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Tuesday, October 28, 2008
831 - Mavis Staples - Live: Hope At The Hideout (2008)
TRACKS1 For What It's Worth 2:52
2 Eyes on the Prize (Traditional) 5:27
3 Down in Mississippi (Lenoir) 4:32
4 Wade in the Water (Traditional) 6:34
5 Waiting for My Child (Traditional) 4:27
6 This Little Light Traditional 4:48
7 Why Am I Treated So Bad (Staples) 8:18
8 Freedom Highway (Staples) 4:37
9 We Shall Not Be Moved (Traditional) 7:46
10 Circle Intro [Encore] (Staples) 3:02
11 Will the Circle Be Broken [Encore] (Traditional) 4:17
12 On My Way [Encore] (Traditional) 6:01
13 I'll Take You There [Encore] (Isbell) 4:19
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BIOGRAPHY
by Rob Bowman
Born in 1940 in Chicago, most of Mavis Staples' career has been as lead singer for the Staple Singers. She first recorded solo for Stax subsidiary Volt in 1969. Subsequent efforts included a Curtis Mayfield-produced soundtrack on Curtom, a disappointing nod to disco for Warner in 1979, a misguided stab at electro-pop with Holland-Dozier-Holland in 1984, and an uneven album for Paisley Park. Staples has a rich contralto voice that has neither the range of Aretha Franklin nor the power of Patti LaBelle. Her otherworldly power comes instead from a masterful command of phrasing and a deep-seated sensuality expressed through timbre manipulation. Both the Staple Singers and Mavis found fresh audiences stemming from their participation on the CD Rhythm Country and Blues, and in 1996 she issued Spirituals & Gospel: Dedicated to Mahalia Jackson. Her next recording project didn't land for another eight years, although Have a Little Faith on Alligator became her highest-profile release in years. We'll Never Turn Back appeared three years later in 2007.
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831
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830 - Chris Farlowe - Make It Fly (2006)
TRACKS1. Try Me 5:21
2. Rock 'N' Roll Soldier 4:36
3. Some Mothers 3:25
4. Hold On 4:05
5. Don't Walk Away 4:12
6. Blues Anthem 2:28
7. Waiting In The Wings 4:32
8. Function To Function 4:40
9. Working In A Parking Lot 4:23
10. Make It Fly 3:30
11. Living It Up 3:37
12. On The Beach 4:53
13. Out Of Time 3:41
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830
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829 - Don Nix - Passing Through (2008)
TRACKS1. Sit Down On Your Love 4:27
2. She's My Rock 3:28
3. Roads 3:23
4. I Wrote It On The Wall 3:49
5. Passsing Through 3:17
6. World Keep On Turning 4:02
7. I Don't Know Way I Care About You 4:08
8. Where's The Problem 4:21
9. I Belong To My Songs 4:40
All Songs By Don Nix and Fredrick Knight except track 9 by Larry Raspberry
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829
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828 - Don Nix - I Don't Want No Trouble (2006)
1 Hole in the Sky Nix, Wall 3:06
2 One Step Ahead of the Blues Nix, Wall 3:09
3 Hurt Somebody Nix, Wall, Wilson 3:58
4 Memphis Man Nix, Well 3:02
5 Smack Dab in the Middle Nix, Smith 2:43
6 Let the Wind Blwo Nix, Wall 3:33
7 Just About Had It Nix, Wall 2:41
8 Subject to Change Nix, Smith, Talley 2:42
9 Crazy from the Heat Nix, Whitsett 2:56
10 Hungry Nix 3:01
11 Addicted to You Nicholson, Nix 3:44
12 Getting on Board Nix, Terry 3:57
2 One Step Ahead of the Blues Nix, Wall 3:09
3 Hurt Somebody Nix, Wall, Wilson 3:58
4 Memphis Man Nix, Well 3:02
5 Smack Dab in the Middle Nix, Smith 2:43
6 Let the Wind Blwo Nix, Wall 3:33
7 Just About Had It Nix, Wall 2:41
8 Subject to Change Nix, Smith, Talley 2:42
9 Crazy from the Heat Nix, Whitsett 2:56
10 Hungry Nix 3:01
11 Addicted to You Nicholson, Nix 3:44
12 Getting on Board Nix, Terry 3:57
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CREDITS
Ryan Cobb - Harmonica
Dave Cochran - Bass
Marc Franklin - Trumpet
Jackie Johnson - Vocals (bckgr)
Susan Marshall - Vocals (bckgr)
Don Nix - Vocals
Ryan Cobb - Harmonica
Dave Cochran - Bass
Marc Franklin - Trumpet
Jackie Johnson - Vocals (bckgr)
Susan Marshall - Vocals (bckgr)
Don Nix - Vocals
Stacie Plunk - Vocals (bckgr)
Larry Raspberry - Bass, Keyboards
Greg Redding - Keyboards
Dave Smith - Bass
Jim Spake - Saxophone
Jay Spell - Fiddle, Keyboards
Greg "Fingers" Taylor - Harmonica
Terry Wall & the Wallbangers - Guitar
Russell Wheeler - Keyboards
Joel Williams - Drums
Larry Raspberry - Bass, Keyboards
Greg Redding - Keyboards
Dave Smith - Bass
Jim Spake - Saxophone
Jay Spell - Fiddle, Keyboards
Greg "Fingers" Taylor - Harmonica
Terry Wall & the Wallbangers - Guitar
Russell Wheeler - Keyboards
Joel Williams - Drums
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828
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827 - Swampdawamp - 2.0 (EP) (2008)
TRACKS1 Dance
2 Fire in the Hole
3 Shoebox
4 Dance-Extended Version
5 Fire in the Hole-Extended Version
6 Shoebox-Extended Version
All Tracks By Gig Michaels
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CREDITS
Gig Michaels - Lead vocals & Acoustic Guitar
Mike Huffman - B3, piano, vocals
Keith Inman - guitars, vocals
Michael Hough - guitars, vocals
Cody Bennett - bass, vocals
David Lee - drums
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827
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826 - Swampdawamp (2007)
TRACKS1 I'm Feelin' Saturday Michaels 3:19
2 Sometimes Michaels 3:33
3 Birthday Michaels 4:38
4 Blind Crippled and Crazy Michaels 4:56
5 Backporch Michaels 3:56
6 The River Michaels 6:06
7 Sunday Southern Tradition Michaels 4:51
8 Miss Becky Michaels 3:32
9 Little Pill Called Truth Michaels 4:24
10 Tastes Like Chicken to Me Michaels 5:25
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CREDITS
Eric Darken - Percussion
Robbie Hegler - Bass, Vocals (bckgr)
Martyn Hill - Guitar (Acoustic), Dobro, Guitar
Eric Darken - Percussion
Robbie Hegler - Bass, Vocals (bckgr)
Martyn Hill - Guitar (Acoustic), Dobro, Guitar
Michael Hough - Guitar, Vocals (bckgr)
David Cory Lee - Drums, Vocals (bckgr)
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David Cory Lee - Drums, Vocals (bckgr)
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BIOGRAPHY
SwampDaWamp (pronounced swamp duh wamp), a unique name for an exciting band with an incomparable sound. The brain-child of singer-songwriter-guitarist Gig Michaels, Charlotte, NC's SwampDaWamp is the powerful and creative collaboration of six talented and seasoned musicians: Gig Michaels (lead vocals & acoustic guitar); David Lee (drums); Michael Hough (guitar & vocals); Keith Inman (guitar); Mike Huffman (keyboards, B3 & vocals); and Cody Bennett (bass). Upon hearing their name, most people are immediately curious. It was born accidentally, while frontman Michaels was scatting at the end of a song. The name instantly captured the band's high-spirited rock energy and rootsy vibe, and it stuck. 2007 marked the debut of SwampDaWamp with the release of their self-titled CD (Big Penny Entertainment-Nashville, TN), an infectious blend of rock and blues with a southern flavor, all in support of Michaels' powerful, gravelly voice. It's no wonder music lovers from rock to blues to country fans...from college age to baby-boomers, love this feel-good, high-octane music. At once unique and familiar, a much sought-after but rarely achieved combination; it has struck a chord with fans all over. Since its release, “SwampDaWamp” has garnered much critical acclaim. The CD was selected as one of the TOP 23 ALBUMS OF 2007 by Eartaste.com , putting them in the company of such artists as John Fogerty, Rickie Lee Jones, and Ray Davies. It also has received rave reviews from the UK's top music publication, “Blues Matters.” In addition, they continue to receive radio airplay throughout the country on college, mainstream, internet and are a favorite at XM Satellite Radio. While almost instantaneously becoming known for their free-spirited, sing-and-dance-along live shows, SwampDaWamp has amassed a huge and rapidly growing fan base. Their music touches people of all ages and backgrounds, as evidenced by the over 15,000 My Space friends they have spanning the globe from the U.S. to France to Australia, proving that the feel-good SwampDaWamp sound is universally engaging and contagious. On the heels of their successful debut CD, this year will bring the release of the band's much-anticipated sophomore effort, SWAMPDAWAMP 2.0, which is scheduled for Summer 2008. SWAMPDAWAMP 2.0 will be carried in stores and available for digital download at all major online retailers.
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826
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Monday, October 27, 2008
824 - Albert Lee and Hogan's Heroes - Like This (2008)
TRACKS1 Skip Rope Song (Winchester) 2:54
2 Can Your Grandpa Rock and Roll Like This (Baker, Pace) 3:10
3 Leave My Woman Alone (Charles) 4:34
4 On the Verge (Prestwood) 3:49
5 I'm Comin' Home (Rich) 2:25
6 Runaway Train (Stewart) 4:27
7 I'll Never Get Over You (Hiatt) 4:32
8 Barnyard Boogie (Gray, Jordan, Wilhelmina) 2:49
9 Two Step Too (McClinton) 2:59
10 Why Me? (Knobloch, McClinton) 3:27
11 Pearl of the Quarter (Becker, Fagen) 3:52
12 Breathless (Blackwell) 3:11
13 Crying in the Rain (Greenfield, King) 3:33
14 Rad Gumbo (Barrere, Clayton, Gradney, Kibbee, Park, Payne) 5:33
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CREDITS
Peter Baron - Drums, Vocals, Vocals (bckgr), Harmony Vocals
Nick Cooper - Cello
Ray Cooper - Percussion
William Hawkes - Viola
Brian Hodgson - Bass, Vocals (bckgr)
Gerry Hogan - Dobro, Pedal Steel, Guitar (Electric), E-Bow
Philippa Ibbotson - Violin
Huey Lewis - Harmonica
Paul Newton - Trumpet
Dick Walter - String Arrangements, String Conductor
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RAPIDSHARE
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Labels:
albert lee and hogan's heroes
| Reactions: |
823 - Albert Lee - Road Runner (2006)
TRACKS1 (I'm A) Road Runner (Dozier, Holland, Holland, Holland) 4:11
2 I'll Stop Loving You (Byrne, Reid) 3:59
3 Rock of Your Love (Hiatt) 3:15
4 Julie's House (Kottke) 4:06
5 Didn't Start Livin' (Burnette, Colton) 4:13
6 The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (Webb) 3:31
7 Livin' It Down (McClinton, Nicholson, Tench) 3:42
8 Working on Love (Sewell, Toner) 4:11
9 Payola Blues (Lee) 7:16
10 Dimming of the Day (Thompson) 3:55
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CREDITS
Bekka Bramlett - Vocals (bckgr)
Mark S. Cohen - Guitar (Acoustic)
Buddy Emmons - Pedal Steel, Guitar (Steel)
Steve Fishell - Guitar (Acoustic), Lap Steel Guitar
Bob Glaub - Bass
Don Heffington - Percussion, Drums
Jon Randall - Vocals (bckgr)
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REVIEW
by Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.
If Albert Lee fans have grown used to his commitment to a handful of good songs and extraordinary guitar work, then Road Runner will not disappoint. Lee and his band kick off with the title track, an easy-rolling rocker with a little vocal help from Buddy Miller. Lee follows with a solid set list that includes selections from John Hiatt, Leo Kottke, and Richard Thompson. These songs all receive tasteful renditions, but the real fun comes with uptempo fare like Billy Burnette and Tony Colton's "Didn't Start Livin'," and Delbert McClinton/Benmont Tench/Gary Nicholson's "Livin' It Down." It doesn't hurt that Lee has enlisted the talents of drummer Don Heffington, bassist Bob Glaub, and steel guitarist Buddy Emmons on Road Runner. Guest appearances by co-producer Steve Fishell on "Didn't Start Livin' and "Rock of Your Love," along with guitarist Mark S. Cohen on the latter, also add something extra to these arrangements. One of the coolest exchanges on the album is between Lee and Emmons' guitar and steel for the last minute and a half on "Working on Love." Guitar freaks, of course, will enjoy the album, but so will country music fans looking for tuneful songs that fall somewhere between the rough edges of alternative country and the glitter of Nashville.
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822 - Albert Lee - Black Claw & Country Fever (1991)
TRACKS1 That's Alright Mama (Crudup) 2:53
2 What a Stupid to Do (Hodges) 3:24
3 Best I Can (Lee) 2:42
4 Send Me Back to the Mines (Corlette, Lee) 2:45
5 Fool [With Strings] (Hazlewood) 2:57
6 Another Useless Day (Hodges) 4:58
7 Six Days on the Road (Green, Montgomery) 2:58
8 Good Times (Vanda, Young) 3:03
9 St. Louis (Vanda, Young) 3:16
10 Brother Preacher (Hodges, Lawrence) 2:59
11 Country in Harlem (Corlette, Lee) 4:25
12 Look Out Cleveland (Helm, Robertson) 3:10
13 Tears of Rage (Dylan, Manuel) 4:01
14 Mama Come Get Your Baby Boy (Corlette, Lee) 2:12
15 Memphis Streets (Diamond) 2:45
16 Long Gone (Diamond) 3:01
17 Too Much of Nothing (Dylan) 1:56
18 Rocky Top (Bryant, Bryant) 3:22
19 Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You (Dylan) 3:15
20 Mama Tried (Haggard) 2:03
21 Lay Lady Lay (Dylan) 3:05
22 Fool [With No Strings] (Hazlewood) 3:06
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CREDITS
Mick Burt - Drums
B.J. Cole Pedal - Steel
Elaine Corlett - Vocals (bckgr)
Matt Fisher - Piano
Harvey Hinsley - Guitar (Rhythm)
Charles "Chas" Hodges - Bass, Guitar, Vocals
Albert Lee - Guitar, Piano, Vocals
Larry Steele - Vocals (bckgr)
Liza Strike - Vocals (bckgr)
Tony Wilson - Vocals (bckgr)
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REVIEW
by Jeff Tamarkin
This collection of late-'60s material is raw yet engaging; the musicianship is stunning.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Bruce Eder
Albert Lee occupies an odd niche in music — British by birth and upbringing, he spent the mid-'60s as a top R&B guitarist, but in the 1970s became one of the top rockabilly guitarists in the world, and no slouch in country music either. In England he's a been household name, and in Nashville and Los Angeles he's been one of the most in-demand session guitarists there is; but outside of professional music circles in America, he's one of those vaguely recognizable names, and occasionally misidentified with his similar-sounding contemporary, ex-Ten Years After guitarist Alvin Lee (with whom he did share a berth once, in Jerry Lee Lewis's band on the latter's London Sessions album) — but where Alvin was a hero of Woodstock and a flashy guitarist, in the manner of British blues extroverts Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck, Albert is much more likely to be found playing in the background, behind the Everly Brothers or alongside Eric Clapton.Lee was born in Leominster, England, in 1943. His introduction to music came from his father, who played piano and accordion. His first instrument was the piano, which he took up at age seven — he was lucky enough to be more than five years into his keyboard study when rock & roll came along, and his first idol was Jerry Lee Lewis, which also marked his introduction to rockabilly music. Within a couple of years, however, Lee had switched to guitar, and also discovered the music of Buddy Holly & the Crickets. He started learning the guitar in earnest and studying their records very closely, and not long after graduated from an acoustic to an electric instrument, and was learning the lead guitar parts on records by Holly, Gene Vincent, Ricky Nelson, the Louvin Brothers, and the Everly Brothers — except that to him they were just as much records by Tommy Alsup, Jimmy Bryant, Cliff Gallup, James Burton, Chet Atkins, and Hank "Sugarfoot" Garland, among other guitarists. At 16, he turned professional and joined the stable of musicians working for manager Larry Parnes, playing behind Dickie Pride, among other stars on Parnes' roster. He later joined the backing band of R&B singer Bob Xavier, and later played behind Jackie Lynton, through whom he appeared on his first recording. Lee twice succeeded Jimmy Page as a lead guitarist, first in Mike Hurst's band and then in Neil Christian's backing group. And Lee, in turn, was succeeded in the latter band by Ritchie Blackmore when he jumped to Chris Farlowe's backing group the Thunderbirds. He spent four years with the Thunderbirds, who became known in British musical circles as one of the best R&B bands in England, and all gained fame as Farlowe charted singles (including a number one hit) in 1966 and early 1967. He finally left Farlowe in 1968, feeling bored after four years, and over next two years passed through several bands playing behind various visiting American country stars, including George Hamilton IV, Skeeter Davis, and Bobby Bare. Lee passed through several groups, including Country Fever and Poet & the One Man Band, before finally reaching a semipermanent berth with Heads, Hands & Feet, a progressive country outfit who were sort of England's answer to the Flying Burrito Brothers or the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. He first achieved public notice as a member of this group, which achieved some positive critical notice — and allowed Lee to expand his playing beyond the guitar — but saw little commercial success. They split up after two years, and Lee made his living as a session guitarist for the next couple of years, and was also able to latch on to a piece of new recording action going on in England. In 1970, Chess Records had scored an unexpected chart success with The London Howlin' Wolf Sessions, which had led to a spate of "London Sessions" albums by Muddy Waters and Chuck Berry, among others at Chess, and even a B.B. King album on ABC Records built along the same lines. He got in on Jerry Lee Lewis' London Sessions album, and that seemed to reopen Lee's relationship of the early '60s with American acts — except that this time one circle of his life seemed to close when he was chosen to replace Glen D. Hardin in the Crickets. He toured with them and also cut sides with them in Nashville for a Mercury Records release, Long Way From Lubbock. When the smoke cleared from his two years with the band, Lee had moved to Los Angeles, where he made contact with Phil Everly and Don Everly, who were working separately at the time. Lee joined Don's band and even got his Heads, Hands & Feet bandmates to work on his Sunset Towers LP.From there, Lee became a member of Joe Cocker's band, which, in turn, led to the offer of a contract in 1975 to do a solo album with A&M Records, which was Cocker's label at the time. A gig playing (and recording) with Emmylou Harris delayed the completion of his own record for a couple of years, until the end of 1978, though when Home, as it was titled, finally appeared, it was not only a guitar virtuoso showcase but included Harris on it as a guest performer. He was signed to Polydor as a solo artist, but by that time the session work and offers were coming in fast and furious, and Lee was seemingly everywhere, playing with everyone from Jackson Browne to Bo Diddley to Herbie Mann. His most visible gig, however, was playing with Eric Clapton, first on Just One Night and then on the tour that followed. And when the Everly Brothers reunited for a concert, a live album, and a concert video, Lee was there in the band. Lee's own solo career continued into the late '80s with Speechless (1987) and Gagged but Not Bound (1988), both issued by MCA and both critical successes. He was also later a member of Gerry Hogan's bluegrass group Hogan's Heroes, and toured and recorded with Bill Wyman's band, the Rhythm Kings. He has also played with Eddie Van Halen and Steve Morse in a supergroup called the Biff Baby All-Stars.In his fifth decade as a professional musician, Lee was part of a rarefied fraternity as a virtuoso's virtuoso, respected on three continents and pretty much living out a professional life that most of his colleagues, when he started out, could only dream of. He continued to record in the 21st century, cutting the country/rockabilly album Heartbreak Hotel for Sugar Hill in 2003. That same year, Castle Records issued a Lee retrospective compilation, That's All Right, Mama. A second Sugar Hill release, Road Runner, appeared in 2006.
