Johnny
Gale invited Ryan back to Jimmy’s basement
studio on Long Island where they quickly cut
four of Ryan’s featured numbers
with the Soul Shakers including “Do the
45” and “I Found a Love.”
About The Album
The collaboration proved
to be heaven-sent. Ryan carefully chose from
dozens of suggested songs and shaped his
own interpretations as Jimmy and Johnny “powered up” the
original arrangements with muscular bass and
drums while adding a guitar riff here
or some handclaps there.
Even as they reinvented
such nuggets as Jackie Wilson’s “I’ll Be Satisfied” and
Bobby Womack’s “Lookin' For A Love,” the
team created new original songs that meshed
seamlessly with the old ones. “The core
songwriting values of that period are so strong
and so timeless that even many of the non-hit
soul records of the Sixties sound like ‘hits’ today,” says
Jimmy. “Those are the values we adhered
to in writing and recording songs like ‘Nobody’ and ‘We
Got Love.’”
Their efforts did not go unrewarded. “Nobody” is
now the first single from This Is Ryan
Shaw while “We Got Love” was
prominently featured in January 2007 promos
for the ABC network television series “Brothers
and Sisters.”
“The strength of his own writing shows
that Ryan Shaw isn't just a great singer” Jimmy
Bralower declares. “He’s a real artist,
he’s got something to say, and he’s
going to be around for a long, long time.”
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Saturday Afternoon
- September 20, 2008 / 1:30pm |
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Garden Stage |
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