
The origin story is almost too good to be true. A teenaged Quinn DeVeaux, raised on a healthy diet of his momโs 80s R&B favorites and dadโs classic rock leanings, left his hometown of Gary, Indiana, and was driving across the country when he really heard Muddy Waters for the first time. He recalls, โI couldn't believe it. Didn't seem real - that bone-raw emotion.โ
Quinn was no stranger to the important legacy of American roots music; it was entwined with his familyโs heritage. His jazz singer grandmother mentored him on church songs and harmonies and nudged him into piano lessons. His uncle booked shows in northern Indiana, coaxing the likes of Chicago-based blues giant Howlinโ Wolf 30 miles south to Gary. By the time Quinn started digging into Chess Records artists like Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley, he was accepting a call to action.
And like any good legend, DeVeaux left home for the wider world: first to Kansas, then to Olympia, Washington, to attend Evergreen State College, and a brief stint in Los Angeles (immortalized in his 2013 ebullient kiss-off โLeft This Townโ), before finding a spiritual home in San Francisco. By the time he began sharpening his performance and songwriting chops through Bay-area cover bands, Quinn had been baptized by Ray Charles, Al Green, and, most profoundly, the working man storyteller Bill Withers.
After playing in a number of configurations that explored all corners of his musical passion, Quinn DeVeaux assembled his Blue Beat Review, which merged his diverse tastes into a rollicking itinerant house party, demolishing venues and releasing several acclaimed records featuring Quinnโs ever-swelling writing and performing skills.
By the time DeVeaux dropped 2018โs This Could Be Yours, he craved a leap of faith and decamped to Nashville to work on his follow-up, 2020โs confident classic Book of Soul. Featuring new spins on modish 60s R&B (โAll I Needโ), simmering Al Green-inspired soul (โCome On Homeโ), Beale Street swagger (โGood Times Rollโ), and afterhours gutbucket blues (โStay the Nightโ), DeVeauxโs Nashville gambit paid off handsomely, solidifying his reputation as versatile and powerful artist.
Pausing briefly to work with old SF friends and bandmates The California Honeydrops on a stellar 2022 single, โTake You Backโ / โVery Best Thangโ, found Quinn building on Book of Soulโs momentum and marked a particularly prolific period in his songwriting, seemingly plucking from the air a wide variety of songs. Quinn explains, โI write everyday and it's a puzzle that gives me so much joy to assemble. The songs already exist and they're just waiting to be revealed.โ In the past few years, DeVeaux has even created an alter-ego project, Flamingo Dores, to spotlight his Americana output, as evidenced by his rootsy โHome Againโ single.
And now, Quinn DeVeauxโs latest album Leisure finds the singer-songwriter continue to refine his soul while injecting his work with new elements. Here are familiar DeVeaux calling cards: the appropriately swampy New Orleans funk of โBayou,โ โYou Got Soulโโs joyous gospel vamp, and the epic ballad โGive Love a Try,โ a sure-bet future live showstopper. But Leisure also revels in a broader palette as seen in โEvil Womanโโs organ vs. synclavier showdown and the smoky 50s lounge vibe of โMany Daysโ before horns launch the tune into Ennio Morricone terrain. The albumโs most compelling moments, however, are found in DeVeauxโs restless songwriting, which explores new stylistic lanes and takes on weightier themes. Revealing some of that Nashville influence, the timeless โEndless Seaโ is stately master-crafted countrypolitan. And โUSAโ digs into Quinnโs midwestern story with evocative precision: โwake up early on a Sunday morning, put on a cotton suit / I didnโt mind the songs we sang, but preachinโ I could never doโ before resigning to โbow my head and roll my eyes - oh, USA.โ This winking, ultimately loving tribute to America is elsewhere undercut by the shattering quiet reflection โHoliday,โ which probes decades of racial violence from its opening couplet โI canโt forget the face of Emmett Till / And all the faces they take from us still.โ Taken together, Leisureโs varied, assured, and personal tracks are as complicated as America itself. A consummate artist, Quinn DeVeaux traverses his countryโs joy, faith, and pain to create beauty forged in tradition and burnished with new spirit.
Considering his journey up to this point, DeVeaux hearkens back to that pivotal Muddy Waters epiphany on the road out of Gary. โWe go back to the stuff we love from the past because we know it's good and we are chasing that first 'pull over out of awe' feeling. But then when something new comes out that gives you that feeling or close to it, it's the best. Yer Shaking all over.โ
-Andy Hittle
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Quinn DeVeaux
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