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Sunday, October 26, 2008
821 - Ollabelle (2004)
TRACKS1 Before This Time (Jones, Lomax) 2:18
2 Soul of a Man (Traditional) 3:59
3 Elijah Rock (Traditional) 5:23
4 Jesus on the Mainline (Traditional) 4:43
5 Get Back Temptation (Patscha) 2:50
6 I Am Waiting (Jagger, Richards) 4:15
7 Two Steps (Helm, Isaacs, Leone, McBain, Tormes, Zhivago) 3:53
8 No More, My Lawd (Traditional) 4:41
9 Can't Nobody Do Me Like Jesus (Crouch) 4:23
10 The Storms Are on the Ocean (Carter, Carter, Carter) 3:25
11 John the Revelator (Traditional) 4:09
12 I'm Willing to Run All the Way (Traditional) 5:54
13 I Don't Want to Be That Man (Patscha) 5:04
14 All Is Well (Traditional) 4:53
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CREDITS
Sean Costello - Guitar, Guitar (Electric), National Steel Guitar
Amy Helm - Vocals
Levon Helm - Drums
Byron Isaacs - Bass (Electric), Slide Guitar, Bass (Acoustic)
Tony Leone - Percussion, Drums, Tambourine, Vocals
Alan Lomax - Arranger
Fiona McBain - Percussion, Vocals, National Steel Guitar
Glenn Patscha - Organ, Dumbek, Vocals, Clavinet, Organ (Pump), Bass Pedals, Wurlitzer, Casio
Liz Tormes - Vocals
Jimi Zhivago - Bass, Harmonica, Guitar (Electric), Vocals, Slide Guitar, Electric Upright Bass, Hi String Guitar
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REVIEW
by William Ruhlmann
New York sextet Ollabelle's music is a hybrid of indigenous American styles, mixing folk, blues, and gospel, and drawing upon traditional sources to create something that sounds wholly new. If one is tempted to say "you've never heard anything quite like this before," it isn't because the ingredients are unfamiliar, it's because the mixture and the approach are. The alternating male and female vocalists usually sing traditional material, with arrangements that recall the kind of updated authenticity of Ry Cooder as much as the original sources. Somehow, these performances steer in between the alternating obstacles of sounding too retro on the one hand or taking an ironic posture on the other. The performers seem utterly immersed in the music, utterly sincere in their singing (though it would be surprising to find that their commitment to the religious lyrics was anything but figurative), yet they clearly are reaching back to their archaic sources through the context of contemporary music. Their few originals are of a piece with the traditional material, and even a revival of the Rolling Stones' "I Am Waiting" fits right in. It's no surprise that T-Bone Burnett's DMZ label is issuing this debut, since Burnett has demonstrated his affinity for American roots music and ability to recontextualize it for the 21st century. And it is appropriate that the Band's Levon Helm, doubtless the father of the group's Amy Helm, drums on "Soul of a Man." Ollabelle is trying to create a new sound out of long-standing folk-based musical styles in much the same way that the Band did with Music From Big Pink in 1968. The wonder is how well the group succeeds. Ollabelle is a moving collection of performances that will remind the listener of the emotional depth and scope of American music. If there is any disc capable of turning the term "Americana" into a full-fledged musical genre, this is it.
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BIOGRAPHY
by William Ruhlmann
Ollabelle was formed as a side project by a group of six New York-based singer/songwriters to play informally at the Sunday night gospel show of a local club. Singer and mandolin player Amy Helm came from Woodstock, NY, where she had performed in blues bands; bassist Byron Isaacs was living in Brooklyn; drummer Tony Leone came out of jazz; singer/guitarist Fiona McBain had moved to New York from Sydney, Australia; keyboard player Glenn Patscha had played extensively in New Orleans; and guitarist Jimi Zhivago was a producer and multi-instrumentalist. All were pursuing various solo and group projects, but they had come to know each other and interact at 9C, a bar located at the corner of 9th Street and Avenue C in Manhattan's East Village neighborhood. When the barman instituted a gospel night in 2002, the bandmembers began playing together, working up originals to go with traditional gospel material, creating a musical hybrid. After several months, Zhivago brought in Steve Rosenthal, owner of a recording studio, who asked to record an album on speculation. The name Ollabelle came from country singer Ola Belle Reed. After recording the album, Rosenthal sent it to only one person, T-Bone Burnett, known for the celebrated traditional country soundtrack album O Brother, Where Art Thou?, who had recently begun his own label, DMZ, distributed by Columbia Records. Five days after receiving the album, Burnett flew to New York to sign Ollabelle to DMZ/Columbia, and the album was released in March 2004 and featured mostly traditional songs. Two years later, the group released their second effort, Riverside Battle Songs, which featured more original material.
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820 - Don Nix and Friends - Going Down: The Songs Of Don Nix (2002)
TRACKS1 Black Cat Moan (Nix) 3:16
2 On the Road Again (Crain, Nix) 3:17
3 Right Where You Want Me (Nix, Tiven, Tiven) 3:11
4 Same Old Blues (Nix) 3:26
5 Lucinda (Nicholson, Nix) 3:26
6 Palace of the King (Dunn, Nix, Russell) 3:29
7 Going Down (Nix) 5:56
8 Going Back to Luka (Nix) 3:27
9 Like a Road Leading Home (Nix, Penn) 4:47
10 One More Repossession (Nicholson, Nix) 4:33
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Bonnie Bramlett - Vocals
Billy Crain - Guitar
Steve Cropper - Guitar
Mike Duke - Piano, Piano (Electric)
Audley Freed - Guitar, Guitar (Electric)
David Hood - Bass
Jackie Johnson - Vocals
Bobby Manuel - Guitar
Susan Marshall - Vocals (bckgr)
John Mayall - Harmonica
Max Middleton - Piano
Greg Morrow - Drums
Don Nix - Vocals
Dan Penn - Vocals
Michael Rhodes - Bass
Billy Lee Riley - Harmonica, Vocals
Dave Smith - Bass
Jon Tiven - Guitar, Guitar (Electric)
Leslie West - Guitar, Guitar (Electric)
Tony Joe White - Guitar
Reese Wynans - Organ
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REVIEW
by Hal Horowitz
The legendary R&B songwriter who penned at least one undeniable classic in this album's title track returns from nearly a decade-long retirement, calls in some notable friends, and re-records a handful of his better songs under the watchful eye of producer Jon Tiven (Wilson Pickett, tribute albums to Otis Blackwell and Curtis Mayfield). His voice is an acquired taste, and the majority of these tunes are performed as standard swamp rock fare, yet this is a decent career recap from the 60-something musician/producer/songwriter. Although Leon Russell (who gave Don Nix his biggest break by hiring him to produce and write songs for Freddie King) is conspicuously M.I.A., old Mar-Keys bandmate Steve Cropper is aboard, as are friends Dan Penn, Bonnie Bramlett, John Mayall, Tony Joe White, and Bobby Whitlock. Queen's Brian May even guests (overdubbed) on a track, as does Mountain man Leslie West. For better or worse, none of these marquee names are particularly prominent in the mix. The majority of the tracks are dominated by Nix's solid studio band which includes ex-Double Trouble man Reese Wynans on organ, guitarist Tiven, Wet Willie keyboardist Mike Duke, and Muscle Shoals legend David Hood on bass. Even with some good songs, it's obvious why Nix's previous solo albums — all but one of which remain out of print as of 2002 — never made much of an impression. His thin vocals are non-descript at best, and off-key at worst. Nix's own versions of these songs remain inferior to the more famous covers from Freddie King, Albert King, John Mayall, and Jeff Beck. A few new compositions, like the surging "One More Repossession," chug along with moderate energy and enthusiasm, but even though everyone seems to be trying their hardest, sparks just don't fly during the majority of the album. Label owner Jerry Gordon's liner notes provide a short but snappy synopsis of Nix's colorful life and the 12-page booklet includes rare historical snapshots. Ultimately, this is a well-intentioned project with some unpretentious, rootsy performances that just never gets off the ground.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Steve Kurutz
Author of the blues classic "Going Down," Don Nix is one of the more obscure figures in Southern soul and rock. As a producer he has worked with Freddie King, Jeff Beck and Furry Lewis, among others; as an artist, he has released solo albums on Shelter and Elektra, as well as smaller labels like Icehouse. Born in Memphis, Nix attended Messick High School with Donald "Duck" Dunn and Steve Cropper of the famed Stax house band Booker T. & the MG's. After graduation, Nix spent a short stint in the Army before returning to Memphis, where he joined Dunn and Cropper, along with Wayne Jackson, Packy Axton, Terry Johnson and Jerry Lee "Smoochie" Smith, as a saxophonist in the Mar-Keys.The group scored a smash hit with the instrumental "Last Night" on the Satelite label (later Stax/Volt), and Nix went on the road with the group, while a house band from Memphis attempted to recorded follow up hits under the Mar-Keys' name. After the success of "Last Night" fizzled, Nix returned to Memphis and spent the next several years as a horn for hire, occasionally playing gigs with a reformed version of the Mar-Keys or backing Stax stars such as William Bell and Carla Thomas.In the mid-'60s, Nix began making trips to L.A. to visit Leon Russell and Carle Radle, friends he'd met through touring. The friendship with Russell, a big producer at the time, landed Nix a position in Dick Clark's Caravan of Stars backing one of Russell's acts, Gary Lewis & the Playboys. Their friendship also provided Nix the opportunity to see how a session was put together, and he began engineering and producing at studios around Memphis such as Stax and Ardent. Nix spent the next several years writing and producing for artists such as Freddie King, Albert King, Sid Selvidge, and Charlie Musselwhite. In 1970, he signed a recording deal with Shelter Records (co-owned by his old friend Leon Russell) and released a solo album, In God We Trust. The album didn't sell very well, and after a few more attempts, Nix returned to recording other artists, producing records for John Mayall and the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. Absent from the record industry through most of the '80s, in recent years Nix has relocated to Nashville and began writing and producing again. He published a book about his experiences titled Road Stories & Recipes, and re-recorded many of his classic tracks with musicians such as Brian May and Steve Cropper for 2002's nostalgic Going Down.
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Labels:
don nix and friends
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819 - Bloodline (1994)
TRACKS1 Stone Cold Hearted (Bonamassa, Hudson, Krieger, Oakley, Segreti) 3:18
2 Dixie Peach 3:37
3 Cell Block 7 (Bonamassa, Davis, Hudson, Krieger, Oakley, Segreti) 4:29
4 Storm [instrumental] (Bonamassa) 4:12
5 The Good Luck You're Having (Bonamassa, Held) 4:37
6 Honest Crime (Bonamassa, Held, Segreti, Turner) 4:27
7 So Far Away (Hudson, Oakley) 5:17
8 Calling Me Back (Bonamassa, Haynes, Oakley, Segreti) 4:32
9 Bad Girls (Bonamassa, Segreti, Sutton) 4:48
10 Since You're Gone (Bonamassa, Davis, Haynes, Krieger, Oakley, Segreti) 9:25
11 Trouble Is My Business (Bonamassa, Jennings, Krieger, Oakley) 5:05
12 Get off Your Back (Bonamassa, Davis, Krieger, Oakley, Segreti) 4:20
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CREDITS
Joe Bonamassa - Guitar
Bertram Brown - Vocals (bckgr)
Erin Davis - Percussion, Drums
Warren Haynes - Guitar, Slide Guitar
Waylon Krieger - Guitar
Berry Oakley, Jr. - Bass, Vocals
Lou Segreti - Keyboards
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REVIEW
by Tim Griggs
Three out of the five members of Bloodline are the offspring of musical legends. Drummer Erin Davis is the son of Miles Davis; Waylon Krieger is former Doors-man Robby Krieger's son; and Berry Oakley, Jr. is the child of the late Allman Brothers bassist. Bloodline's lead guitarist, Joe Bonamassa, may not be the progeny of a legend, but he is certainly the prodigy of this group. His rocking guitar on this album practically overwhelms the other members of the group, who are all fine musicians. Another excellent rocker, Warren Haynes, makes a guest appearance on slide guitar. Unfortunately, none of the members of the group, including Bonamassa, are a major threat in the songwriting department. The songs are forgettable and, regrettably, great musicianship cannot save run-of-the-mill songs.
by Tim Griggs
Three out of the five members of Bloodline are the offspring of musical legends. Drummer Erin Davis is the son of Miles Davis; Waylon Krieger is former Doors-man Robby Krieger's son; and Berry Oakley, Jr. is the child of the late Allman Brothers bassist. Bloodline's lead guitarist, Joe Bonamassa, may not be the progeny of a legend, but he is certainly the prodigy of this group. His rocking guitar on this album practically overwhelms the other members of the group, who are all fine musicians. Another excellent rocker, Warren Haynes, makes a guest appearance on slide guitar. Unfortunately, none of the members of the group, including Bonamassa, are a major threat in the songwriting department. The songs are forgettable and, regrettably, great musicianship cannot save run-of-the-mill songs.
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818 - The Cell - Are You Ready (2006)
1 The Blues Never Stops 4:21
2 Ready for a Ride 4:22
3 Out of Time 3:45
4 Burnin' Like a Fire 3:18
5 Dreams Inside My Head 4:12
6 I Haven't Got a Lady 4:26
7 Backdoor Woman 4:01
8 Down 4:10
9 Third Bitch in a Row 3:20
10 Long Gone 4:49
11 Fall into the Sky 4:25
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CREDITS
DAVID GORE - Lead Vocals, Guitar and Co-Writer of all the songs
MICHAL BENES - Guitar, Vocals and Co-Writer of all the songs
TOMAS HOMUTA - Hammond Organ and Piano
VERONIKA MILATOVA - Vocals
LEO KOUDELKA - Bass and Vocals
MILAN MILATA - Drums and Vocals
Special Guest:
2 Ready for a Ride 4:22
3 Out of Time 3:45
4 Burnin' Like a Fire 3:18
5 Dreams Inside My Head 4:12
6 I Haven't Got a Lady 4:26
7 Backdoor Woman 4:01
8 Down 4:10
9 Third Bitch in a Row 3:20
10 Long Gone 4:49
11 Fall into the Sky 4:25
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CREDITS
DAVID GORE - Lead Vocals, Guitar and Co-Writer of all the songs
MICHAL BENES - Guitar, Vocals and Co-Writer of all the songs
TOMAS HOMUTA - Hammond Organ and Piano
VERONIKA MILATOVA - Vocals
LEO KOUDELKA - Bass and Vocals
MILAN MILATA - Drums and Vocals
Special Guest:
PETER BOSKA - Guitar
HANA VANIKOVA - Vocals
MIKE GORE - Vocals
JAN MOC - Violins
JAN CZAKAL - Cello
JARDA HULA - Harmonica.
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REVIEW
In the fall of 1993, DAVID GORE, of Lafayette, Louisiana, had one of those days similar to the one that Michael Douglas had in the movie "FALLING DOWN" (which by the way, was released in 1993). In case you've never seen the flick, Michael plays a very stressed out member of the work force, who buckles under the pressure of long commutes, in constantly heavy traffic, and goes on a rampage. And I do mean a rampage!
Fortunately, DAVID didn't quite take it to the same extreme. He simply said “That’s it, I'm leaving the country!”. And he did. From reading his bio, it's apparent that it was one of the best decisions he ever made in his life. Not only did he end up in several very successful business ventures, but he obviously met a bunch of extremely talented Czech musicians and formed himself one hell of a band - THE CELL.
The opening track on "ARE YOU READY", which features eleven all original tracks, is "THE BLUES NEVER STOPS (UNTIL YOU'RE DEAD)". Hopefully, that's true. I can handle the blues in the rest of my life. Unfortunately that's not how this song is addressing it. These haunting blues are caused by the "devils daughter' who yanked out her lover's heart and carved it up. This is why his blues will never stop. This is a real hard drivin' number with excellent lead and background vocals and some serious guitar playing. A very impressive opening track, it leaves you looking forward to what's ahead. Which, by the way, is another very similar smokin' track called "READY FOR A RIDE".
"BURNIN' LIKE A FIRE" features some absolutely stunning drum work by MILAN. This, added to what by now has become this bands signature features - it's lead and back ground vocals and phenomenal guitar work, makes this one of the discs highlights.
"DREAMS INSIDE MY HEAD" , a much slower paced track, features several very nice organ and piano solos by TOMAS and a real nice, very bluesy guitar solo by MICHAL. As usual, the background vocals by VERONIKA and HANA are right on the spot.
"BACK DOOR WOMAN" features the two ladies that have, all disc long, been blowing me away with their background vocals. However, on this track, they're even more enjoyable because VERONIKA and HANA are sharing the lead vocals. The talented ladies make this track an automatic highlight.
"THIRD BITCH IN A ROW" could be the theme song of many a single man. After being with three bitches in a row, this poor soul cannot take it anymore, as he decides to shoot or hang her, he is already preparing himself for what he's going to tell the judge - quite simply - "She's his third bitch in a row". Fortunately it's just a dream. Excellent vocal, lyrics musicianship make this another of the discs many winners.
I don't exactly know if the THE CELL will be planning an American tour any time soon, especially since there's always the chance that DAVID may go "MICHAEL" if he ever returns. However, you should look into getting your hands on a copy of "ARE YOU READY" by this Southern Fried Bohemian Blues Rock Band.
You can visit The Cell on the Internet at: www.thecell.cz/
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HANA VANIKOVA - Vocals
MIKE GORE - Vocals
JAN MOC - Violins
JAN CZAKAL - Cello
JARDA HULA - Harmonica.
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REVIEW
In the fall of 1993, DAVID GORE, of Lafayette, Louisiana, had one of those days similar to the one that Michael Douglas had in the movie "FALLING DOWN" (which by the way, was released in 1993). In case you've never seen the flick, Michael plays a very stressed out member of the work force, who buckles under the pressure of long commutes, in constantly heavy traffic, and goes on a rampage. And I do mean a rampage!
Fortunately, DAVID didn't quite take it to the same extreme. He simply said “That’s it, I'm leaving the country!”. And he did. From reading his bio, it's apparent that it was one of the best decisions he ever made in his life. Not only did he end up in several very successful business ventures, but he obviously met a bunch of extremely talented Czech musicians and formed himself one hell of a band - THE CELL.
The opening track on "ARE YOU READY", which features eleven all original tracks, is "THE BLUES NEVER STOPS (UNTIL YOU'RE DEAD)". Hopefully, that's true. I can handle the blues in the rest of my life. Unfortunately that's not how this song is addressing it. These haunting blues are caused by the "devils daughter' who yanked out her lover's heart and carved it up. This is why his blues will never stop. This is a real hard drivin' number with excellent lead and background vocals and some serious guitar playing. A very impressive opening track, it leaves you looking forward to what's ahead. Which, by the way, is another very similar smokin' track called "READY FOR A RIDE".
"BURNIN' LIKE A FIRE" features some absolutely stunning drum work by MILAN. This, added to what by now has become this bands signature features - it's lead and back ground vocals and phenomenal guitar work, makes this one of the discs highlights.
"DREAMS INSIDE MY HEAD" , a much slower paced track, features several very nice organ and piano solos by TOMAS and a real nice, very bluesy guitar solo by MICHAL. As usual, the background vocals by VERONIKA and HANA are right on the spot.
"BACK DOOR WOMAN" features the two ladies that have, all disc long, been blowing me away with their background vocals. However, on this track, they're even more enjoyable because VERONIKA and HANA are sharing the lead vocals. The talented ladies make this track an automatic highlight.
"THIRD BITCH IN A ROW" could be the theme song of many a single man. After being with three bitches in a row, this poor soul cannot take it anymore, as he decides to shoot or hang her, he is already preparing himself for what he's going to tell the judge - quite simply - "She's his third bitch in a row". Fortunately it's just a dream. Excellent vocal, lyrics musicianship make this another of the discs many winners.
I don't exactly know if the THE CELL will be planning an American tour any time soon, especially since there's always the chance that DAVID may go "MICHAEL" if he ever returns. However, you should look into getting your hands on a copy of "ARE YOU READY" by this Southern Fried Bohemian Blues Rock Band.
