Brody Buster’s story is one of early promise, hard falls, and a powerful return. Known for his jaw-dropping harmonica skills and multi-instrumental prowess, Buster first made waves as a child prodigy. By age 12, he was fronting his own band, The Bluesbusters, and sharing stages with legends like B.B. King, Quincy Jones, and Keb’ Mo’.
His early career was marked by national television appearances, including The Tonight Show and Dateline, and performances at major festivals such as the Montreux Jazz Festival and the Montreal Jazz Fest. B.B. King was once quoted as saying, “Despite his age, Brody Buster is one of the greatest harmonica players of our time.” Buster was a regular on national TV and played major festivals before most kids his age had even picked up an instrument. But after a meteoric start, personal struggles and addiction forced him to step away from music and the spotlight.
After years lost to substance abuse and isolation from the music community, Buster hit rock bottom. In late 2023, he made the tough call to leave Kansas for Missouri, determined to rebuild his life. He put family and music at the center, owning up to past mistakes and pouring his energy into songwriting. The result is Redemption, his first album in eight years, released in April 2025—a collection that is intended as a tale of coming out of addiction.
Redemption is a tight set of nine original tracks, the first seven of which were composed by Buster. The album wastes no time getting down to business: from the opening notes, you know you’re in the hands of a seasoned bluesman and his very adept musical crew. The band features Buster on vocals, harmonica & lead guitar, Jackie Myers on organ and piano, Ian Pond on drums, Terry Dry on bass guitar, Howard Mahan on slide guitar, and Jacque Garouette, who besides producing the album, plays bass guitar & sang background vocals. Danielle Nicole also added background vocals.
Buster’s harmonica is front and center, but it’s his raw, honest vocals and songwriting that steal the show. The album moves from hard-driving blues rockers to heartfelt ballads like “The Color Blue,” which wouldn’t feel out of place in a Van Morrison set. The music is tight, energetic, and deeply personal, reflecting both the pain and the hope of Buster’s journey out of addiction.
The tempos don’t let up until the seventh track, a powerful ballad called “The Color Blue” which could appear in a Van Morrison repertoire onstage. The album opens with “Can You Hear Me” but the second track’s lyric (“Born To Be Bad”) delivers the album’s main premise: “When you’re born to be bad / Oh don’t you know it’s so hard to be good / Well, it only took me forty years / Til I found the living just like I should.”
Confessional lyrics can be wearying, but Buster’s album cuts through the clutter of the more traditional blues complaints of being deserted by their women and the standard hard times of being left lonely and broke.
The musicianship is excellent throughout, but the standout track instrumentally is on the fifth track “Wish The Blues Would Stop” when Buster trades figures between the harmonica and lead guitar, rushing to a section of tandem duet play in swing time, until the band slams back into a syncopated blues with stops!
Jacque Myers’ organ playing shines on “Deadwood Shuffle” and could stand to be given a little more time and space, which happens for a moment when we reach the eighth track "This Time I Got the Blues." Country fans will surely enjoy the “Working For The Devil” up-tempo two-stepping groove.
Redemption isn’t just a comeback—it’s a statement. Buster proves he’s not only survived, but come back stronger, reaffirming his place as one of the most compelling multi-instrumentalist blues artists on the scene today. If you’re looking for blues with guts, heart, and a story to tell, Redemption delivers.