Eli Cook draws a line between blues-rock-grunge on new music

Eli comes from the crossroads of blues, the highways of rock and the backroads of country, and with his gritty voice, there ain’t nothing like it. His guitar prowess includes pickin’, slidin’, and strummin’ from a Fender to a National Resonator Tri-Cone; he amazes the traditionalists and scares the modern players.  

Born and raised at the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in VA, Eli started young, and by the time he was 18, he was playing church revivals, “juke-joints” and opening up for B.B. King, Johnny Winter, and Robin Trower. He’s spending the good part of these past three years playing live, solo or with his power trio.

Press has been kind to Eli, from Guitar Player to No Depression to Elmore to Blues Music Magazine as well as Maverick overseas and many more. He’s a delight on the radio interviews, and of course, live shows are where Eli piles on the food on plates for his listeners.  

ALL NIGHT THING – 2020
“I want the record to sound like John Fogerty and Billy Gibbons forced Scott Weiland to listen to Chuck Berry and Bill Haley records for a week and then had a jam session. It’s meant to be a call back to the earliest era of blues-based rock and roll, yet undeniably influenced by the latter gods of Southern songwriting. And as always, the grunge giants that embody extreme attitude and energy because it has to have swagger to the nines and make people move compulsively”– Eli Cook, 2020

With “All Night Thing,” Eli goes back to his rock roots, the stuff that legends are made from, and he’s plugged in and ready to play.

Video credit: Aaron Vogeley

Critic Praise: No Depression – Through The Lens 

Eli Cook – All Night Thing 

Cook’s latest may seem like a meager three-track EP, but it packs quite a wallop with a dusty, nitty-gritty sound that doesn’t easily wear off. Like being washed in the blood of the lamb, Cook not only gets down to it, but rolls it around, and comes up for more. This should as no surprise to those familiar with his music: Cook began playing the blues as a young teen, opened for B.B.King at 18, and now, at age 34 and eight albums later, has staked out his own territory, a realm that’s at once both electrifying and guttural while touching other sources, such as Creedence Clearwater Revival. It has taken me a while to catch up with him, I think you should as well. – Amos Perrine 

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A GREAT REVIEW IN VINTAGE GUITAR: August 2020

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