You can visit The Cell on the Internet at: www.thecell.cz/
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2008/10/24
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Blogger has been notified, according to the terms of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), that certain content in your blog infringes upon the copyrights of others. The URL(s) of the allegedly infringing post(s) may be found at the end of this message.The notice that we received, with any personally identifying information removed, will be posted online by a service called Chilling Effects at http://www.chillingeffects.org. We do this in accordance with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Please note that it may take Chilling Effects up to several weeks to post the notice online at the link provided.The DMCA is a United States copyright law that provides guidelines for online service provider liability in case of copyright infringement. We are in the process of removing from our servers the links that allegedly infringe upon the copyrights of others. If we did not do so, we would be subject to a claim of copyright infringement, regardless of its merits. See http://www.educause.edu/Browse/645?PARENT_ID=254 for more information about the DMCA, and see http://www.google.com/dmca.html for the process that Blogger requires in order to make a DMCA complaint.Blogger can reinstate these posts upon receipt of a counter notification pursuant to sections 512(g)(2) and 3) of the DMCA. For more information about the requirements of a counter notification and a link to a sample counter notification, see http://www.google.com/dmca.html#counter.Please note that repeated violations to our Terms of Service may result in further remedial action taken against your Blogger account. If you have legal questions about this notification, you should retain your own legal counsel. If you have any other questions about this notification, please let us know.Sincerely,The Blogger TeamAffected URLs:http://velhorockeiro.blogspot.com/2008/04/225-molly-hatchet-no-guts-no-glory-1983.html
817 - Warren Haynes - The Benefit Concert Volume 2 (2001)
TRACKS1 I'll Be the One 5:11
Composed by: Haynes
Performed by: Warren Haynes
2 In My Life 4:55
Composed by: Haynes
Performed by: Warren Haynes, Matt Abts
3 Badness 4:17
Composed by: Duarte
Performed by: Chris Duarte Group
4 Who Knows Hendrix 9:27
Composed by: Hendrix
Performed by: Duarte, Chris Group, Mike Barnes
5 Nancy Sinatra 2:56
Composed by: Baird, Henneman
Performed by: Bottle Rockets
6 Stuck in a Rut 4:14
Composed by: Henneman
Performed by: Bottle Rockets
7 Elevator to the Moon 10:50
Composed by: Hampton, Keller
Performed by: Bruce Hampton & Aquarium Rescue Unit
8 Fixin' to Die 4:32
Composed by: White
Performed by: Bruce Hampton & Aquarium Rescue Unit
9 Time Is Free/Jack the Rabbit 17:28
Composed by: Hampton, Johnson, Keller, Rothschild
Performed by: Bruce Hampton & Aquarium Rescue Unit, John Popper
10 Goin' out West 7:39
Composed by: Brennan, Waits
Performed by: Gov't Mule, Dave Schools
11 Mountains Win Again 7:38
Composed by: Sheehan
Performed by: Gov't Mule, Dave Schools, John Popper
12 Alone 12:42
Composed by: Popper
Performed by: John Popper, Warren Haynes
13 Scared But Smarter 5:11
Composed by: Kinney, Nielsen
Performed by: Kevn Kinney, John Popper
14 A Good Country Mile 5:24
Composed by: Kinney
Performed by: Kevn Kinney, Tramp
15 Solitude 7:03
Composed by: McCain
Performed by: Edwin McCain, Warren Haynes
16 I Shall Be Released 7:14
Composed by: Dylan
Performed by: Warren Haynes, Kevn Kinney, Edwin McCain
17 Come and Go Blues 5:22
Composed by: Allman
Performed by: Gregg Allman, Warren Haynes
18 Ain't Wastin' Time No More 5:30
Composed by: Allman
Performed by: Allman Brothers Band
19 Born Under a Bad Sign 6:23
Composed by: Bell, Jones
Performed by: Allman Brothers Band, Floyd Miles, Paul Riddle
20 Soulshine 6:54
Composed by: Haynes
Performed by: Allman Brothers Band, Dan Matrazzo
21 Statesboro Blues 6:43
Composed by: McTell
Performed by: Allman Brothers Band, John Popper
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REVIEW
by Thom Jurek
Y'all know what you're gonna get here, right? Yep. Recorded at the Thomas Wolfe Auditorium in Asheville, NC back on December 21, 2000, it's Warren Haynes and his pals from the strange to the legendary and everywhere in between. This Benefit Concert, Vol. 2 is a double disc that features Haynes playing solo acoustic, and with two of his own bands — the Allman Brothers and Gov't Mule — as well as John Popper, Kevn Kinney, the Bottle Rockets, Edwin McCain, Chris Duarte, Col. Bruce Hampton & the Aquarium Rescue Unit, and cats like Audley Freed, Dr. Dan Matrazzo, and Dave Schools pitching in wherever needed. Haynes is a dynamite performer even when playing acoustic. When he's playing with anybody else he's simply a monster of a musician. For those who dig the jam band scene, this set and its first companion volume are among the hardcore treasures. The performances are all dynamite: check the Allmans playing "Born Under a Bad Sign," and Gregg Allman with Haynes on "Come and Go Blues," or Haynes, Kinney, Popper and McCain playing Bob Dylan's "I Shall Be Released," just for starters. There's some ebb and flow here, too: Duarte's and Hampton's performances are over the top, and the Bottle Rockets are just plain crazy (and delightful). The sound is pristine, without losing any of the grit and grease of the moment.
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816 - Warren Haynes - The Benefit Concert Volume 1 (2000)
TRACKS1 Beautiful Life 4:53
Composed by: McCain
Performed by: Edwin McCain
2 Alive 7:37
Composed by: McCain
Performed by: Edwin McCain, Warren Haynes
3 I'll Be 5:04
Composed by: McCain
Performed by: Edwin McCain, Warren Haynes
4 Rastaman Chant 11:19
Composed by: Marley
Performed by: Trucks, Derek Band
5 Chicken Strut 5:10
Composed by: Modeliste, Neville, Nocentelli, Porter
Performed by: Trucks, Derek Band
6 555 Lake 7:37
Composed by: McKay, Scott, Smallie, Trucks
Performed by: Trucks, Derek Band, Jimmy Herring
7 Yield Not to Temptation/Turn on Your Lovelight 7:28
Composed by: Malone
Performed by: Trucks, Derek Band, Bruce Hampton
8 Ain't That Loving You 8:07
Composed by: Malone
Performed by: Trucks, Derek Band, Larry McCray, Jimmy Herring
9 Don't Change Horses (In the Middle of a Stream) 7:37
Composed by: Watson, Williams
Performed by: Trucks, Derek Band, Edwin McCain
10 Just Won't Burn 6:18
Composed by: Tedeschi
Performed by: Susan Tedeschi, Trucks, Derek Band
11 Angel from Montgomery 4:05
Composed by: Prine
Performed by: Susan Tedeschi
12 Pretty as You Please 4:01
Composed by: Freed
Performed by: Cry Of Love
13 Peace Pipe 4:44
Composed by: Freed, Holland
Performed by: Cry Of Love
14 Mule 6:27
Composed by: Abts, Haynes, Woody
Performed by: Gov't Mule
15 Bad Little Doggie 3:45
Composed by: Abts, Haynes, Woody
Performed by: Gov't Mule
16 Lay Your Burden Down 5:26
Composed by: Barbiero, Haynes
Performed by: Gov't Mule, Johnny Neel
17 Fallen Down 8:42
Composed by: Haynes
Performed by: Gov't Mule, Johnny Neel
18 Devil Likes It Slow 6:45
Composed by: Haynes
Performed by: Gov't Mule, Johnny Neel, Jimmy Herring
19 Spoonful 8:41
Composed by: Dixon
Performed by: Gov't Mule, Bruce Hampton, Johnny Neel
20 When the Blues Come Knockin' 5:19
Composed by: Haynes, Jaworowicz
Performed by: Gov't Mule, Little Milton, Johnny Neel
21 It Hurts Me Too 5:01
Composed by: James, Sehorn
Performed by: Gov't Mule, Larry McCray, Derek Trucks
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REVIEW
by Thom Jurek
Vol. 1 of Warren Haynes' Christmas Jam Benefit Concert from 1999 hits the streets a month after Vol. 2, but whatever. Issued on Haynes' Evil Teen label, this is one star-studded effort, featuring Haynes, the late Allen Woody, and Matt Abts of Gov't Mule; Edwin McCain (with and without Haynes); the Derek Trucks Band (with special guests like Col. Bruce Hampton, Jimmy Herring, and Trucks' wife, guitar slinger Susan Tedeschi); and Tedeschi and her own band. There's the jam band Cry of Love, and, of course, Gov't Mule, as a trio and with Hampton, bluesmen Larry McCray, Little Milton (RIP), Mike Barnes, Herring, and Yonrico Scott. It's a good time, to be sure. Vol. 1 fares better across two CDs because of a continuity in sets. There's more of everyone here: Trucks and his band play nearly a full set, as do the Mule, McCain gets three numbers and Tedeschi does her "Angel from Montgomery" read, and it's stunning here. Willie Dixon's "Spoonful" by the Mule with Hampton and Johnny Neel is another highlight, as is the Trucks Band's version of "Rastaman Chant" and (with Tedeschi) "Just Won't Burn." McCain's "Alive" with Haynes is another winner for warming up the crowd as well. For fans of Gov't Mule, Haynes, Trucks, or any of the above, this is a nifty little gig to be spinning during party hours. [Released in 2000 also on Haynes' Evil Teen label, the double-CD set Wintertime Blues: The Benefit Concert features a track listing identical to Benefit Concert, Vol. 1, aside from the latter release's replacement of "It Hurts Me Too" for the 15-plus-minute version of "Merry Christmas, Baby" by Gov't Mule heard on Wintertime Blues.]
by Thom Jurek
Vol. 1 of Warren Haynes' Christmas Jam Benefit Concert from 1999 hits the streets a month after Vol. 2, but whatever. Issued on Haynes' Evil Teen label, this is one star-studded effort, featuring Haynes, the late Allen Woody, and Matt Abts of Gov't Mule; Edwin McCain (with and without Haynes); the Derek Trucks Band (with special guests like Col. Bruce Hampton, Jimmy Herring, and Trucks' wife, guitar slinger Susan Tedeschi); and Tedeschi and her own band. There's the jam band Cry of Love, and, of course, Gov't Mule, as a trio and with Hampton, bluesmen Larry McCray, Little Milton (RIP), Mike Barnes, Herring, and Yonrico Scott. It's a good time, to be sure. Vol. 1 fares better across two CDs because of a continuity in sets. There's more of everyone here: Trucks and his band play nearly a full set, as do the Mule, McCain gets three numbers and Tedeschi does her "Angel from Montgomery" read, and it's stunning here. Willie Dixon's "Spoonful" by the Mule with Hampton and Johnny Neel is another highlight, as is the Trucks Band's version of "Rastaman Chant" and (with Tedeschi) "Just Won't Burn." McCain's "Alive" with Haynes is another winner for warming up the crowd as well. For fans of Gov't Mule, Haynes, Trucks, or any of the above, this is a nifty little gig to be spinning during party hours. [Released in 2000 also on Haynes' Evil Teen label, the double-CD set Wintertime Blues: The Benefit Concert features a track listing identical to Benefit Concert, Vol. 1, aside from the latter release's replacement of "It Hurts Me Too" for the 15-plus-minute version of "Merry Christmas, Baby" by Gov't Mule heard on Wintertime Blues.]
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815 - Blues Co-Op, Featuring John Jaworowicz (2007)
TRACKS1 Muddy Water Fever (Jaworowicz, Moore) 3:54
2 Back Door Man (Dixon) 5:12
3 Before the Bullets Fly (Haynes, Jaworowicz, Williams) 3:12
4 Who to Believe (Haynes, Jaworowicz) 4:14
5 Kindness for Weakness (Jaworowicz) 4:28
6 Why Can't I Get Lucky with You? (Jaworowicz, Nails, Roy) 3:09
7 Shake You Down (Carpenter, James, Jaworowicz) 3:43
8 The Eyes Don't Lie (Carpenter, James, Jaworowicz) 3:33
9 When the Blues Come Knockin' (Haynes, Jaworowicz) 4:31
10 Dirty Deals (Jaworowicz, Reynolds, Roy) 3:32
11 Give Me Some Slack (Elrod, Jaworowicz) 3:02
12 So Wrong for So Long (Jaworowicz, Nails) 4:42
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CREDITS
Jack Pearson - Guitar
Chuck Burke - Drums
Maxwell Schauff - Drums
William Howse - Harmonica
Michael Organ - Drums
Moe Denham - Organ (Hammond), Choir, Chorus
James DePrato - Guitar
Billy Earheart - Organ (Hammond)
Larry Greene - Guitar (Rhythm)
Warren Haynes - Guitar, Guitar (Rhythm), Slide Guitar
John Jaworowicz - Bass, Guitar (Bass), Vocals, Choir, cHORUS
Rick Moore & Mr.Lucky - Guitar, Guitar (Rhythm), Choir, Chorus
Jim Nalls - Guitar, Guitar (Rhythm), Vocals (bckgr), Producer, Slide Guitar, Guitar (Tremolo)
Bobby Nichols - Guitar (Rhythm)
Jack Pearson - Guitar, Guitar (Rhythm), Choir, Chorus, Slide Guitar
Noel Roy - Guitar, Guitar (Rhythm), Vocals (bckgr), Soloist
Elijah Shaw - Choir, Chorus
Joe Warner - Organ (Hammond)
Martin Woodlee - Choir, Chorus
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REVIEW
The sound of this CD is a little reminiscent of Gov't Mule both in the vocals of
John Jaworowicz and in the guitar solo's. The disc itself features a host of
guests including, Gov't Mule's Warren Haynes on guitar, Jimmy Nalls and Jack
Pearson both from the Gregg Allman Band on guitar, Willie Howse from the
Greg Allman band on harp, Willie Dixon's drummer, Chucki Bruke and Billy
Earheart from the Amazing Rhythm Aces on organ. All of the songs on the
CD, except Willie Dixon's "Back Door Man", were written or cowritten by
Jaworowicz. Unfortunately, Jaworowitcz passed away shortly after the CD
was released and Jimmy Nalls is currently battling Parkinson's disease.
Therefore, a follow up CD reuniting this talent will not occur. Overall, the
songs represented here are good rockin' blues from the land of Muscle
Shoals. Highlights are "Muddy Water Fever" and "Shake You Down". No slow
dancing allowed.
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Labels:
blues co-op,
featuring john jaworowicz
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Saturday, October 25, 2008
814 - V. A. - Fillmore: The Last Days (1972)
TRACKS CD 11. Hello - John Walker
2. Hello Friends - Lamb
3. So Fine - Elvin Bishop Group
4. Party Till The Cows Come Home - Elvin Bishop Group
5. Pana - Malo
6. Poppa Can Play - Sons Of Champlin
7. White Bird - It's A Beautiful Day
8. Fresh Air - Quicksilver Messenger Service
9. Mojo - Quicksilver Messenger Service
10. Introduction - Bill Graham
11. Back On The Streets Again - Tower Of Power
12. Baby's Callin Me Home - Label Copy Conversion/Epic Unknown
13. I Just Want To Make Love To You - Cold Blood
14. Passion Flower - Stoneground
15. Henry - New Riders Of The Purple Sage
TRACKS CD 2
1. Casey Jones - Grateful Dead
2. Johnny B. Goode - Grateful Dead
3. Introduction - Bill Graham
4. Keep Your Lamps Trimmed And Burnin' - Hot Tuna
5. Incident At Nashabur - Santana
6. In A Silent Way - Santana
7. Jam Session: We Gonna Rock - Taj Mahal-Elvin Bishop-Boz Scaggs & Friends
8. Jam Session: Long And Tall - Taj Mahal-Elvin Bishop-Boz Scaggs & Friends
9. Final Night Jam Session: Nigle Noble
10. Words With Bill Graham
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REVIEW
by Lindsay Planer
On Independence Day, 1971, the Fillmore West closed its doors, leaving a Bay Area landmark in its wake. During the closing week, proprietor Bill "Uncle Bobo" Graham selected a few of his favorite artists to help him send the venerable venue out in style. The festivities were documented on film and tape, the results of which were issued the following year as both a full-length cinematic feature film and three-LP box set. The latter also featuring a bonus 7" record containing a few "Words With Bill Graham." Initial pressings also came packaged with an original "closing week" poster, a ticket from one of the hundreds of legendary shows held in the Fillmore between November 06, 1965, and July 04, 1971, as well as a commemorative liner notes booklet, which, among other things, included a complete list of every show held at the venue. Musically, the discs feature a who's who of rock music circa 1971, most — if not all — of which began their collective journey's in the Bay Area music scene at the time. The Grateful Dead ("Casey Jones" and "Johnny B. Goode"), Quicksilver Messenger Service ("Fresh Air" and "Mojo") and Santana ("Incident at Neshabur" and "In a Silent Way") all make strong showings. As do some of the lesser-known artists, such as Malo ("Pana") or Lamb ("Hello Friends"). Last Days of the Fillmore includes some amazing performances from It's a Beautiful Day ("White Bird"), as well as the stunningly powerful "Baby's Calling Me Home" by Boz Scaggs — no doubt an homage to his stint with the Steve Miller Band — plus a definitive version of "Keep Your Lamps Trimmed and Burnin'" from Hot Tuna — who are the only representatives from the Jefferson Airplane, perhaps the one San Francisco band that is most conspicuously absent from the proceedings. The "Words With Bill Graham" interview allows Graham to personally express his thanks to the people who made the Fillmore such a success and to give some insight into the changing dynamics [read: money and drugs] which so radically altered his ability to adequately provide both artist and attendee with the same high-quality performance and venue for a reasonable price.
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Labels:
fillmore the last days
| Reactions: |
812 - The British Blues All Stars - At Notodden Blues Festival (2007)
TRACKS01. when it rains (kim simmonds)5:20
02. mississippi steamboat (fenton robinson)6:14
03. standing by my window (mcguinness)4:55
04. black magic woman (green)3:30
05. pine top's boogie woogie (hall, smith)6:12
06. midnight in new orleans (unknown)4:38
07. shake that thing (unknown)4:33
08. beehive blues (hall)5:50
09. i got my eye on you (mcguinness)4:20
10. where has your heart gone (kim simmonds)7:38
11. every day i have the blues (chatman)5:45
12. baldry's out (baldry)4:43
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CREDITS
Bob Hall - Vocal, Piano
Kim Simmonds - Vocal, Guitar
Tom McGuinness - Vocal, Guitar, Mandolin
Long John Baldry - Vocal, Guitar
Peter Green - Vocal, Guitar, Harmonica
Colin Allen - Drums
Gary Fletcher - Bass
Steve Beighton - Saxophone
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INFO
Notodden is a small town (population c. 22.000) situated about 50 miles south-west of Oslo.
The origins of the Notodden Blues Festival (NBF) go back to 1980 when thirteen local blues enthusiasts got together to promote the blues in Norway, and to promote Norway to the blues scene worldwide. The town has since established strong blues cultural links with Clarksdale, Mississippi.
Since its inception the festival's organisers have watched audiences grow from 2.000 to around 25.000. New Yorker, Ed Murphy, has been the festival's artistic director for many years now and American legends such as Hubert Sumlin, Scotty Moore and Jimmy Witherspoon have all appeared there.
In August 2004 the NBF welcomed some British blues legends: that lineup of BBA was Long John Baldry on vocals; guitarists Kim Simmonds, Tom McGuinness and Peter Green (also on harmonica); Bob Hall on piano; bassist Gary Fletcher; saxophonist Steve Beighton, and Colin Allen on drums.
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Labels:
the british blues all stars
| Reactions: |
811 - Lars Frederiksen and The Bastards - Viking (2004)
TRACKS1 Bastards Armstrong, Frederiksen 1:41
2 Skins, Punx and Drunx (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 1:04
3 Fight (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 0:56
4 1% (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 2:46
5 Switchblade (Armstrong, Aston, Frederiksen) 3:38
Performed by: Frederiksen, Skinhead Rob
6 Marie Marie (Alvin) 1:55
7 Little Rude Girl (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 1:17
8 Maggots (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 2:00
9 Mainlining Murder (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 3:30
10 For You (Ashssa, Blake, Culmer, Exall, Graham) 3:11
11 My Life to Live (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 4:27
Performed by: Frederiksen, Tim Armstrong
12 The Kids Are Quiet on Sharon Palms (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 2:46
13 Blind Ambition (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 0:20
14 Gods of War (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 0:55
15 Streetwise Professor (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 3:10
16 The Viking (Armstrong, Frederiksen) 5:05
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CREDITS
Alen C. Agadhzhanyan - Strings, Violin
Tim Armstrong - Guitar, Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Rob "SR" Aston - Vocals
Big Jay Bastard - Bass, Vocals
Chris Dugan - Vocals (bckgr)
Lars Frederiksen - Guitar, Sound Effects, Vocals
Matt Freeman - Mandolin
Gordy "The Known Bastard" - Vocals
Dan Hodge - Vocals (bckgr)
Craig Leg - Guitar (Rhythm), Vocals
Lochlan McHale - Vocals (bckgr)
Brett Reed - Vocals (bckgr)
Skatty Punk Rock - Drums
Carl Wheeler - Piano, Organ (Hammond), Wurlitzer
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REVIEW
by Tim Sendra
If Lars Frederiksen's first solo project was a welcome addition to the Rancid family, his second record is like a dog crawling back home after rolling in something very rancid. Viking is a generic record made up of by-the-numbers punk tracks unaided by minor things like melodies, thoughtful lyrics, or surprises. The sound is ultraprocessed and hook-free, the musicians competent at best. The songs are pretty silly and childish, whether about murder ("Mainlining Murder"), guns and violence ("1%" and "Switchblade"), sex with hookers ("My Life to Live," a duet with Lars' better half, Tim Armstrong), or how tough and wonderful Lars is ("Streetwise Professor"). In fact, of the songs are about Lars and his self-mythology, most laughably on the last track on the record, "The Viking." Lars speak-sings his life story over weeping strings and churchified organ, reaching the high point when he calls out, "Sorry ladies, I'm married to the sea." The record is just so damn boring and sleazy (check out the lovely sub-Suicide Girls photos in the CD booklet — or better yet, don't) and self-important. It feels like the kind of record bands like Zeppelin and Grand Funk were making in the '70s, the kind of bland, irrelevant record punk aimed to wipe out. Having Armstrong, who has one of the best and most distinctive voices around, sing a track also points out one major flaw of the record, that being Frederiksen's generically gruff and tuneless voice. Listening to Rancid albums, you would have no idea that something so lame could come from their ranks. It's sad but true, and Viking is the proof.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Christopher True
Best known as a guitarist and vocalist for the '90s punk act Rancid, Lars Frederiksen (born Lars Everett Dapello in California on August 30, 1971) was a major player in the California punk scene in the '90s and beyond, working not only with his bands Rancid and Lars Frederiksen & the Bastards, but doing production work with Dropkick Murphys, Agnostic Front, and the Gadjits. Frederiksen first achieved notoriety playing with the U.K. Subs on their 1991 U.K. tour. He joined Rancid in 1993, and made his recording debut with them on their second album, Let's Go. While still a member of Rancid, Frederiksen got a side band together, called it Lars Frederiksen & the Bastards, and released that band's first album in 2001. Their second album, Viking, saw the light of day in 2004.
