Texarkana Gazette

Marcus King, ‘El Dorado’ (Fantasy Records)

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Marcus King’s solo debut is an enticing mix of deep soul, rock and country in the best Southern traditions.

King, though just 23 years old, has been a profession­al musician for over a decade and already has three albums with the Marcus King Band.

Produced and co-written by Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys, “El Dorado” is a smoothly-paced release, with acoustic-based and mid-tempo soul tunes amid a few fuzzy rockers with cutting guitars and rumbling bass.

You could say King has been “Auerbached,” with the producer’s distinct approach — shaped by recording in his own Easy Eye

Sound Studio in Nashville and relying on the timeless talent of legends like drummer Gene Chrisman, bassist

David Roe and Bobby Wood’s Wurlitzer — putting a definitely noticeable but elegantly unintrusiv­e frame around King’s own skills.

Auerbach won a Grammy way back in 2013 for his production work, and his quality control hasn’t let up since. This project follows, in a similar vein, some of his recent efforts on outstandin­g albums by Yola, The Pretenders, Robert Finley and Kendell Marvel.

King is known for his volcanic vocals and his amazing six-string dexterity. But “El Dorado” finds King, a South Carolina native now based in Nashville, mostly dialing down the overall volume without sacrificin­g intensity or feeling. By putting his songwritin­g and more nuanced singing at the fore, King expands his guitar hero profile with excellent results.

Songs range from the countryish “Young Man’s Dream” and “Too Much Whiskey” to the thumping “The Well” and the tortured soul of “One Day She’s Here,” where King sounds a bit like a restrained CeeLo Green.

The slight but enjoyable “Sweet Mariona” precedes the mysterious and yearning “Beautiful Stranger,” which has an air of Aretha Franklin’s “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man.”

The faster tracks on the second half are highlighte­d by more of that swampy fuzz (“Say You Will”) and a clavinet played by Mike Rojas that lives up to its funky reputation on “Say You Will.”

Even this early in the year, “El Dorado” already stands out as a definite high point of 2020. — Pable Gorondi, Associated Press

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