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| Reactions: |
810 - Sonic Footprint (2008)
TRACKS1 Last Train to Nowhere
2 I Can't Wait
3 Unlucky
4 Hold On
5 Nor Will I
6 Living the Dream
7 Anymore
8 Lemmings
9 Whole On the Other Side
10 Irresponsible
11 Oceans of Green
12 Frayed
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CREDITS
Dave "Cab" Callaway - Vocals, Guitar
Greg Popp - Guitar, Vocals
Ron Low - Drums, Vocals
Paul Jasper - Bass
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BIOGRAPHY
Sonic Footprint is a Chicago based four piece rock band formerly known as Critical Mass.
Critical Mass was created following a recording project between former college friends and band mates David Callaway and Greg Popp. What began as a songwriting and recording experiment became an album of 11 original songs.
Dave and Greg’s desire to perform the album live resulted in their original college drummer Ron Low and Swamp Dog bassist Paul Jasper joining the band. Dave’s fascination with cosmology, space, time, and the origin of the universe led the band to choose the name Critical Mass.
Critical Mass performed songs from the album they subsequently named Baseline at Chicago clubs in 2004 and 2005.
As soon as Critical Mass was formed, the band began working on new material for an album that would feature the playing of all 4 members.
While working on the album, the band realized that Critical Mass might suggest religious-themed music and also learned that other organizations and bands already used the name. Therefore, Sonic Footprint was born.
12 new songs drawing from classic rock, folk rock, and modern rock elements were recorded in Greg’s studio PoppArt and mastered with Justin Shturtz at the venerable mastering house Sterling Sound in New York City in June, 2008. In October of 2008, the self-titled album Sonic Footprint was released.
Sonic Footprint plans to perform throughout Chicagoland in early 2009.
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Friday, October 24, 2008
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Blogger has been notified, according to the terms of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), that certain content in your blog infringes upon the copyrights of others. The URL(s) of the allegedly infringing post(s) may be found at the end of this message.
The notice that we received, with any personally identifying information removed, will be posted online by a service called Chilling Effects at http://www.chillingeffects.org/. We do this in accordance with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Please note that it may take Chilling Effects up to several weeks to post the notice online at the link provided.
The DMCA is a United States copyright law that provides guidelines for online service provider liability in case of copyright infringement. We are in the process of removing from our servers the links that allegedly infringe upon the copyrights of others. If we did not do so, we would be subject to a claim of copyright infringement, regardless of its merits. See http://www.educause.edu/Browse/645?PARENT_ID=254 for more information about the DMCA, and see http://www.google.com/dmca.html for the process that Blogger requires in order to make a DMCA complaint.
Blogger can reinstate these posts upon receipt of a counter notification pursuant to sections 512(g)(2) and 3) of the DMCA. For more information about the requirements of a counter notification and a link to a sample counter notification, see http://www.google.com/dmca.html#counter.
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809 - Madeleine Peyroux - Half The Perfect World (2006)
TRACKS1 I'm All Right (Becker, Klein, Peyroux) 3:27
2 The Summer Wind (Bradtke, Mayer, Mercer) 3:55
3 Blue Alert (Cohen, Thomas) 4:10
4 Everybody's Talkin' (Neil) 5:10
5 River (Mitchell) (Peyroux and KD Lang) 5:19
6 A Little Bit (Harris, Klein, Peyroux) 4:02
7 Once in a While (Harris, Klein, Peyroux) 4:00
8 (Looking For) The Heart of Saturday Night (Waits) 3:27
9 Half the Perfect World (Cohen, Thomas) 4:21
10 La Javanaise (Gainsbourg) 4:11
11 California Rain (Harris, Klein, Peyroux) 2:57
12 Smile (Chaplin, Parsons, Turner) 3:57
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CREDITS
Scott Amendola - Drums
Sam D. Bass - Cello
Jay Bellerose - Cymbals, Drums
Till Brönner - Trumpet
Gary Foster - Sax (Alto)
Larry Goldings - Celeste, Wurlitzer, Soloist
Graeme Jennings - Violin
Carla Kihlstedt - Violin
k.d. lang - Vocals
Greg Leisz - Pedal Steel
Dean Parks - Guitar, Ukulele, Soloist
Madeleine Peyroux - Guitar, Vocals
David Piltch - Bass
Charith Premawardhana - Viola
Sam Yahel - Piano, Organ (Hammond), Wurlitzer
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REVIEW
by Marisa Brown
Madeleine Peyroux took significantly less time than the eight years between her debut and its follow-up to release her third album, Half the Perfect World, which finds a more mature — or at least less vulnerable — singer, one who chooses to express herself with nuance rather than overtness. Often, like in the opening "I'm All Right" — one of four original songs — this aversion to unconcealed emotion works well, playing off the swelling Hammond, the swinging rhythm of the acoustic guitar (contrasting nicely with the hook of "It's all right, I've been lonely before"), and the simple drums. But at other times, like in "A Little Bit" — which is bluesy and more upbeat and practically screams for an outburst, a growl, something — her hesitancy instead almost comes across as a flaw, as a fear of fully expressing herself. On "Blue Alert," where Anjani's voice was full and seductive, rife with curling smoke rings and lipstick-stained wineglasses, Peyroux seems desolate and flat and she simplifies the situation too much, though she does fare much better on the other Anjani/Leonard Cohen piece and title track of the album. Here, she changes its perspective, mixing the characters together and sounding beautifully fragile, yet at the same time strong and certain, as she sings about her love. The same can be said for her version of the Johnny Mercer-penned "The Summer Wind," which uses a cleaner, less dramatic arrangement to convey the feeling that, though she's thinking about past events with some nostalgia, she's also able to accept the outcome and move forward with her life. This kind of resignation hangs heavy throughout the entire album, making every song she covers seem sadder than the original. Joni Mitchell's "River," sung with k.d. lang, is slow and heart-wrenching (lang's voice, especially, brings a sweet melancholy to it), and Peyroux's version of Charlie Chaplin's "Smile" has a kind of dejected resoluteness that makes you wonder if she can even follow the advice she's singing. This subtlety is two-fold, however. It's so prevalent in the music that it's hard to tell if it's hinting at greater depth or if it's really a protective blanket, an affected timidity to prevent exposure. The delicateness of Half the Perfect World is certainly nice, but Peyroux seems to be using it as a device to hide behind instead of an actual expression of feeling, and so while the album is an overall success, it still leaves questions lingering behind the softly clicking hi-hat, the wandering bass, of when the singer's really going to show herself completely.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Richard Skelly
Vocalist Madeleine Peyroux can best be thought of as a Billie Holiday for the 1990s. Like Holiday, Peyroux was marketed as a jazz singer, when what she seems to do best is sing blues music. Though Peyroux may remind some listeners of Holiday, there are differences, and she has her own sense of phrasing and interpretation. Her 1996 Atlantic Records debut, Dreamland, is a brilliant recording, as Peyroux's distinctive voice is not hindered by overly intricate arrangements. Most of the accompaniment on the record is light and sparse, the way it should be for a singer with such a unique voice. Her debut album features a cast of top players from the New York jazz scene, including pianist Cyrus Chestnut, drummer Leon Parker, guitarists Vernon Reid and Marc Ribot, and saxophonist/clarinetist James Carter.Peyroux was born in Athens, GA, and raised between Southern California, Brooklyn, and Paris. She began singing at age 15, when she discovered the Latin Quarter in Paris and became enamored with several street musicians. By 1989, she was working with a group of musicians called the Riverboat Shufflers, and after working for a while as a hat passer for the group, she began singing with them. She then joined the Lost Wandering Blues and Jazz Band at age 16, spending the next couple of years touring Europe while holding college in abeyance. That group formed the basis for her first album, for they performed the songs of Fats Waller, Billie Holiday, early Ella Fitzgerald, and others.Though Dreamland was by no means a straight-ahead jazz album, Peyroux and her producers take a thoroughly modern approach to blues tunes from the 1920s and '30s. She interprets songs like Fats Waller's "I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter," Billie Holiday's "Gettin' Some Fun Out of Life," as well as tunes popularized by Bessie Smith, like "Reckless Blues" and "Lovesick Blues." But unlike Smith or Holiday, who weren't known as songwriters, Peyroux also recorded three of her own tunes on Dreamland, "Always a Use" (on which she accompanies herself on guitar), "Hey Sweet Man," and "Dreamland." It took another eight years, however (the reasons for which were never very clear), for her follow-up, Careless Love, to hit shelves. This time working with producer Larry Klein on Rounder Records, Peyroux explored a more contemporary and eclectic mix of covers, including Elliott Smith's "Between the Bars," Bob Dylan's "You're Going to Make Me Lonesome," as well as older songs like Hank Williams' "Weary Blues." It was very well received and made the 2006 release of Half the Perfect World, again a combination of covers and originals, highly anticipated. The record, which featured a duet with k.d. lang, included versions of songs by Serge Gainsbourg and Tom Waits, among others.
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808 - The Beat Farmers - Tales Of The New West (1985)
TRACKS1 Bigger Stones (Kaminski) 2:20
2 There She Goes Again (Reed) 2:41
3 Reason to Believe (Springsteen) 2:35
4 Lost Weekend (Blue) 2:50
5 California Kid (Kaminski) 2:40
6 Never Go Back (Stewart) 3:52
7 Goldmine (Blue) 2:48
8 Showbiz (Raney) 2:11
9 Lonesome Hound (Blue) 2:38
10 Where Do They Go? (Raney) 2:56
11 Selfish Heart (Raney) 2:40
12 Happy Boy (Becker, Covover) 1:23
13 Powderfinger (Young) 3:37
14 Beat Generation (McKuen) 2:30
15 Glad 'N' Greasy (Blue) 2:37
16 Big Rock Candy Mountain (McClintock) 2:00
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CREDITS
Steve Berlin - Saxophone, Producer
Buddy Blue - Dobro, Guitar, Harmonica, Drums, Harp, Vocals
Peter Case - Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Rolle Dexter - Bass, Bass (Electric), Bass (Acoustic)
Sid Griffin - Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Joey Harris - Guitar, Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Paul Kamanski - Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Chip Kinman - Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Tony Kinman - Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Country Dick Montana - Guitar, Accordion, Drums, Keyboards, Vocals
Vicki Peterson - Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Jerry Raney - Guitar, Harmonica, Drums, Vocals
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REVIEW
by Matthew Greenwald
Hailing from San Diego, the Beat Farmers burst on the California music scene like a locomotive in the mid-1980s with amazing live shows. Their powerful combination of rock & roll, country, blues, and folk styles — performed exquisitely tight — was truly a wonder to behold. This, their first album, accurately captured the band's live intensity. Along with some glorious covers, notably "There She Goes Again" (Lou Reed) and "Never Goin' Back" (John Stewart), the band could write quite well too, with Paul Kamanski's "Bigger Stones" being the best example. This album is an extremely good snapshot of post-punk California rock & roll.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Richard Skelly
The Beat Farmers enjoyed a cult following throughout the 1980s and early '90s until the untimely passing of lead singer/drummer/guitarist Country Dick Montana in November 1995. He was just 40, and he collapsed of a massive heart attack at the Long Horn, a bar in Whistler, British Columbia, in western Canada. Montana, a former record store owner, and past president of the Kinks Preservation Society fan club, formed the Beat Farmers in San Diego in 1983, influenced on the one hand by country and blues music, but on the other by the first wave of punk rock bands to come out of Los Angeles. The group began to latch on to a following at San Diego and Los Angeles-area clubs, satisfying a need for roots-based rock &' roll before most people even knew the need existed. Over the years, Montana collaborated with a wide range of Los Angeles-based musicians and singers, including Mojo Nixon, John Doe from the group X, Rosie Flores, the Bangles, Los Lobos, Katy Moffatt, blues singer/pianist Candye Kane and ex-Blasters guitarist Dave Alvin. The Beat Farmers discography is more extensive than most people would think, because a number of recordings are hard to find or out of print. The original group consisted of Montana on drums, guitar and vocals, Jerry Raney on guitar and vocals, Buddy Blue on guitar and vocals and Rolle Dexter on bass. The group's albums include Tales of the New West (1985, Rhino), Glad 'n' Greasy (1985, Rhino), Van Go (1986, Curb Records), The Pursuit of Happiness (1987, Curb Records), Poor and Famous (1989, Curb Records), Live, Loud and Plowed (1990, Curb Records), Viking Lullabys (1994, Sector 2 Records), Greatest Hits (1995, Curb Records), and Manifold (1995, Sector 2 Records). The Beat Farmers formed in August, 1983 when they played a series of shows at the Spring Valley Inn in San Diego, and later played a local bar, Bodies. By March of 1984, they were signed to Rhino Records for a one-off deal, and with a 4,000-dollar budget, recorded Tales of the New West, their debut, which was released in January, 1985. They began their first U.S. tour and signed a seven record deal with Curb Records. In December, 1985, Buddy Blue left the band and was replaced by guitarist/mandolinist Joey Harris, who had worked earlier with Montana in a precursor to the Beat Farmers, Country Dick and the Snuggle Bunnies. Around the time of their first U.S. tour, the band also begins to tour in Europe, where the passion for blues-rock, roots-rock and country rock runs higher than in parts of the U.S. The group's album, Pursuit of Happiness spurred the single "Make It Last'' which got airplay on more than 40 country western stations. But once country radio programmers had a chance to hear the rest of the album, they quickly dropped the single, since many of them felt the rest of the album was too rock 'n' roll oriented. In 1989, Montana and Harris joined Mojo Nixon and Dave Alvin from the Blasters to form the Pleasure Barons, a group that specialized in "lounge" music. A year later, Montana went into the hospital for thyroid surgery and continued to visit the doctor's office for cancer treatments. In the midst of all of this, the group grew dissatisfied with its relationship with Curb Records, and they attempted to get out of their seven album contract around the same time they discover a live album, Live, Loud and Plowed has been released without their knowledge. In between national tours, Montana occupied himself with other projects in the Los Angeles area, including the Incredible Hayseeds, Country Dick's Petting Zoo, Country Dick's Garage and the Pleasure Barons. In 1993, the Beat Farmers recorded their first album for Sector 2 Records (an Austin, Texas label), in Vancouver, Canada, Viking Lullabys. (sic) The record is released in August, 1994 and the band toured in earnest once again to support their release. While working on a second album for Sector 2, Curb Records released a Greatest Hits album, again without the band's consent. The Beat Farmers last album, Manifold, is released on September 19, 1995, but was released two weeks earlier in San Diego to coincide with the Street Scene, an outdoor festival there. The group toured the U.S. in September and October, playing venues in Texas, the midwest and New York City. On Nov. 8, 1995, Montana suffered a massive heart attack three songs into the band's set at the Long Horn in Whistler, B.C. The remaining Beat Farmers decide to dissolve the band on November 11, 1995.Despite his risqué stage antics and bantering with his audiences, whom he often sprayed with beer, Country Dick Montana was a gentle soul who, after shows, would make his way around a club, shaking hands, signing autographs and chatting for a few minutes with all who took the time to say hello. Since Montana's death in 1995, guitarists Joey Harris and Jerry Raney have gone on to form their own bands, continuing to some extent the roots-rock tradition of the Beat Farmers. At their live shows, the group was unique for the way Montana would get out from behind his drum set to step out front and center and play guitar as well. In 1996, Bar None Records of Hoboken, N.J. posthumously released The Devil Lied to Me, a long-awaited Country Dick Montana solo album. A star-studded affair with regionally and nationally famous musicians from the Los Angeles area, Montana is joined on this excellent release by roots chanteuses Katy Moffatt and Rosie Flores, as well as talented live performers like Mojo Nixon and ex-Blasters guitarist Alvin. Highlights include Alvin's "Rich Man's Town," Paul Kamanski's "Indigo Rider," a cover of Tom Petty's "Listen to Her Heart,'' and the originals "King of the Hobos,'' as well as a tribute to amateur rappers — and there are many of both in San Diego — "Bum Rap."
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807 - Nine Pound Hammer - Sex, Drugs and Bill Monroe (2008)
TRACKS1 I'm Yer Huckleberry (Crim, Luallen, Pulito) 2:15
2 Hookers and Hot Sauce (Cartwright) 2:09
3 Black Sheep 2:37
4 Everybody's Drunk (Cartwright, Luallen) 2:37
5 Fightin' Words (Luallen, Luallen) 1:39
6 Mama's Doin' Meth Again (Cartwright) 2:28
7 Right to Do You Wrong (Cartwright) 2:05
8 Rode Hard (Crim, Luallen) 2:28
9 Too Sorry (Luallen, Luallen) 1:57
10 Hell in My Head (Cartwright) 3:06
11 The Wheels Flew off Again (Luallen, Pulito) 2:26
12 Ain't Worth Killin' (Hendricks) 2:18
13 Cookin' the Corn (Pulito) 2:45
14 The Way It Is (Crim, Luallen) 2:41
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CREDITS
Rick Ballard - Harmony Vocals
Blaine Cartwright - Guitar, Vocals
Earl Crim - Guitar
Mark Hendricks - Bass, Guitar
Scott Luallen - Vocals, Art Direction
Brian Pulito - Guitar (Acoustic), Drums, Vocals
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REVIEW
by Jack Rabid, The Big Takeover
Groups such as Rank & File and Lone Justice were called "country punk" circa 1982 (just for not being lame), but it wasn't until Mike Ness covered Johnny Cash and this Owensboro, KY group hit, that such a link-up was achieved. On their sixth studio LP in 20 years (they were defunct for years, and Blaine Cartwright started Nashville Pussy), they crank up gnarly axes ‘n' speed and hit like a buckin' bronc. And they're mean riffers, with Sun Records' hillbilly-rockabilly flavorings brought into punk's guitars even more directly than X. (Dig that traditional lap steel on "Mama's Doin' Meth Again," though.) This kicks like MC5 and Radio Birdman if they loved outlaw C&W as much as Chuck Berry, and the opening "I'm Your Huckleberry" is like a sped-up Stooges' "1970" for 2008. Just try to ride this bull, cowboy!
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BIOGRAPHY
by Linda Seida
Even though Nine Pound Hammer disbanded in 1996 and guitarist Blaine Cartwright moved on to work with the band Nashville Pussy, members still reunited for a short series of live performances. Bandmates first got back together in Georgia in 2000, and repeated the reunion event with another show three months later in Kentucky. The following year, Nine Pound Hammer reunited again and headed to North Carolina, where the band performed at that summer's Sleazefest in the city of Chapel Hill.The band formed in 1985 in Evansville, IN, when singer Scott Luallen and Cartwright pulled together the lineup of Brian "Forrest" Payne on bass, Toby Myrig on drums, and David Epperson. Soon, however, Payne and Epperson dropped out, and bass player Bart Altman took Payne's place. Gigs followed in Kentucky and Indiana before the group re-christened itself Raw Recruit and headed to Lexington, KY. Another name change ensued, with the band ending up as Black Sheep and landing a regular gig as a local nightspot's house band. Drummer Darren Howard soon stepped in to take over for Myrig, and the group reverted to the name Nine Pound Hammer. The lineup continued to evolve, with bassist Altman dropping out and Kathy Lewellyn stepping in. Before the 1988 release of The Mud, the Blood, and the Beers for the Wanghead label, the band also included bassist Brian Moore and drummer Rob Hulsman. Moore soon left, his shoes filled by Matt Bartholomy. In 1992, Crypt Records put out Smokin Taters. A two-month European tour followed, but the lineup still hadn't settled down. By the time a second tour of the continent rolled around, Hulsman was out and Johnny Evans was in. By 1994, when the band recorded Hayseed Timebomb, Bill Waldron had become the group's drummer. Nine Pound Hammer embarked on another European tour, and a recording of the band's performance in Sweden was issued as a double live album three years after the group officially disbanded. Another change in drummers took effect that same year with the addition of Adam Neal, who came aboard in time for the band's North American tour. An appearance at Sleazefest followed in 1995. The following year, Waldron came back for the band's Japanese tour. Cartwright and spouse Ruyter Suys, along with Nine Pound Hammer drummer Neal, pulled together a new group called Hell's Half-Acre. The group evolved into Nashville Pussy.
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806 - Asylum Street Spankers - Hot Lunch (1999)
TRACKS1 Cakewalk (Bayless, Wammo) 3:11
2 I Don't Wanna (Bayless) 3:41
3 Trippin' Over You (Wammo) 3:59
4 U.F.O. Attack (Hershman) 2:35
5 If I Were You (Marrs) 3:48
6 Colonel Josh's B.B.Q. (Arnson) 3:12
7 Hot Lunch (Biller, McLoughlin) 4:12
8 Blue Prelude (Bishop, Jenkins) 5:23
9 Smells Like Thirty-Something (Wammo) 3:03
10 Fanny (Wammo) 2:39
11 Island Angel (Bayless) 4:57
12 A Smo-o-oth One (Goodman, Smith) 7:06
13 Bijou (Bayless) 3:07
14 Sad Bomber (Wammo) 4:04
15 New Jazz Fiddle (Marrs) 2:39
16 Asylum Street Blues (Wammo) 3:38
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CREDITS
Josh Arnson - Guitar, Guitar (Rhythm), Vocals, Guitar (Tenor)
Pops Bayless - Guitar, Ukulele, Vocals, Whistle (Human), Slide Whistle, Guitar (Tenor)
Leroy Biller - Guitar, Guitar (Rhythm)
Bob Brozman - Guitar, Guitar (Rhythm), Ukulele, Producer, Slide Guitar, Charango, Hawaiian Guitar, National Steel Guitar, Guest Appearance
Glover Gill - Accordion, Guest Appearance
Christina Marrs - Guitar, Ukulele, Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Eamon McLaughlin - Fiddle, Mandolin, Violin
Mysterious John - Kazoo, Vocals, Soloist
Sara Nelson - Cello, Guest Appearance
John Salmon - Drums
Stanley Smith - Clarinet, Clarinet (Bass), Ukulele, Vocals, Soloist
Wammo - Harmonica, Bongos, Sound Effects, Vocals, Vocals (bckgr), Washboard, Bottle, Sheet Metal
Rick White - Trumpet, Guest Appearance
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REVIEW
by Chris Handyside
This, Asylum Street Spankers' sophomore recording, breezes in on acoustic guitar and ukulele strains and the words "Life ain't a cakewalk, it's a waltz/And they're playing my music out of time" — and it only gets better from there. Indeed, the Asylum Street Spankers, a loose, unplugged collective of Austin, TX, pickers and bon vivants, seem to have little trouble, on Hot Lunch's 16 cuts, deftly blending virtuosic musicianship with seemingly effortless musical and lyrical wit. The band flits between ragtime, country, old-style am radio pop tunes, swing, and country-blues with equal ease. The Spankers are — particularly on such puckish, narrative cuts as "Trippin' Over You," "Sad Bomber," and others — manage to walk the razor thin line between novelty and just plain fun-lovin' jamboree frolics. It's this graceful self-awareness that separates Asylum Street Spankers from such less graceful musical revivalists as the Squirrel Nut Zippers. In fact, on the cut "Smells Like Thirty-Something," the Spankers seem to, well, spank the mid-'90s swing revival craze on its rump, chiding, atop a rollicking, bluesy riff, "I like martinis/and I like cigars/But I hate martini and cigar bars." Somewhere between that sense of humor and vocalist/instrumentalist (for every Spanker is a multi-instrumentalist) Christina Marrs' sublime vocals lies the charm of Asylum Stret Spankers as expressed in these grooves. A beautiful, rocking, and rollicking unplugged beer-and-pot party populated with the most unpretentious, heartbreaking characters you're ever likely to meet.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Richard Skelly & Bradley Torreano
The Asylum Street Spankers, from Austin, TX, are a unique band led by vocalist/washboard player/poet Wammo and vocalist Christina Marrs. They're finding a growing cult following for their unique brand of acoustic blues and early jazz. While much of their material is blues from the 1920s and '30s, the Asylum Street Spankers also perform original songs in their live shows and on their debut album for Watermelon Records, Spanks for the Memories. The band's live shows are performed without amplifiers or microphones, usually including tunes from Bessie Smith and Robert Johnson along with other standard and traditional blues tunes. In addition to Wammo and Marrs, bandmembers have included guitarist Colonel Josh Arnson, guitarist Jeff Ross, banjo and mandolin player Pops Bayless, drummer Jimmie Dean, guitarist and saw player Olivier Giraud, kazoo player Mysterious John, guitarist and singer/songwriter Guy Forsyth, and bassist Kevin Smith. The genesis of the band occurred in the early '90s at a hotel outside of Austin. After an all-night acoustic tune swap, the musicians realized they were onto something, getting back to basics and playing acoustic music. After several phone calls and circulated tapes, the band met again for a rehearsal, and the chemistry took over from there.The Asylum Street Spankers began attracting growing crowds after playing steady Wednesdays at the Electric Lounge, a bar in Austin, and from that following, they took the next step and recorded their debut album for the local Watermelon label. While many of the melodies and progressions on Spanks for the Memories are old, some of the band's lyrics are straight out of contemporary America. Songs like "Funny Cigarette," "Trade Winds," "Lee Harvey," and "Hometown Boy" are funny and entertaining to most audiences. This was proven by the following live album, which chronicled a 1996 show and showcased their charm and charisma in a live setting. The Nasty Novelties EP provided fans with one great song title, "Rotten Cocksucker's Ball," but it was the following year's full-length Hot Lunch that brought the real goods. Another fine set of old-fashioned pop, the record won rave reviews and set them apart from other, more gimmick-oriented revivalists. The next year, Spanker Madness took fans by surprise with its hootenanny-style structure and heavy cast of guest musicians. Every song revolved around the merits of marijuana, and the humorous approach and loose vibe drafted a new set of fans who were enticed by the band's liberal politics. A clever Christmas album and an EP of more dirty songs (highlighted by the hilarious "Everybody's Fucking But Me") held over fans until 2002, when My Favorite Record was released on their own Spanks-a-Lot Records. Mercurial, a typically eclectic outing that included a cover of the Beastie Boys' "Paul Revere" and a hoedown version of Black Flag's "TV Party," was released in 2004, and Re-Assembly arrived in 2006. The Spankers came out with a bouncy, family-oriented album called Mommy Says No! the following year.
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Labels:
asylum street spankers
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805 - Al Perkins - Triple Play (2004)
TRACKS1 Cuttin'Loose/Buckaroo 03:12
2 I'm Gonna Love You Too 02:07
3 So True 03:03
4 Sweet Susannah 02:36
5 Because He Lives 05:05
6 Hambone Boogie 02:43
7 Foggy Mountain Rock 01:15
8 Big Boss Man 4:21
9 Crossroads 05:02
10 Just Before Dawn 02:42
11 Western Man 03:49
12 Sweet Georgia Brown 02:22
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REVIEW
Featuring 12 new recordings, this album demonstrates the full repertoire of guitar skills from one of rock's pioneers. Whether you prefer the white hot snarling lap steel of his live performances, or his distinctive guitar picking, or the delicate, definitive country sound of the pedal steel as featured on countless albums by household names, this CD has it all.
However, don't be misled into thinking this is a self-indulgent exercise in technique - Triple Play is about songs, and you'll find original new numbers on here, mixed with a few standards, all given the unique Al Perkins treatment through his bluesy, expressive vocals.
Appearing on the album are Al's sons Matt and Jess, along with friends such as Chris Eddy (Duane's son) from the latest incarnation of Mason Proffit.Triple Play effortlessly swings through blues, country, gospel bluegrass and even cajun influences with a storming live feel throughout.
The enjoyment of being able to cut loose on his own self-penned material is clear, and Al Perkins comes up trumps with an infectious set of studio and live cuts. Triple Play is the term used for a particularly outstanding play in Baseball, and outstanding is certainly the description that should be applied to this collection.
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AL PERKINS
AL PERKINS today is equally at home in the studio adding his timeless pedal steel to albums by upcoming stars such as Julie Roberts, as he is adding white hot snarling lap steel to the dynamic live appearances of Kevin Montgomery, or complementing Chris Hillman's traditional bluegrass sound with his signature dobro playing. Featuring 12 new recordings, Perkins' album Triple Play demonstrates the full repertoire of skills from one of rock's pioneers. Not a self-indulgent exercise in technique, this collection is primarily about songs, delivered effortlessly in his warm, expressive, bluesy vocals. This legend of popular music was born and raised in Texas , and learned to play Hawaiian steel guitar at the age of 9. Playing in West Texas bands throughout the sixties, it wasn't until his release from the US Army Reserves in the early seventies that his musical career took off with California Country Rockers Shiloh. Perkins found himself hired to play in the new incarnation of The Flying Burrito Brothers and recorded the seminal live album The Last of the Red Hot Burritos in 1972. The band splintered, and Perkins along with former Byrd Chris Hillman joined Manassas . Led by Stephen Stills, they were one of the most talented units in music at the time. Equally at home with Latin jams, rock, blues, country, folk, and bluegrass, they were one of the most versatile outfits in rock history. As the second album was released and Stills was being drawn more towards his work with Crosby Stills and Nash, Perkins and Hillman found themselves joining up with Richie Furay (Buffalo Springfield and Poco founding member) and J.D. Souther in the Souther Hillman Furay band. Perkins moved into producing records in the mid 70s, but did tour again with Michael Nesmith and McGuinn & Hillman. He somehow managed to also continue working as a session player, and found himself contributing to many of the notable albums of that time, including the Eagles' On The Border . Continuing his production work into the 80s, Perkins also toured with Chris Hillman as a duo which later developed into the Desert Rose Band, before joining Dolly Parton in 1986, touring and recording with her for several years before moving to Nashville . It was in Nashville he reunited with Emmylou Harris on a new project, the Nash Ramblers, having previously worked with Emmylou and playing on the two solo albums of the late, great Gram Parsons. (It was his association with Parsons that led to Perkins being called in to play on the sessions for the Rolling Stones' Exile on Main Street ). For the Live at the Ryman album, Emmylou and her band, obviously inspired by the history of the famous auditorium, responded by putting together a stunning live set spanning the history of country music. The album was to win a Grammy award in 1992. Al Perkins continues to tour and record, and is well known for his work with Nashville 's rising star Kevin Montgomery in his all-star band the Road Trippers. He has played and toured with artists as diverse as Bob Dylan, Cher, Rita Coolidge, Dan Fogelberg and Dwight Yoakam yet he manages to share around his time, appearing with long-time associate Chris Hillman (most recently at the Nashville Americana Awards Ceremony), with the recently reformed Mason Proffit, led by Terry Talbot, and with veteran country singer Michael Martin Murphey. A recent highlight of Perkins' long career was his appearance on stage alongside Keith Richards and a host of stars at the Gram Parsons tribute show in California in the summer of 2004. Two years ago Perkins managed to find enough time to put together a collection of studio outtakes and rare recordings spanning the breadth of his career. Snapshots chronicled his associations with many of his previous musical buddies, and featured long lost or forgotten recordings by the Nash Ramblers and the Burritos amongst others for a fascinating album. Triple Play is Perkins' first solo album of his own music, and features Al's sons Matt and Jess, along with friends such as Chris Eddy (Duane's son) from the latest incarnation of Mason Proffit. Triple Play effortlessly swings through blues, country, gospel bluegrass and even Cajun influences, and the enjoyment of being able to cut loose on his own self-penned material is clear, as Al Perkins comes up trumps with an infectious set of studio and live cuts. Triple Play is the term used for a particularly outstanding play in Baseball, and outstanding is certainly the description that should be applied to this collection.
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804 - Tom Rigney And Flambeau - Off The Hook (2006)
TRACKS1 My Babe (Medley) 3:45
2 Off the Hook (Rigney) 3:27
3 Never Let You Take It Away (Paquin, Rigney) 2:53
4 Forbidden Fruit (Rigney) 4:51
5 Let Me Be Your Fool Tonight (Duke) 4:13
6 La Porte en Arriere (The Back Door) (Menard) 3:48
7 Farewell Waltz (Rigney) 3:39
8 Cocodrill Stomp (Rigney) 5:00
9 I Won't Be Sad Tonight (Paquin, Rigney) 3:49
10 Pont de Vue (Traditional) 3:45
11 Insomnia (Rigney) 5:24
12 Tes Parents Veulent Plus Me Voir (Your Parents Don't Want to See ...) (Fontenot) 4:10
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CREDITS
Bobby Black - Guitar (Steel)
Danny Caron - Guitar (Electric)
Jerry Cortez - Guitar (Electric), Guitar (Rhythm), Slide Guitar
Caroline Dahl - Piano, Accordion
Steve Evans - Bass
Kevin Hayes - Drums
Ian Hoffman - Drums
Lloyd Meadows - Rubboard
Joe Paquin - Guitar (Acoustic), Rubboard
Steve Parks - Bass, Vocals, Harmony Vocals
Tom Rigney - Violin, Vocals, Producer, Engineer, Mixing, Cover Art
Henry Salvia - Organ (Hammond), Clavinet, Wurlitzer
Jimmy Sanchez - Percussion, Drums
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BIOGRAPHY
by Linda Seida
Fiddler Tom Rigney has contributed more than a quarter of a century to roots music in San Francisco. After graduating from Harvard with a Masters in fine arts, he went on to play the fiddle for a band named Back in the Saddle. That stint brought him a Bammie (Bay Area Music Award) in the early '80s, thanks to his performance on the group's first album. The band independently issued one of Rigney's compositions, "Time & Again," which became a regional hit. When Back in the Saddle folded, Rigney moved on to Queen Ida & the Bon Temps Zydeco Band. While touring with the group, he came to fully appreciate the music of Louisiana, specifically zydeco, Cajun, and some sounds of New Orleans. He took his new appreciation for Louisiana's music to his next venture, a band called the Sundogs that teamed Rigney with T.J. Politzer and Joe Paquin. Rigney and The Sundogs put out more than half a dozen albums and spent more than a dozen years together. They took their mixture of blues, Cajun, and roots music to stages and festivals throughout the U.S., as well as in Europe and Canada. Upon leaving the Sundogs, Rigney pulled together a new outfit, Flambeau. The band consists of guitarist Danny Caron, accordionist and pianist Caroline Dahl, drummer Jimmy Sanchez, and bassist Steve Parks. Rigney composes most of the band's music, but Flambeau also plays several of the old zydeco and Cajun favorites. In addition to recording with his bands, Rigney also has a solo effort to his credit. Chasing the Devil was released in 1998 by Parhelion. Rigney, son of the late San Francisco Giants infielder and manager Bill Rigney, was raised in the Bay Area.
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Labels:
tom rigney and flambeau
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Thursday, October 23, 2008
803 - The Commitments (Bonus Tracks) (2007)
Disc 11 Mustang Sally 4.01
2 Take Me To The River 3.39
3 Chain Of Fools 2.58
4 The Dark End Of The Street 2.36
5 Destination Anywhere 3.09
6 I Can't Stand The Rain 3.11
7 Try A Little Tenderness 4.34
8 Treat Her Right 3.39
9 Do Right Woman, Do Right Man 3.16
10 Mr. Pitiful 2.10
11 I Never Loved A Man 3.11
12 In The Midnight Hour 2.24
13 Bye Bye Baby 3.25
14 Slip Away 4.30
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Disc 2
1 Hard To Handle 2.22
2 Grits Ain't Groceries 3.44
3 I Thank You 3.40
4 That's The Way Love Is 4.08
5 Show Me 2.56
6 Saved 2.55
7 Too Many Fish In The Sea 2.45
8 Fa-Fa-Fa-Fa-Fa (Sad Song) 2.52
9 Land Of A Thousand Dances
10 Nowhere To Run 3.40
11 Bring It On Home To Me 3.43
12 Are You Lonely For Me Baby 3.57 Andrew Strong
13 (She's) Some Kind Of Wonderful 3.21 Andrew Strong
14 Too Many Cooks (Spoil The Soup) 3.26 Andrew Strong
15 Same Old Me 5.07 Andrew Strong
16 Ain't Nothing You Can Do (Long Version) 6.03 Andrew Strong
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802 - Freedom and Whiskey - Super Real (2007)
TRACKS1 Riverside Stomp 1:52
2 Super Real 2:56
3 For No Good Reason 3:21
4 Comin' Down Heavy 3:42
5 Whiskey State of Mind 4:26
6 Too Far Gone 5:31
7 Running Blind 4:19
8 Is This Thing On 4:05
9 Slow Suicide 3:37
10 Green 3:01
11 August 4:46
12 Sellavision Blues 5:07
All Tracks Composed by Goins, Hoekstra, Huettig, Mingis
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Labels:
freedom and whiskey
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801 - Freedom and Whiskey (2003)
TRACKS1 No More (Goins, Huettig) 4:39
2 Freedom (Goins, Huettig) 3:25
3 Rev It Up (Goins, Huettig) 3:48
4 Hit the Bricks (Goins, Huettig) 4:29
5 Ghost of Mary Green (Goins, Huettig) 4:12
6 You and I (Goins, Huettig, Torrance) 3:57
7 The Slide (Goins, Huettig) 3:02
8 Kettlebottom Blues (Goins, Goins, Huettig) 3:43
9 Dog House (Goins, Huettig) 4:23
10 The Stranger (Goins, Goins, Huettig) 4:38
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INFO
Freedom and Whiskey is from the Louisville, Kentucky / Jeffersonville, Indiana area in the heart of the Ohio Valley. The style of music is a mix of classic/modern/southern rock and blues.
Musical influences for the band include groups like Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, AC/DC, Steely Dan, Sound Garden, Fleetwood Mac, and many more.
The group consist of four main members:
Mike Huettig (formerly with "Days of The New"), Bill Goins, Chuck Mingis (formerly with "Days of The New"), and Mark Hoekstra (formerly with “The Legendary Blues Band (Muddy Waters)”, “Homesick James Williamson” and “Walter Horton”).
Bill Goins and Mike Huettig wrote, produced and composed most of Freedom and Whiskey's material. Bill sings and plays bass guitar. Mike plays drums and sings. Chuck plays guitar. Mark plays harmonica and sings.
The album was recorded and engineer in Nashville, Tennessee, Louisville, Kentucky and Jeffersonville, Indiana in 2003.
The album also includes other backing musicians such as Griffin Torrance, Todd Smith(piano and keys), Rob Edwards(percussion), Debbra Belt and Joyce Green(backing vocals).
Freedom and Whiskey would like to thank all thier fans for the support. Rock on and enjoy the music!
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BIOGRAPHY
Freedom and Whiskey is a band from the Louisville Kentucky/Jeffersonville Indiana area. It is a combination of musical talents from several contributors. The music style varies from Rock to Blues and everything in between.
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Mike Huettig - Drums/Vocals
Mike Huettig, recorded and toured with "Days of the New" from 2001 through 2003. He plays the drums and guitar on Freedom and Whiskey's first album. On the second album, Mike plays drums, guitar, and sings. Mike co-wrote, co-produced and co-engineered the bands first and second album as well. He is from Louisville, Kentucky and has played with several groups in the area.
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Bill Goins - Bass/Vocals
Bill Goins, lives in Jeffersonville Indiana and has played in several groups in the Louisville area. Bill co-wrote, co-produced and sang lead vocals on the first album. Some of Freedom and Whiskey's material from the first album was recorded at Bill's studio. The band recorded the entire second album there as well. Bill co-engineered and co-produced the majority of the material from both albums.
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Mark Hoekstra - Harmonica/Vocals
Mark Hoekstra, veteran Chicago blues-man, brings his musical talents with harmonica on the first album and second album. Mark also contributed his soulful lyrics and vocals as well as some slide guitar on the second album. Mark has played and recorded with many blues artists such as: The Little Dippers, West Side Heat, and Steve Arvey. Mark also worked on the score for the "Pee Wee Reese" biography.
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Chuck Mingis - Lead guitar
Chuck Mingis is also a former guitarist for the Louisville based group "Days of The New". Chuck has taught guitar, played in several bands and written songs over the years for groups like Eden Street and Spanky Lee. Chuck brings his energetic and melodic guitar playing to the front line of Freedom and Whiskey to form a strong guitar based band.
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other contributors on their first two albums were: Tina Goins, Griffin Torrance, Debra Belt, Joyce Green, Rob Edwards, Todd Smith, and several others.
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Labels:
freedom and whiskey
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800 - Ghost Riders - Fortune Teller (2003)
TRACKS1 Gone South 3:45
2 Roots 5:31
3 G.R.I.T.S. 3:57
4 Fortune Teller 5:49
5 Shotgun Run 3:41
6 Ballad of the Ghost Rider 4:58
7 Handy Man 5:05
8 Song for the Angels 4:30
9 There Goes Another Love Song 3:13
10 Whiskey Drinkin' Woman 3:29
11 I Want the Blues Tonight 4:38
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BIOGRAPHY
Steve Grisham on guitar and vocals has been sucessful as singer, songwriter, producer and engineer. Before building the success of his own 'Mira Vista Studios,' he toured with the southern rock group The Outlaws throughout the decade of the '80's. He's also credited with writing a number of sucessful songs - including "Fallen Hero," for the Disney/Touchstone movie "Can't Buy Me Love." "Keepin' Our Love Alive", a top 40 hit for the Henry Paul Band, "The Outlaw" and "Lady Luck" for The Outlaws. And was a staff writer for Ronnie Milsap Music Publishing. Steve has been back up guitarist for: Razzy Bailey, Tom Wopat (Luke Duke on Dukes of Hazard), Bobby Bare, Montey Holmes, Jeannie C. Riely ("Harper Valley PTA"), Robert Nix (Atlanta Rythym Section), Artimus Pyle (Lynyrd Skynyrd) and many more.
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Barry Rapp on keyboards and vocals, was born in Chicago. Shortly after high school, he was on the road with Sow Belly, a Southern Rock outfit. Sow Belly moved to Jacksonville, Florida in the mid 70's where they were signed by Armstrong Agency Management Company, who also managed Tony Dorsey and Magic. Tony Dorsey, the leader of the band and trombonist, left this band to join Paul McCartney's "Wings Over America" Tour. In the late 70's, Barry moved back to Jacksonville, where he joined the newly formed Henry Paul Band on Atlantic Records. Barry and Henry wrote "Grey Ghost", the title track of the band's biggest album, selling over 250,000 copies. Barry also sang the band's first nationally charted single, "Cross-Fire". Barry contributed on their next album,"Feel The Heat" and co- writing the title track of the next album,"Anytime". They toured continuously for four years, opening for The Rolling Stones, ZZ Top, Charlie Daniels, Rossington Collins and Marshall Tucker. Upon leaving Henry Paul Band, Barry formed his own band in Jacksonville, One Eyed Jacks, featuring Robert Nix of Atlanta Rhythm Section fame on drums and Max Schwennsen, Steve Grisham, Bobby Croft. By the late 80's Barry was trying to cross over Southern Rock with Country, the result was TimePiece. (Tim Lindsey, Bobby Johns, Barry Lee Harwood, Barry Rapp, Steve McNally) TimePiece was a Jacksonville favorite, touring the Southeast and opening for all the top Country acts. They recorded one release, "Time For A Change" packed with powerful original Southern Country. In the mid 90's Barry did a lot of work at Kingsnake Studio with Ace Moreland recording several CDs. Working again with Ace is like coming full circle for Barry with the release of Route 66. Barry then started Big Jim and the Twins and released the CD "Yeah We Smoke".
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Jimmy Bennett on electric and acoustic guitar, slide guitar, lap steel and vocals, was born in Brooklyn and began his musical career at age six. While touring, Jimmy has shared the stage with greats such as The Greg Allman Band, Dickey Betts, Bo Didley, Lightnin' Hopkins, Brian Setzer, Charlie Daniels and Marshall Tucker. By the mid 90's, he was playing with the Stills-Cohen Band (sons of Steven and Leonard), Greg Kihn and John Eddy. Jimmy toured the U.S.A. and Europe with Stone Caravan opening for Jimmie Vaughan, Buddy Guy, Ben E. King, Southside Johnny and Richie Havens. More recently, Jimmy and his brother Peter, produced and album entitled Bennett Mclaughlin, that had some regional success in New York, that led to a collaboration with the late Rick Danko and Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame member Levon Helm.
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Pug Baker on drums, born in London England, came to the U.S.A. when he was 5 years old and was raised in Los Angeles. Some of the bands that Pug has played drums for are: Rocking Horse on RCA records, Jimmey Spheeris on Epic and Columbia, Waves on Epic Records, The Knack on Capitol Records, Chakris on Reprise Records and more. Pug wrote an entire album with Johnathan Cain, the keyboardist from Journey, which had the top 40 hit, "Holdin' On". And co-wrote the song "Photo Play" for The Terminator movie.
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Phil Stokes on bass, born in Columbus, Ohio has played with Pure Prarie League (RCA Records), Bo Diddley, J.D. Blackfoot (Mercury Records), Dennis Yost and The Classics Four, Eric Moore of The Godz, Sleepy LaBeef (Rockabilly Legend), and has done session work with Craig Fuller of Little Feat.
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799
From: Rush Hicks
copy to D. Scott Miller
Your unauthorized use of the recordings and songs by the members of Brothers of the Southland on your website constitutes copyright infringement. I request that you immediately remove the project from your website and destroy any copies made, or I will be forced to commence appropriate proceedings in the U.S. federal courts as well as through the Brazilian embassy. I look forward to a quick reply.Rush HicksLaw Firm of J. Rush Hicks49 Music Square WestSuite 503Nashville, TN 37203615-329-9455fax 615-321-3424cell 319-1912
copy to D. Scott Miller
Your unauthorized use of the recordings and songs by the members of Brothers of the Southland on your website constitutes copyright infringement. I request that you immediately remove the project from your website and destroy any copies made, or I will be forced to commence appropriate proceedings in the U.S. federal courts as well as through the Brazilian embassy. I look forward to a quick reply.Rush HicksLaw Firm of J. Rush Hicks49 Music Square WestSuite 503Nashville, TN 37203615-329-9455fax 615-321-3424cell 319-1912
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Wednesday, October 22, 2008
797 - The Groovy Greasebags - Gold (1995)
TRACKS01 - I want to die in a woman's prison 3:43
02 - Groove me 4:01
03 - It comes to me naturally 2:39
04 - When I wake up 3:50
05 - Working in a coal mine 3:31
06 - Saddle up 2:46
07 - Jambalaya 2:23
08 - This passion 4:18
09 - Axis_ bold as love 3:17
10 - Go to the Mardi Gras 3:10
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Labels:
the groovy greasebags
| Reactions: |
796 - Pink Pedal Pushers - Set the Rules (2003)
TRACKS1 Punkrock Livin' (Pink Pedal Pushers) 2:57
2 Pusher Street (Pink Pedal Pushers) 2:55
3 Get the Hell Out (Pink Pedal Pushers) 3:34
4 Slowside Parade (Pink Pedal Pushers) 3:11
5 Pass the Balls (Pink Pedal Pushers) 2:33
6 The Remains of One Good Man (Pink Pedal Pushers) 4:52
7 Cruisin' Pink (Pedal Pushers) 3:21
8 My Mom's a Pusher (Pink Pedal Pushers) 1:45
9 The Last Crusade (Pink Pedal Pushers) 3:27
10 Goddamn! (Pink Pedal Pushers) 1:04
11 Persona Non Grata (Pink Pedal Pushers) 3:11
12 We're the Ones Who Set the Rules (Pink Pedal Pushers) 2:44
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CREDITS
Anna - Vocals (bckgr), Handclapping, Foot Stomping
Isaksson - Vocals (bckgr), Handclapping, Foot Stomping
Martensson - Piano, Drums, Vocals
Mattsson - Guitar
Mister Milkshake - Bass, Vocals
Pink Pedal Pushers - Arranger, Producer, Concept
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Labels:
pink pedal pushers
| Reactions: |
795 - David Peel and The Apple Band - John Lennon Forever (1987)
TRACKS1. Imagine 04:58
2. John Lennon Forever 04:20
3. Cast A Shadow 05:32
4. John Lennon Interview For Peace 01:12
5. God Bless You 04:38
6. David Peel Commentary At The Dakota 02:42
7. Goodbye John Lennon Goodbye 04:37
8. A Prayer To John Lennon 03:01
9. John Lennon Forever Live! 10:17
10. John Lennon Interview On Meeting David Peel 02:02
11. New York City 00:50
12. The Apple Jam Live! 09:16
13. Strawberry Fields News Message 01:51
14. John Lennon & His Music Are Forever 04:47
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REVIEW
by Bruce Eder
David Peel returned to the orbit of John Lennon for this 1987 memorial album, which opens with his reconception/recomposition of "Imagine" in a heavy electric/punk style and a few guitar and backing vocal vamps that even emulate Yoko Ono's style of singing. His vocals throughout this album are as raw and untrained as ever — that's part of his appeal — but the accompaniment this time out takes the form of a nicely full electric rock & roll band with a first-rate rhythm section and some satisfyingly hook-laden lead guitar on pieces like "John Lennon Forever." The songs are interspersed with interview and commentary tracks, but most of what's here is music, and surprisingly accomplished music at that — the tone may be a little overly serious (which is not surprising given the subject matter of the album), but overall this was Peel's most professional sounding (dare one say mainstream?) album since the 1970s.
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BIOGRAPHY
by R.W. Hand
David Peel was, and still is, a street musician and political activist from the Lower East Side of New York City. With a collection of friends who became his bandmates and who were eponymously called the Lower East Side, he recorded two groundbreaking albums of social reflections, urban tales, and hippie mythology for Elektra Records. The first, entitled Have a Marijuana, was released in 1968. The second, The American Revolution, was released in 1970. Both were just exactly as you would think they would be from their album titles: Musical Counterculture Manifestos Presented With Guitars and Grins.
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Labels:
david peel and the apple band
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794 - Dion - Heroes: Giants of Early Guitar Rock (2008)
TRACKS1 Summertime Blues (Capehart, Cochran) 3:12
2 Come on, Let's Go (Valens) 3:17
3 Rave On (Petty, Tilghman, West) 2:55
4 Believe What You Say (Burnette, Burnette) 2:55
5 Bye Bye Love (Bryant, Bryant) 3:20
6 Be-Bop-A-Lula (Davis, Vincent) 3:06
7 Runaway (Crook, Shannon) 3:41
8 Jailhouse Rock (Leiber, Stoller) 3:18
9 I Walk the Line (Cash) 3:13
10 Blue Suede Shoes (Perkins) 3:05
11 Who Do You Love (McDaniel) 3:36
12 Sweet Little Rock and Roller (Berry) 3:33
13 Dream Baby (Walker) 3:48
14 Shake, Rattle and Roll (Calhoun) 3:09
15 The Wanderer (Maresca) 3:10
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CREDITS
Dion DiMucci - Guitar, Vocals
Rick Krive - Keyboards
Tony Lavender - Vocals (bckgr)
John Michalak - Saxophone
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DION says:
In my lifetime I believe there are two
decades when giants walked the earth:
the '50's and the 60's. Rolling Stone magazine began publication in 1967, documenting the great rock journey, but by that time more than a decade had passed since the first rockers made their revolutionary mark. I recorded my first two hit records in 1957; I was seventeen. It was an exciting time for me! The Alan Freed shows, the Brooklyn Fox Theatre. . .
All the energy and different sounds of rock 'n' roll from all over the country culminated on that legendary stage. Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Buddy Holly, Eddie Cochran. . . I'd throw my new Strat over my shoulder, walk out to the front of the stage, take the stance, hit the E chord and then: hold on to your ass! What a happening! The audience was wild! I still love taking people on a trip. . . many friends, many stories, many events are vivid memories for me.
Most of the songs on this CD I heard firsthand, night after night and sometimes five times a day, at the Brooklyn Paramount or the Apollo Theater.
I toured the Midwest for two weeks with Buddy Holly and Ritchie Valens-- we jammed in the back of the bus for hours on end. These guys were not only great singers and writers; above all they were great guitar players! Today there is a whole new audience out there that has no idea that early rock was black and white coming together. In my case, it was black music filtered through my Bronx neighborhood, coming out with an attitude.
This CD is a labor of love. What a blessing to have the privilege of recording these songs. I wanted to capture the original intent, essence and passion of these first-generation rockers. This is a homage--better yet, a way for me to honor and show my reverence and respect for these artists. I want to give people a glimpse of who Cliff Gallup was. . .James Burton. . .Scotty Moore. Guitar innovators who infused fire into the music of Gene Vincent, Ricky Nelson and Elvis Presley.
Sometimes I get the feeling people look at this era of early rock as light. It was anything but. Most of these guys were street punks from all over the country, playin' Strats, Telecasters, Gretsches, Martins and Gibsons. . .kickin' ass, rockin' out. . .
I put a collection of my favorite songs and stories together. These Giants of Early Guitar Rock are my Heroes.
Dion
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BIOGRAPHY
by Richie Unterberger
Bridging the era between late-'50s rock and the British Invasion, Dion DiMucci (born July 18, 1939) was one of the top white rock singers of his time, blending the best elements of doo wop, teen idol, and R&B styles. Some revisionists have tried to cast him as a sort of early blue-eyed soul figure, although he was probably more aligned with pop/rock, at first as the lead singer of the Belmonts, and then as a solo star. Drug problems slowed him down in the mid-'60s, yet he made some surprisingly interesting progressions into blues-rock and folk-rock as the decade wore on, culminating in a successful comeback in the late '60s, although he was unable to sustain its commercial and artistic momentum for long. When Dion began recording in the late '50s, it was as the lead singer of a group of friends who sang on Bronx street corners. Billing themselves as Dion & the Belmonts (Dion had released a previous single with the Timberlanes), their first few records were prime Italian-American doo wop; "I Wonder Why" was their biggest hit in this style. His biggest single with the Belmonts was "A Teenager in Love," which pointed the way for the slightly self-pitying, pained odes to adolescence and early adulthood that would characterize much of his solo work.Dion went solo in 1960 (the Belmonts did some more doo wop recordings on their own), moving from doo wop to more R&B/pop-oriented tunes with great success. He handled himself with a suave, cocky ease on hits like "The Wanderer," "Runaround Sue," "Lovers Who Wander," "Ruby Baby," and "Donna the Prima Donna," which cast him as either the jilted, misunderstood youngster or the macho lover, capable of handling anything that came his way (on "The Wanderer" especially).In 1963, Dion moved from Laurie to the larger Columbia label, an association that started promisingly with a couple of big hits right off the bat, "Ruby Baby" and "Donna the Prima Donna." By the mid-'60s, his heroin habit (which he'd developed as a teenager) was getting the best of him, and he did little recording and performing for about five years. When he did make it into the studio, he was moving in some surprisingly bluesy directions; although much of it was overlooked or unissued at the time, it can be heard on the Bronx Blues reissue CD.In 1968, he kicked heroin and re-emerged as a gentle folk-rocker with a number four hit single, "Abraham, Martin and John." Dion would focus upon mature, contemporary material on his late-'60s and early-'70s albums, which were released to positive critical feedback, if only moderate sales. The folk phase didn't last long; in 1972 he reunited with the Belmonts and in the mid-'70s cut a disappointing record with Phil Spector as producer. He's been recording and performing fairly often in the years that followed (sometimes singing Christian music), to indifferent commercial results. But his critical rep has risen steadily since the early '60s, with many noted contemporary musicians showering him with praise and citing his influence, such as Dave Edmunds (who produced one of his periodic comeback albums) and Lou Reed (who guested on that record). Dion continued to be active as the 21st century opened, releasing Déjà Nu in 2000, Under the Influence in 2005, and Bronx in Blue in 2006. His first major-label album since 1989's Yo Frankie, entitled Son of Skip James, was released by Verve in 2007.
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793 - Marc Benno - Shadow (2007)
TRACKS1 Exception to the Rule 4:20
2 Forever Love 3:07
3 Love Worth Waiting For 3:21
4 Dreamboat 3:39
5 The Way I Feel 4:25
6 When You Lose the Magic 4:14
7 Nothing But Love 3:54
8 I Do Means 3:55
9 First Love Song 3:56
10 Shadow 4:20
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BIOGRAPHY
by William Ruhlmann
Marc Benno came up playing guitar in various bands in Austin, TX, in the late '60s, then moved to Los Angeles, where he hooked up with Leon Russell and formed the duo Asylum Choir, which released one album in 1968 and recorded a second before splitting up. (The second Asylum Choir album was released in the wake of Leon Russell's commercial success in 1971 and hit #70 in the charts.) He made four albums of mainstream pop/rock in the 1970s, the most successful of which was the third, Ambush, in 1972.
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792 - Link Wray - Barbed Wire (2000)
TRACKS1 Tiger Man (Burns, Louis) 3:26
2 Julie Baby (Wray) 3:28
3 Home Is Where the Heart Is (David, Edwards) 2:53
4 Hard Rock (Wray) 3:00
5 Barbed Wire (Cooper, Wray) 2:29
6 Young and Beautiful (Schroeder, Silver) 2:48
7 Jailhouse Rock (Leiber, Stoller) 2:54
8 Somebody Lied (Prtichard) 3:30
9 Lover, Come Back to Me (Hammerstein, Romberg) 1:49
10 Spider Man (Wray) 3:44
11 Rumble (Grant, Wray) 3:47
12 Born to Be Wild (Bonfire) 7:55
13 Fire (Springsteen) 7:21
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CREDITS
Eric Greevers - Organ, Guitar (Bass)
Rob Keyloch - Percussion
Rob Louwers - Drums
Link Wray - Guitar, Vocals
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BIOGRAPHY
by Cub Koda & Steve Leggett
Link Wray may never get into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, but his contribution to the language of rockin' guitar would still be a major one, even if he had never walked into another studio after cutting "Rumble." Quite simply, Link Wray invented the power chord, the major modus operandi of modern rock guitarists. Listen to any of the tracks he recorded between that landmark instrumental in 1958 through his Swan recordings in the early '60s and you'll hear the blueprints for heavy metal, thrash, you name it. Though rock historians always like to draw a nice, clean line between the distorted electric guitar work that fuels early blues records to the late-'60s Hendrix-Clapton-Beck-Page-Townshend mob, with no stops in between, a quick spin of any of the sides Wray recorded during his golden decade punches holes in that theory right quick. If a direct line can be traced forward from a black blues musician crankin' up his amp and playing with a ton of violence and aggression to a young white guy doing a mutated form of same, the line points straight to Link Wray, no contest. Pete Townshend summed it up for more guitarists than he probably realized when he said, "He is the king; if it hadn't been for Link Wray and "'Rumble,'" I would have never picked up a guitar." Everything that was handed down to today's current crop of headbangers from the likes of Led Zeppelin and the Who can be traced back to the guy from Dunn, NC, who started out in 1955 recording for Starday as a member of Lucky Wray & the Palomino Ranch Hands. You see, back in the early '50s, it was a different ball game altogether. Rock & roll hadn't become a national event in the United States yet, and if you were young and white and wanted to be in the music business, you had two avenues for possible career moves. You could be a pop-mush crooner like Perry Como or a hillbilly singer like the late Hank Williams, and that was about it. With country music all around him as a youth in North Carolina, the choice was obvious; Wray joined forces with his brothers Vernon and Doug, forming Lucky Wray & the Lazy Pine Wranglers, later changing the band name to the spiffier-sounding Palomino Ranch Hands. By the end of 1955, they had relocated outside of Washington, D.C., and added Shorty Horton on bass. With Link, Horton, and brothers Doug and Vernon ("Lucky," named after his gambling fortunes) handling drums and lead vocals respectively, they fell in with some local songwriters, and the results made it to vinyl as an EP on the local Kay label, with the rest of the sides being leased to Starday Records down in Texas. But by 1958, the music had changed, and so had Wray's life. With a lung missing from a bout with tuberculosis during his stint in the Korean War, Link was advised by his doctor to let brother Vernon do all the vocalizing. So Link started stretching out more and more on the guitar, coming up with one instrumental after another. By this time, the band had sweated down to a trio, and changed its name to the Ray Men. After a brief flirtation as a teen idol — changing his name to Ray Vernon — the third Wray brother became the group's producer/manager. Armed with a 1953 Gibson Les Paul, a dinky Premier amp, an Elvis sneer, and a black leather jacket, Link started playing the local record hops around the D.C. area with disc jockey Milt Grant, who became his de facto manager. One night during a typical set, says Link, "They wanted me to play a stroll. I didn't know any, so I made one up. I made up "'Rumble.'" "Rumble" was originally issued on Archie Bleyer's Cadence label back in 1958, and Bleyer was ready to pass on it when his daughter expressed excitement for the primitive instrumental, saying it reminded her of the rumble scenes in West Side Story. Bleyer renamed it (what its original title was back then, if any, is now lost to the mists of time), and "Rumble" jumped to number 16 on the national charts, despite the fact that it was banned from the radio in several markets (including New York City), becoming Wray's signature tune to this day. But despite the success and notoriety of "Rumble," it turned out to be Wray's only release on Cadence. Bleyer, under attack for putting out a record that was "promoting teenage gang warfare," wanted to clean Link and the boys up a bit, sending them down to Nashville to cut their next session with the Everly Brothers' production team calling the shots. The Wrays didn't see it that way, so they immediately struck a deal with Epic Records. Link's follow-up to "Rumble" was the pounding, uptempo "Rawhide." The Les Paul had been swapped for a Danelectro Longhorn model (with the longest neck ever manufactured on a production line guitar), its "lipstick tube" pickups making every note of Link's power chords sound like he was strumming with a tin can lid for a pick. The beat and sheer blister of it all was enough to get it up to number 23 on the national charts, and every kid who wore a black leather jacket and owned a hot rod had to have it. But a pattern was emerging that would continue throughout much of Wray's early career; the powers that be figured that if they could tone him down and dress him up, they'd sell way more records in the bargain. What all these producers and record execs failed to realize was the simplest of truths: if Duane Eddy twanged away for white, teenage America, Link Wray played for juvenile delinquent hoods, plain and simple. By the end of 1960, Wray found himself in the mucho-confining position of recording with full orchestras, doing dreck like "Danny Boy" and "Claire de Lune." But when these gems failed to chart as well, relations with Epic came to a close, and by years' end, Link and Vern formed their own label, Rumble Records. Rumble's three lone issues included the original version of Wray's next big hit, "Jack the Ripper." If "Rumble" sounded like gang warfare, then "Jack the Ripper" sounded like a high-speed car chase, which is exactly what it became the movie soundtrack for in the Richard Gere version of Breathless. Link's amp was recorded at the end of a hotel staircase for maximum echo effect, while he pumped riffs through it that would become the seeds of a million metal songs. After kicking up noise locally for a couple of years, it was going through another period of disc jockey spins when Swan Records of Philadelphia picked it up and got it nationwide attention. Certainly Wray was at his most prolific during his tenure with Swan, and label president Bernie Binnick gave Link and Vernon pretty much free rein to do what they wanted. Turning the family chicken coop into a crude, three-track studio, the Wray family spent the next decade recording and experimenting with sounds and styles. At least now they could succeed — or fail — on their own terms. Most of these sides were leased out as one-shot deals to a zillion microscopic labels under a variety of names like the Moon Men, the Spiders, the Fender Benders, etc. What fueled this period of maximum creativity is open to debate. A lot of it had to do with the fact that Link and the boys honed their particular brand of rockin' mayhem working some of the grimiest joints on the face of the planet when these tracks were cut. When Swan label chief Binnick was questioned as to how he could issue such wild-ass material, he would smile, throw his hands up in the air and say, "What can you do with an animal like that?" As the new decade dawned, Link Wray's sound and image were updated for the hippie marketplace. Wray's career fortunes waxed and waned throughout the '70s, a muddle of albums in a laid-back style doing little to enhance his reputation. After a stint backing '70s rockabilly revivalist Robert Gordon, Wray went solo again, taking most of Gordon's band (including drummer Anton Fig) with him. But if the studio sides were a bit uneven, (Wray recorded several albums in the '80s backed by nothing more than a clumsy drum machine), he still could pack a wallop live, and his rare forays on the stages of the world spread the message that rock & roll's original wild guitar man still had plenty of gas left in the tank. Wray married and moved to Denmark in 1980, recording the stray album for the foreign market, and throughout the 1990s he was still capable of strapping on a guitar and making it sound nastier than anyone in his sixties had a right to. And his back catalog got a lot attention in the '90s when the grunge revolution hit, with several young, hip guitarists citing Wray as an influence, and his early work continued to be reissued under various imprints. He recorded two new albums for Ace Records, Shadowman in 1997 and Barbed Wire in 2000 and toured up until his death in Copenhagen on November 5, 2005.
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Tuesday, October 21, 2008
791 - Johnny Rivers - Rockin' Rivers, Volume 3
TRACKS01. Linda Lu 3:38
02. China 4:15
03. Borrowed Time 2:59
04. Little White Lie 4:08
05. Be My Baby 2:46
06. Dreamer 3:19
07. Living Alone 2:39
08. Who You Gonna Love 3:10
09. Romance (Give Me A Chance) 3:48
10. Boppin' the Blues 2:42
11. Little Queenie 4:09
12. Tearin' the Drive-In Down 3:28
13. One Man Woman 2:39
14. Down At the House Of Blues 4:42
15. Last Train To Memphis 3:42
16. Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye 3:12
17. Gypsy Wind 4:00
18. Ballad Of Hopalong Cassidy 4:08
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790 - Johnny Rivers - Rockin' Rivers, Volume 2
TRACKS01. Look At the Sun 1:54
02. Rock Me On the Water 3:52
03. People Get Ready 3:39
04. So Far Away 3:45
05. Think His Name 4:38
06. Brown Eyed Girl 4:14
07. Stories To A Child 3:57
08. Hang On Sloopy 4:27
09. Solitary Man 2:43
10. Willie And the Hand Jive 5:01
11. Barefootin' 3:07
12. Geronmino's Cadillac 3:22
13. Sitting In Limbo 4:10
14. Six Days On the Road 2:54
15. Take It Easy 3:20
16. Wild Night 3:11
17. Something You Got 2:46
18. Reggae Walk 2:30
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789 - Johnny Rivers - Rockin' Rivers, Volume 1
TRACKS01. Le Montagne Sono Grandi (Mountain Of Love) 02:31
02. The Promised Land 02:31
03. I Should Have Known Better 03:18
04. Rhythm Of the Rain 02:16
05. He Don't Love You (Like I Love You) 03:03
06. Oh, Pretty Woman 02:47
07. It's All Over Now 02:44
08. Moody River 02:39
09. Keep A-Knockin'02:19
10. A Man Can Cry 02:56
11. The Way We Live 03:08
12. Right Relations 04:06
13. One Woman 03:49
14. Rainy Night In Georgia 03:51
15. Glory Train 04:59
16. Jesus Is A Soul Man 03:34
17. Enemies And Friends 02:34
18. Spezialle Mezanotte (Midnight Special) 01:47
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Sunday, October 19, 2008
788 - Nalle, Omar and Magic Slim - Chapel Hill (2008)
TRACKS01 Meet Me in My Own Hometown
02 Built for Comfort
03 Little Red Rooster
04 It’s All Right
05 Chapel Hill Boggie
06 Scufflin’
07 Come on Pretty Baby
08 Country Girl
09 Can’t Get No Grindin’
10 Come on in This House
11 Mary Lee
12 I’m a Stranger
13 Love My Baby
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CREDITS
Nalle - Vocal
Omar Kent Dyes - Vocal and Guitar
Magic Slim - Vocal and Guitar
Ivan Sand - Banjo on Tracks 1, 2, 5, 7, 9, 11, 12 and Guitar on Tracks 4, 8
Henrik Vester - Harpe on Tracks 5, 9, 10, 11 and National on Track 1
Dion Egtved - Bass on Tracks 1, 2, 5, 7, 9, 11
Michael Blakemore - Harpe on Track 13
Jonathan McDonald - Slideguitar on Track 3
Rene Augustinus - Guitar/Slide on Tracks 4, 8, 12
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Labels:
nalle,
omar and magic slim
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787 - Five Horse Johnson - The Mystery Spot (2006)
TRACKS1 The Mystery Spot 3:04
2 Ten-Cent Dynamite 4:32
3 Call Me Down 2:56
4 Of Ditch Diggers and Drowning Men (Dürr, Five Horse Johnson) 4:10
5 Gin Clear 4:37
6 Rolling Thunder 4:21
7 Feed That Train 3:26
8 Keep Your Prize 3:16
9 Three Hearts 3:12
10 The Ballad of Sister Ruth 3:07
11 I Can't Shake It 3:30
12 Drag You There 5:06
All Tracks By Five Horse Johnson
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CREDITS
Brad Coffin - Guitar, Vocals
Phil Durr - Guitar
Eric Oblander - Harp, Vocals
Craig Riggs - Keyboards, Vocals (bckgr)
Steve Smith - Bass
Dave Unger - Keyboards
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REVIEW
by Eduardo Rivadavia
Not even a minor stroke could stop Five Horse Johnson from rockin' and, if anything, vocalist and harpist extraordinaire Eric Oblander's brush with the beyond only served to inspire the band's fifth album, 2006's The Mystery Spot, that much more. Also benefiting from Clutch drummer Jean-Paul Gaster's imposing guest appearance throughout (hear him take over "Ten-Cent Dynamite" with his outro solo), the record showcases a noticeably reinvigorated 5HJ — not really messing with their successful, rootsy hard rock formula, so much as tackling it with renewed appetite. Starting with the opening title track's aggressive 5/6 blues shuffle, where Oblander's raunchy vocal pays discreet homage to early, pre-Dada Captain Beefheart, and continuing through gritty stomps like "Feed That Train" and the energized "La Grange" groove of "I Can't Shake It," where his harmonica punctuates Brad Coffin's geeetar-grit with soaring wails. Then there's the evocatively named standout "Of Ditch Diggers and Drowning Men"; co-written with former Big Chief member Phil Durr (who also contributes second guitar), it is further fleshed out with slide guitars and organs for a laid-back, down-home sound the Black Crowes used to own the patent on. The remaining cuts do their aforementioned comrades ample justice, without necessarily guaranteeing themselves a spot on future set lists, but The Mystery Spot's overall consistency and reliable sonic qualities (bottom line: few bands pull this music off so well) still offer Five Horse Johnson fans plenty of reasons to celebrate their return.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Charles Spano
Five Horse Johnson comes straight out of Toledo, OH, with big riff, get down, rootsy, middle American rock & roll that takes acid blues and Led Zeppelin and mixes in influences like the Black Crowes, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Aerosmith, and ZZ Top.The band — made up of Eric Oblander on harps and vocals, Brad Coffin on guitar, Steve Smith on bass, and Mike Alonso on drums — got together in 1995 and began opening for acts like War, Southern Culture on the Skids, Atomic Bitchwax, the Queens of the Stone Age, and R.L. Burnside. In 1998, they released Double Down. The critically acclaimed Fat Black Pussycat followed in 1999 and The No. 6 Dance came out on Small Stone Records in 2001.
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Labels:
five horse johnson
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786 - Wilko Johnson - Barbed Wire Blues (1988)
TRACKS1. Living In The Heart Of Love
2. I Keep It To Myself
3. Waiting For The Rain
4. Turned 21
5. Barbed Wire Blues
6. If You Want Me You've Got Me
7. Letting The Night Go By
8. Take Me Back
9. The Hook (Little Darling)
10. Out In The Traffic
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CREDITS
Wilko Johnson - Guitar, Vocals
Norman Watt-Roy - Bass, Backing Vocals
Salvatore Ramundo - Drums, Backing Vocals
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BIOGRAPHY
by Steve Huey
Best-known as the guitarist in Dr. Feelgood, one of British pub rock's greatest bands, Wilko Johnson went on to a long solo career playing the kind of rootsy, R&B-based rock & roll he loved. Born John Wilkinson (which he inverted to come up with his stage name) in 1947, Johnson grew up in the coastal Canvey Island area, and played around the local music scene during the '60s (often in jug bands). He studied at Newcastle University beginning in 1967, but returned home during breaks to keep up his musical activities. In 1971, after returning from a trip to India, he joined the band that became Dr. Feelgood, and quickly became one of their focal points thanks to his maniacally intense stage presence. Dr. Feelgood played locally for a couple of years and made their debut in London in the summer of 1973; their distinctively scruffy image and menacing energy soon made them a hot commodity on the pub rock circuit. The band released their debut album, Down By the Jetty, in 1975; Johnson stayed for two more studio albums (Malpractice and Sneakin' Suspicion) and the chart-topping live document Stupidity, contributing a number of fine original songs. However, tensions between Johnson and the rest of the group led to his departure toward the end of 1977.Johnson soon formed a backing band called the Solid Senders, which featured keyboardist John Potter, bassist Steve Lewins, and drummer Alan Platt. They signed to Virgin in 1978 and released the LP Solid Senders that year. The following year, Johnson joined Ian Dury's Blockheads, where he remained until 1980; there he met bassist Norman Watt-Roy, who later became a regular collaborator. In early 1981, Johnson released his second album, Ice on the Motorway, and two years later issued the EP Bottle Up and Go! with Lew Lewis; several small-scale LPs, mostly for European labels, followed over the '80s: 1984's Pull the Cover, 1985's Watch Out!, 1987's Call It What You Want, and 1988's Barbed Wire Blues. The latter was the first recording with his new regular group the Wilko Johnson Band, which featured Watt-Roy and drummer Salvatore Ramundo, and remained a concert fixture around England for the next decade or so. In 1998, Johnson finally had the opportunity to release another album, Going Back Home for Mystic. Johnson began to cut back on his concert appearances in 1999, but still found the wherewithal to cut Live in Japan 2000 the following year.
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Saturday, October 18, 2008
785 - Mojo Buford - State of the Blues Harp (1998)
TRACKS1 Picking Rags 5:14
2 Ground Hog Blues 3:44
3 Mo's Stroll 6:44
4 Jealous of My Baby 6:32
5 I'm a Blues Man 4:07
6 I Wanna Know 4:56
7 Jack Potato Boogie 3:54
8 Come Home Baby 5:33
9 Big Leg Woman 3:47
10 Watch Dog 4:39
11 Jealous of My Baby 4:18
12 Mo's Stroll 4:01
13 Deep Sea Diver 5:31
14 Picking Rags 3:08
All Tracks By Buford
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CREDITS
George "Mojo" Buford - Harmonica, Vocals
Jack Hills - Piano
Geoff Nichols - Drums
Richard Studholme - Guitar
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BIOGRAPHY
by Bill Dahl
When Muddy Waters deemed a harp player talented enough to follow Little Walter and James Cotton into his peerless combo, he must have been someone special. Mojo Buford spent several stints in the employ of the Chicago blues legend, and was his harpist of choice in the final edition of the Waters band. George Buford left Mississippi for Memphis while still young, learning his early blues lessons there. He relocated to Chicago in 1952, eventually forming a band called the Savage Boys that mutated into the Muddy Waters, Jr. Band (no, they weren't fronted by a Waters imitator; they subbed for their mighty sponsor at local clubs when he was on the road). Buford played with Muddy Waters as early as 1959, but a 1962 uprooting to Minneapolis to front his own combo, and cut a couple of solid but extremely obscure LPs for Vernon and Folk-Art, removed him from the Windy City scene for a while. Buford returned to Waters' combo in 1967 for a year, put in a longer stint with him during the early '70s, and came back for the last time after Jerry Portnoy exited with the rest of his mates to form the Legendary Blues Band. Buford recorded as a bandleader for Mr. Blues (later reissued on Rooster Blues) and the British JSP logo, never drifting far from his enduring Chicago blues roots.
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784 - Joe Bonamassa - A New Day Yesterday Live (2002)
TRACKS1 Jam Intro 3:21
2 Cradle Rock (Gallagher) 3:37
3 Steppin' Out/Rice Pudding 5:31
4 A New Day Yesterday (Anderson) 8:05
5 Miss You, Hate You 7:20
6 Walk in My Shadows (Fraiser, Kirke, Kosoff, Rodgers) 5:57
7 I Know Where I Belong (Bonamassa) 10:14
8 Colour & Shape (Bonamassa) 6:12
9 Trouble Waiting (Bonamassa, Tyrell, Tyrell) 4:36
10 If Heartaches Were Nickels 7:42
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CREDITS
Joe Bonamassa - Guitar, Vocals
Eric Czar - Bass
Kenny Kramme - Drums
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REVIEW
by Eduardo Rivadavia
Something of an odd release, A New Day Yesterday Live documents the final date of a 60-day jaunt during blues guitar prodigy Joe Bonamassa's 2001 tour in support of his major-label debut bearing the same title, and (this is the odd part), released just a few months earlier. Just why his record company felt the need for it, then, is up for grabs (more promotion...thinking Bonamassa's virtuosity came across stronger in a live setting...who knows?), but what's clear is that the young guitarist's trio lacked nothing in terms of on-stage presence and performing tightness as compared to what was heard on said studio album. Their kinetic reinventions of oft-overlooked '70s rock classics such as Free's "Walk in My Shadows" and Jethro Tull's "A New Day Yesterday" instantly distinguish Bonamassa from teenage blues competitors such as the overly Stevie Ray Vaughan-reliant Kenny Wayne Shepherd or the more purist (and technically less dazzling) Jonny Lang, and his better-conceived originals ("Colour & Shape," the wonderful "Miss You Hate You") stand up under any circumstance — but again, so what? Didn't listeners just buy their studio versions a few months ago? Yes, there's the additional benefit of extended jamming and incendiary guitar soloing to expand upon their themes, but suffice to say that this set need only be sought out by Bonamassa fanatics, or, in the event that they've yet to hear the studio version, first timers, too — why not?
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BIOGRAPHY
by MacKenzie Wilson & Al Campbell
Guitar mastermind Joe Bonamassa, a young player with the childhood dream of playing music similar to legends like Stevie Ray Vaughan, Eric Clapton, and Jimi Hendrix, was 22 when he inked a deal with Epic. Hailing from Utica, NY, Bonamassa could play the blues before he could drive a car. He first heard Stevie Ray Vaughan at age four and was instantly taken by Vaughan's high-powered playing. By age eight he opened for B.B. King, and at age 12 he was playing regularly around upstate New York. It was soon thereafter that Bonamassa hooked up with the band Bloodline, which featured other musicians' sons: Waylon Krieger (Robby Krieger's son), Erin Davis (Miles Davis' drummer kid), and Berry Oakley, Jr. (son of the Allman Brothers bassist). Bloodline released a self-titled album, but Bonamassa wanted to move on. In summer 2000 he guested for Roger McGuinn on Jethro Tull's summer tour, later releasing his debut solo album, A New Day Yesterday. Produced by longtime fan Tom Dowd, the album marked a move toward a more organic and rock-sounding direction. He put together a power trio with drummer Kenny Kramme and bassist Eric Czar and hit the road to support the album. Upon returning from the road, he hooked up with Dowd to record the muscular and sweeping studio disc So, It's Like That and released a document of the tour, A New Day Yesterday Live. The following year Bonamassa put out Blues Deluxe, featuring nine cover versions of blues classics alongside three originals. The muscular You & Me appeared in 2006, followed by the more acoustic-tinged Sloe Gin in 2007. A year later, Bonamassa released the two-disc live album Live from Nowhere in Particular.
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783 - Cowboy Mouth - Voodoo Shoppe (2006)
TRACKS1 Joe Strummer (Allen, Griffith, LaSange, LeBlanc, Sanchez) 3:36
2 Misty Falls (Griffith, LeBlanc, Sanchez) 3:27
3 Winds Me Up (Griffith, LaSange, LeBlanc, Sanchez) 3:34
4 Hole in My Heart (Griffith, LeBlanc, Sanchez) 3:58
5 Voodoo Shoppe (Griffith, LeBlanc, Sanchez) 3:54
6 Slow Down (Griffith, LaSange, LeBlanc, Sanchez) 3:35
7 This Much Fun (Griffith, LeBlanc, Sanchez) 2:45
8 Supersonic (Griffith, LeBlanc, Sanchez, Tetlow) 2:35
9 I Told Ya (Griffith, LaSange, LeBlanc, Sanchez) 3:16
10 Home (Griffith, LeBlanc, Sanchez, Tetlow) 3:13
11 Glad to Be Alive (Cobb, Griffith, LeBlanc, Sanchez, Tetlow) 3:35
12 The Avenue (Griffith, LeBlanc, Sanchez, Tetlow) 3:55
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CREDITS
John Boutté - Vocals
Herman V. Ernest III - Drums
Steven Gardner - Radio
John Thomas Griffith - Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
Fred LeBlanc - Percussion, Drums, Vocals
George Porter, Jr. - Bass
Paul Edward Sanchez - Guitar, Vocals
Sonia Tetlow - Bass, Vocals
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REVIEW
by Joseph McCombs
Their status as a popular concert draw had never translated to album sales, so New Orleans rockers Cowboy Mouth went in a more hit-oriented direction for much of 2006's Voodoo Shoppe. The lead single, "Joe Strummer," is a self-conscious statement of priorities: singer Fred LeBlanc's dumping a girl who's demonstrated her insipidity by not knowing who the titular artist is. The song's mildly amusing, but repeat listens reveal it to be more or less a rewrite of Bowling for Soup's "1985." Cowboy Mouth are far better off with the wild rockers that gave the band its live reputation: the searing "Winds Me Up" and "I Told Ya," the latter evoking mid-'70s Kiss. Those two slammers are easily the high points of the album, but the giddy I'll-be-a-kid-forever vibes of "This Much Fun" and "Glad to Be Alive" will please longtime fans of the band as well. Poppier tracks like "Slow Down" are fun but the steam-cleaned productions are just too precious for their own good. More seriously, two of the final three tracks confront the unavoidable subject of Hurricane Katrina's devastation of their Louisiana home: "Fix yourself a drink" is the first order of business on the mournful, passionate "Home," while LeBlanc and Company play it straight on the inherently touching "The Avenue." Both tracks represent an unusually reserved, adult side of the group, confirming that they're quite capable of being much more than a party band. Still, unfortunately for Cowboy Mouth, Voodoo Shoppe proves half sure-fire, half misfire, their remarkable energy remaining frustratingly uncaptured in the studio.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Cowboy Mouth are a collective of '80s rock & roll survivors — musicians with slight new wave and alternative connections who have aspired to AOR stardom. Formed in the early '90s after alternative rock had broken into the mainstream, the group fused AOR with alternative and roots rock influences on a handful of indie releases before signing with MCA Records in 1996. Although Cowboy Mouth had trouble remaining on a major label's roster, the band has continued releasing material in the new millennium on a variety of imprints and indie labels.Paul Sanchez (vocals, guitar) had previously recorded as a solo artist before teaming up with Fred LeBlanc (vocals, drums). The pair formed the Backbeats, who were short-lived. After their breakup, Sanchez moved to New York, where he continued to perform solo. In 1988, he returned to New Orleans; LeBlanc, who had just finished playing with Dash Rip Rock, had Sanchez join his new band. The duo began jamming with Griffith (lead guitar, vocals), who had just left the Red Rockers, a new wave band who had a hit with "China." The trio played with a variety of bassists until 1993, when Rob Savoy — the former frontman for the Bluerunners — joined the band. The band released its first album, Mouthing Off, late in 1993 on the independent Viceroy Records. Two years later, they released It Means Escape on the Monkey Hill label. By 1995, the group's following had grown large enough to earn attention from major labels. Cowboy Mouth decided to sign with MCA in early 1996, and they recorded their major-label debut, Are You with Me?, with producer Michael Wanchic during Mardi Gras of that year. The album was released in the summer of 1996 and charted a hit with "Jenny Says," an older song that the band had reprised for its major-label debut. The following spring, Cowboy Mouth released Live on Monkey Hill; Mercyland appeared a year later, and both All You Need Is Live and Easy followed in 2000. Disappointing sales prompted Atlantic to drop the band after Easy, but Cowboy Mouth, undeterred as always (even with the departure of bassist Rob Savoy), rose to the occasion and released the blistering Uh-Oh on the independent Bayside label the following year. Voodoo Shoppe, which was issued by Eleven Thirty, arrived in 2005. Fearless followed three years later, featuring a spunky ode to TV personality Kelly Ripa.
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782 - The Loved Ones - Build & Burn (2008)
TRACKS1 Pretty Good Year 2:14
2 The Inquirer 3:31
3 The Bridge 3:27
4 Sarah's Game 3:25
5 Brittle Heart 2:39
6 Selfish 4:01
7 3rd Shift 2:54
8 Louisiana 3:38
9 Dear Laura 2:49
10 I Swear 4:13
All Tracks By The Loved Ones
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CREDITS
Buick Audra - Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Christopher Gonzalez - Bass, Guitar
Dave Hause - Guitar, Vocals
Tad Kubler - Soloist
Franz Nicolay - Organ, Harmonica, Piano, Accordion, Organ (Hammond), Saw
Mike Sneeringer - Drums
Pete Steinkopf - Guitar, Vocals (bckgr)
Bob Strakele - Vocals (bckgr)
Dave Walsh - Guitar
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REVIEW
by Corey Apar
The Loved Ones could never be accused of being insincere, and you'd be even harder-pressed to make such a claim after listening to Build & Burn, the band's sophomore release for Fat Wreck Chords. An honest desperation careens through every note and nook of the record, ensuring that even the predictable and slightly derivative nature of its songs doesn't take away from how enjoyable the album is. Sure, almost anyone could play the uncomplicated chord progressions and straightforward melodies well, but only a select few could do it with as much heart as these Philly punks; the end result is a set of unforgivingly catchy songs that won't get out of your head even when you want them to (see "Sarah's Game" or "I Swear"). Build & Burn is an album about survival, a message that rings loudly through the Loved Ones' stomping rhythms, throaty vocals, and ringing chords, not to mention the occasional piano tinkering and Southern-charmed flavoring. So whether it's in cuts like the churning "Pretty Good Year" or the musingly acoustic "Brittle Heart," the group performs with the underdog spirit of that kid perpetually knocked down on the playground who never fails to get back up again. Ten songs in just 30 minutes, Build & Burn is a quick listen in which the Loved Ones — with a little help from their friends in the Hold Steady and Bouncing Souls, among others — stick to what they do best, and produce a solid album of passionate pop-punk.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Corey Apar
Philadelphia-based punk trio the Loved Ones formed in late 2003 and are comprised of singer/guitarist Dave Hause, bassist Michael "Spider" Cotterman, and drummer Mike Sneeringer. Already longtime friends, the bandmembers had previously done time playing in groups like Kid Dynamite, Paint It Black, the Curse, and Trial by Fire. In the past, Hause had also worked in various managing/roadie positions for bands such as Sick of It All, Bouncing Souls, Kid Dynamite, and the Explosion, which eventually inspired him to follow his own dreams of playing music for a living. The Loved Ones released their self-titled EP on Jade Tree in February 2005, and soon found themselves opening shows for the likes of Against Me!, Bad Religion, and NOFX. Their polished punk sensibilities combined with singalong choruses and raspy vocals next brought the guys to the attention of Fat Wreck Chords; the label issued their full-length debut, Keep Your Heart, a year later. Much touring ensued in support, and though Cotterman had exited the group by the first days of 2007, the Loved Ones continued on with a replacement for a string of headlining dates through mid-March. When former tourmates the Explosion broke up a few months later, Hause and Sneeringer brought members Chris Gonzalez (bass) and David Walsh into the Loved Ones, and the band released Build & Burn in February of 2008.
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781 - Dave Mason - 26 Letters 12 Notes (2008)
TRACKS1 Good 2 U (Hernandez) 4:32
2 Let Me Go (Mason) 3:52
3 One Day (Ingoldsby, McEuen) 4:27
4 Pink Lipstick (Hollster) 3:06
5 How Do I Get to Heaven (Capaldi, Earle, Mason) 4:20
6 Ain't Your Legs Tired Baby (Mason) 3:17
7 You're Standing in My Light (Capaldi) 5:00
8 Passing Thru the Flame (Williams) 4:21
9 That's Love (Mason) 3:20
10 El Toro (Mason) 3:36
11 World of Hunger 3:31
12 Full Circle and Then (Mason, Sambataro) 4:26
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CREDITS
Ralphe Armstrong - Bass
Eddie Baytos - Piano, Fender Rhodes
Alvino Bennett - Drums
Tal Bergman - Percussion, Drums
Angela Bostic - Choir, Chorus
Alex Drizos - Bass
Sheila E. - Percussion, Vocals (bckgr)
Mike Finnegan - Organ (Hammond), Vocals (bckgr)
Lashawn D. Gary - Choir, Chorus
Beth Griffith - Choir, Chorus, Lead
Jaime Hanna - Vocals (bckgr)
Billy Mason - Organ (Hammond)
Dave Mason - Guitar, Vocals, Vocals (bckgr), Producer
Jonathan McEuen - Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric), Vocals (bckgr)
Angelo Morris - Bass, Piano, Fender Rhodes
Willie Nelson - Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric)
Renato Neto - Bass, Piano, Strings, Fender Rhodes, Orchestral Arrangements
Suzanne Paris - Vocals (bckgr)
Mark Pastoria - Percussion, Programming
Jenean Presberry - Choir, Chorus
Carmine Rajos - Bass
Pamela Bowie Smith - Choir, Chorus
Robert Vilera - Percussion
Brian Zsupnick - Drums
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REVIEW
by Thom Jurek
Dave Mason is a co-founder of the legendary rock band Traffic. He's played on some of the greatest rock albums in history: Jimi Hendrix's Electric Ladyland, George Harrison's All Things Must Pass, and Delaney & Bonnie's Motel Shot among them. 26 Letters 12 Notes (issued on his own Out of the Box imprint through RED Distribution) is his first new album in a decade. Originally produced by Mason at home in California, additional recording was done in Detroit and Miami. It's a back to basics, '70s style rock and Brit soul record. It contains some modern co-production by a number of folks including the Motor City's Mark and Brian Pastoria (some of the mixing was also done in Detroit). It reveals Mason not only as a solid, focused, and relevant songwriter in the rock idiom, but as an expressive vocalist of uncanny power and depth (he's actually gotten better over the decades). His guitar playing has continued to develop and grow: he is a far more interesting player than his peer Eric Clapton is at this stage of the game. There isn't anything showy or hyper-consciously "dazzling" in the presentation, Mason's always been humble, and he sets his playing and singing to be true to his songs. There are some stellar guests on the set, including Willie Nelson (playing guitar, not singing), and percussionist and vocalist Sheila E. The big surprise is soul/gospel vocalist Beth Griffith belting it out with great firepower. The production is warm, lively, and immediate. It's not in your face; instead it concentrates on presenting the music as alive dynamically, though it is rich and deep in its textures.The opener, "Good 2 U," is classic Mason, with a bluesy guitar riff backed by a taut string arrangement. The blues ring out in fills against Mason's open, emotional baritone. The guitar winds around a funky backbeat on the refrain, complete with a chorus of backing vocalists, a tight snare, and a slithering B-3. "One Day" opens with the same raucous Stratocaster playing a gospel blues, with Mason belting it out on top. The chorus, piano, and organ interact with that guitar and are infectious. The keyboard sounds meld into Mason's rough-edged guitar in a chorded riff; they feel like the sound of the mid-'70s radio rock roaring out of the dashboard speakers. This is a highway anthem disguised as a broken love song. Mason's lyrics serve his voice; they are wonderfully written. In "How Do I Get to Heaven," his writing is emotionally worthy of Barrett Strong and lyrically of Bob Dylan. This is a hymn to busted love so emotionally authentic, we keep expecting the singer to break down. There's a beautiful pedal steel here played by Dana Keller that does exactly what it's supposed to do: add a ton of atmosphere without being intrusive. Mason loves late R&B and early rock & roll, as evidenced by the swagger in "Ain't Your Legs Tired Baby," with a smoking baritone sax adding raunch to the roll. Other winners include the midtempo torch song "Passing Thru the Flame," and two pumped up slippery funk tunes in "That's Love," and "World of Hunger" with Sheila E. There's also a happening Spanish guitar-tinged instrumental called "El Toro." The set ends with the country-ish "Full Circle and Then," a gorgeous love song with wonderful acoustic and electric guitar work as well as Mason's deeply committed vocal. 26 Letters 12 Notes stands tall in Mason's catalog; it's proof that some veteran rockers are still hungry for the Muse; they've have been stashing diamonds in the dust of age — this album is full of them and proof that Mason doesn't rest on his laurels.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Steve Huey
After serving as road manager for the Spencer Davis Group and meeting Steve Winwood, singer/guitarist Dave Mason found fame as one of the founding members of the jazz/rock/pop fusion group Traffic. However, conflicts between Winwood and Mason over the group's direction led to the latter's departure in 1969 after three albums. Mason moved to Los Angeles and joined Delaney & Bonnie before beginning his solo career. His 1970 solo debut, Alone Together, went gold and is, arguably, his best album. Mason next collaborated with Mama Cass Elliot for Dave Mason & Cass Elliot, but its reception was lukewarm at best. Mason settled permanently in America in 1973 and signed a long-term contract with CBS, recording a series of moderately successful, often inconsistent pop/rock albums featuring originals and a sprinkling of covers. Mason scored his biggest solo hit in 1977 with "We Just Disagree," which reached number 12. New Mason material was scarce in the 1980s, except for a beer commercial. Mason continued to tour, though, and joined Fleetwood Mac in 1994; 1999 saw the release of Live: 40,000 Headmen Tour, which also featured Jim Capaldi. The re-release ofIt's Like You Never Left followed a year later.
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780 - Mungo Jerry - Naked From The Heart (2007)
TRACKS1 Motor Biking
2 Ballad of a Teenage Queen (Jack Clement)
3 Make Me Happy
4 Come on Baby
5 Hey Gyp, Dig the Slowness (Leitch Donovan Phillips)
6 Play That Funkin' Music
7 Go to Sleep
8 Hippty Cat Mama
9 Ten Little Women (Noland)
10 Everybody Wants Someone
11 I'm a Liar
12 I've Got My Eye on You
13 Let's Go
14 We Will Never Be Alone
15 I Walked Everywhere
16 Staying at Home
17 Staying at Home [Single Version]
All Tracks By Ray Dorset, except 2, 5, 9
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CREDITS
Ray Dorset - Vocals, Electric and Acoustic Guitars, Harp, Coquerino, Percussion
Mike Cole - Double Pass, Percussion, Backing Vocals
Bruce Brand - Drums, Percussion, Footstomp, Washboard, Jug, Piano, Organ, Backing Vocals
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INFO
The world might not be desperate for a new album from this veteran crew. But closing in on 40 years after their brief string of hit singles, Mungo Jerry are still capable of delivering a spectrum of quality music.
From the driving Motor Biking, through the Doors-tinged Hey Gyp, Dig the Slowness and the soulful groove of Play That Funkin' Music, the band are convincingly vibrant.
Mainman Ray Dorset still has the trademark vocal wobble, and the atmosphere is that of a packed blues bar just after midnight.
Nothing here is essential. But everything tells of three musicians who still know how to have fun.
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779 - Ray Dorset and Mungo Jerry - Lovin' In Alleys & Fightin' In The Streets (1977)
TRACKS1 All That a Woman Should Be 3:24
2 I Could Never Start Lovin' You 5:46
3 Lovin'in the Alleys an' Fightin'in the Streets 3:18
4 The Grease 3:03
5 Dragster Queen 4:43
6 Heavy Foot Stomp 3:01
7 Gone to Malaya 4:46
8 Can't Keep It Down 4:05
9 Lovin'in the Morning 4:44
10 Just Can't Say Goodbye 4:23
11 I Do What I Want 4:15
12 Lana 3:41
13 We're Gonna Boogie 3:50
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REVIEW
by Bruce Eder
Lovin' in the Alleys & Fightin' in the Streets was a mouthful of a title for Mungo Jerry's second Polydor LP, issued in the spring of 1977. This album actually had a serious split personality, half of it much harder than one was used to hearing from the group, with a pounding electric rock sound throughout and screaming vocals, while the other half was more in keeping with the group's familiar low-wattage roots rock sound. The title track and "All That a Woman Should Be" represented the snarling, aggressive side of the music, while "Heavy Foot Stomp" showed off their more genial, skiffle-inspired sound (though still with a serious beat); the driving, hook-laden "Gone to Malaya" managed to recall Bob Dylan's "Hurricane" and any number of Bruce Springsteen tracks of the era; and the album closed on the heavy, electric rock & roll singalong-style track "Just Can't Say Goodbye."
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Labels:
ray dorset and mungo jerry
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778 - Mungo Jerry - You Don't Have To Be In The Army (1971)
TRACKS01. You Dont Have To Be In The Army To Fight In The War 03:15
02. Ella Speed 03:05
03. Pidgeon Stew 04:58
04. Take Me Back 03:27
05. Give Me Love 04:47
06. Hey Rosalyn 03:47
07. Northcote Arms 03:16
08. There's A Man Going Round Taking Names 03:07
09. Simple Things 03:53
10. Keep Your Hands Off Her 02:47
11. On A Sunday 03:20
12. That Old Dust Storm 03:21
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CREDITS
Ray Dorset - Guitar, Percussion, Vocals
Colin Earl - Piano, Vocals
John Godfrey - Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
Paul King - Banjo, Guitar, Vocals
Joe Rush - Percussion
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REVIEW
by Dave Thompson
Bedecked with one of the most terrifying covers of the early '70s — a vast, bemedalled military harridan striking a scornful pose of "come and get it" allure — Mungo Jerry's third U.K. album was titled for one of their best-loved (but, contrarily, least-successful) hit singles, a saga of all the things that can and will go wrong as you try to live your daily life. This album, though the song doesn't mention it, would appear to be one of them. From beginning to end, it is one of their weakest, with Ray Dorset now firmly entrenched in writing according to the established band style and Paul King simply squeezing in his less-typical songs where he can. That he was saving the best for his own forthcoming solo album seems blatantly obvious, though — his "Hey Rosalyn" is no more a shining triumph than Dorset's "Pigeon Pie" and "Give Me Love," and it's telling that the best songs on the album are the traditional pieces, "Ella Speed" and "Take Me Back." Mungo Jerry would bounce back (briefly), and You Don't Have to Be in the Army's defeat would quickly be forgotten. At the time, however, it was difficult not to believe that the summertime was finally over.
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Friday, October 17, 2008
777 - Christie - Yellow River - The Best Of (2008)
TRACKS1. Yellow River
2. Inside Looking Out
3. San Bernadino
4. Put Your Money Down
5. Until The Dawn
6. Gotta Be Free
7. Here I Am
8. I’ve Got A Feeling
9. New York City (Blakey, Elmes)
10. Down The Mississippi Line
11. Country Boy
12. Johnny One Time
13. Coming Home Tonight
All Tracks By Christie, except track 9
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CREDITS
Jeff Christie - Bass, Vocals
Vic Elmes - Guitar
Michael Blakey - Drums
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INFO
Christie's style of music was simple, high-energy rock with country influences. Jeff Christie was their main songwriter and lead singer. They made it to number one in the UK charts with Yellow river in 1970 although it was quickly knocked off the top my Mungo Jerry's classic In the summertime.
Following that success, their next single, San Bernadino, became a top ten UK hit. Any hopes that they might have a string of hits after that were quickly dispelled as they only had one other UK hit - Iron horse, which only briefly crept in at the bottom of the charts. I get the impression that Christie were more successful in Germany, where their music has been easier to find on CD's.
In the seventies, pop and rock music became ever more complex so the simple sounds of Christie soon went out of fashion. Nevertheless, their music is highly entertaining and worthy of a place in any collection of rock oldies.
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BIOGRAPHY
by Jason Ankeny
While Lou Christie's shrieking falsetto was among the most distinctive voices in all of pop music, he was also one of the first solo performers of the rock era to compose his own material, generating some of the biggest and most memorable hits of the mid-1960s. Born Lugee Alfredo Giovanni Sacco in Glen Willard, Pennsylvania on February 19, 1943, he won a scholarship to Moon Township High School as a teen; there he studied music and vocal technique, later joining a group dubbed the Classics. Between 1959 and 1962, in collaboration with a variety of Pittsburgh-area bands, he cut a series of records for small local labels, adopting the stage name Lou Christie along the way. Eventually he made the acquaintance of Twyla Herbert, a classically trained musician and self-proclaimed mystic some 20 years his senior; they became songwriting partners, and in 1962 penned "The Gypsy Cried," which he recorded on two-track in his garage. The single became a local phenomenon, and was eventually licensed for national release by the Roulette label, peaking at number 24 on the pop charts in 1963. After relocating to New York and landing session work as a backing vocalist, Christie wrote and recorded a follow-up, "Two Faces Have I"; it landed in the Top Ten, but shortly after its release he began a two-year stint in the Army. He returned to action in 1966, picking up right where he left off with his biggest hit yet — the lush, chart-topping "Lightnin' Strikes." Christie's next smash, 1966's "Rhapsody in the Rain," was notorious for being among the more sexually explicit efforts of the period. After brief stays with Colpix and Columbia, he next moved to the Buddah label, scoring one last Top Ten hit in 1969 with "I'm Gonna Make You Mine." Drug problems plagued Christie during the early 1970s, and after getting clean at a London rehab clinic, he dropped out of music, working variously as a ranch hand, offshore oil driller and carnival barker; by the 1980s, he was making the occasional appearance on oldies package tours, and in 1997 issued Pledging My Love, his first new material in over a quarter-century.
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by Jason Ankeny
While Lou Christie's shrieking falsetto was among the most distinctive voices in all of pop music, he was also one of the first solo performers of the rock era to compose his own material, generating some of the biggest and most memorable hits of the mid-1960s. Born Lugee Alfredo Giovanni Sacco in Glen Willard, Pennsylvania on February 19, 1943, he won a scholarship to Moon Township High School as a teen; there he studied music and vocal technique, later joining a group dubbed the Classics. Between 1959 and 1962, in collaboration with a variety of Pittsburgh-area bands, he cut a series of records for small local labels, adopting the stage name Lou Christie along the way. Eventually he made the acquaintance of Twyla Herbert, a classically trained musician and self-proclaimed mystic some 20 years his senior; they became songwriting partners, and in 1962 penned "The Gypsy Cried," which he recorded on two-track in his garage. The single became a local phenomenon, and was eventually licensed for national release by the Roulette label, peaking at number 24 on the pop charts in 1963. After relocating to New York and landing session work as a backing vocalist, Christie wrote and recorded a follow-up, "Two Faces Have I"; it landed in the Top Ten, but shortly after its release he began a two-year stint in the Army. He returned to action in 1966, picking up right where he left off with his biggest hit yet — the lush, chart-topping "Lightnin' Strikes." Christie's next smash, 1966's "Rhapsody in the Rain," was notorious for being among the more sexually explicit efforts of the period. After brief stays with Colpix and Columbia, he next moved to the Buddah label, scoring one last Top Ten hit in 1969 with "I'm Gonna Make You Mine." Drug problems plagued Christie during the early 1970s, and after getting clean at a London rehab clinic, he dropped out of music, working variously as a ranch hand, offshore oil driller and carnival barker; by the 1980s, he was making the occasional appearance on oldies package tours, and in 1997 issued Pledging My Love, his first new material in over a quarter-century.
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776 - Mungo Jerry - Electronically Tested (1971)
TRACKS1 She Rowed (Dorset) 3:21
2 I Just Wanna Make Love to You (Dixon) 9:06
3 In the Summertime (Dorset) 3:38
4 Somebody Stole My Wife (Dorset) 3:01
5 Baby Jump (Dorset) 4:16
6 Follow Me Down (Dorset) 3:25
7 Memoirs of a Stockbroker (Dorset) 4:11
8 You Better Leave That Whiskey Alone (Dorset) 4:05
9 Coming Back to You (Dorset) 3:45
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CREDITS
Ray Dorset - Guitar, Percussion, Harp, Kazoo, Tambourine, Vocals, Guitar (12 String), Bass (Acoustic), Stomping
Colin Earl - Piano, Vocals
Roger Earl - Drums
John Godfrey - Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
Paul King - Banjo, Guitar, Vocals
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REVIEW
by Dave Thompson
No less than its predecessor, Mungo Jerry's second album hit the stores in the wake of a massive hit single, the lascivious "Baby Jump" — still one of the most sexually raw records ever to land regular daytime airplay. And, again like its predecessor, the full album



