BOB BROZMAN
''FIRE IN THE MIND''
JANUARY 8 2013
46:55
1/Breathing the Blues/4:17
2/Cannibal Stomp/3:47
3/American House Fire Blue/5:01
4/Rhythm Is the Thing/3:51
5/Strange Mind Blues/4:49
6/Blue Mars Over Sorrento/4:09
7/Banm Kalou Banm/6:04
8/Ow! My Uke's On Fire!/1:57
9/Nightmares and Dreames/5:06
10/Memory Blues/4:31
11/Lonesome Blues/3:50
Bob Brozman/vocals, baritone guitar, baglama, ukulele, marimba, percussion
John Pearse/strings
Jim Norris/drums
Daniel Thomas/triangle
REVIEW
By Al Hensley
Ever since the days of Charley Patton, successive blues artists have pushed their tradition forward by absorbing ideas from other kinds of music outside their culture. New York-born master of slide, fingerstyle and percussive guitar and lifelong student of ethno-musicology Bob Brozman, here expands this concept way beyond the confines of the Mississippi Delta. A world traveller with a deep understanding of a plethora of styles from the Americas, Europe, Africa and the Asia-Pacific, the acoustic guitar genius whose recorded repertoire has grown by over thirty titles since his 1981 solo debut album, creatively blends his blues roots with diverse global influences. Playing traditional and exotic guitars, marimbas, ukulele, tabla and bouzouki, Brozman’s musical state of mind knows no boundaries as he floats comfortably through an all-original set of instrumental pieces and songs of travel, despair, loneliness, love and death, spanning a wide range of timbre and emotion. The combination of Brozman’s staggering fretwork and rhythmic dexterity and Jim Norris’ expert drumming generates a unique musical rapport, from the tribal pulse of ‘Breathing The Blues’, through the Andalusian feel of ‘American House Fire Blues’ and the Hellenic sounds of ‘Strange Mind Blues’, to the Gypsy jazz of ‘Blue Mars Over Sorrento’. A ghostly cerebral effect comes with the closer ‘Lonesome Blues’ where Brozman’s falsetto vocal and melodic chording invokes the spectre of Skip James.
BIOGRAPHY
by Richard Skelly
Multi-instrumentalist, historian, and educator Bob Brozman was born in New York on March 8, 1954. His uncle, Barney Josephson, was a prominent club owner who ran Cafe Society in Greenwich Village, one of the first places in New York, or anywhere, where black and white musicians played on-stage together.
Brozman studied music and ethnomusicology at Washington University in St. Louis. Brozman became not only a master of classic blues from the '20s and '30s, but also a competent performer of early jazz and ragtime. In the mid-'70s while still in college, he would make trips down South to find, interview, and play with the older blues artists from the 1920s and '30s whom he admired.
Brozman recorded several fine albums in the early and mid-'80s for the Kicking Mule and Rounder labels, and for students of early vintage blues and vintage guitar aficionados, they're well worth looking for. In 1985, he recorded Hello Central...Give Me Dr. Jazz for the Massachusetts-based Rounder label and followed up in 1988 with Devil's Slide. Truckload of Blues appeared on Rounder in 1992.
Brozman also collaborated on album projects with a number of musicians from around the world, including the Tau Moe Family (Remembering the Songs of Our Youth), Debashish Bhattacharya (Mahima), René Lacaille (DigDig), Takashi Hirayasu (Jin Jin and Nankuru Naisa), Djeli Moussa Diawara (Ocean Blues), Led Kaapana (In the Saddle), David Grisman (Tone Poems III), Jeff Lang (Rolling Through This World), Woody Mann (Get Together), and Cyril Pahinui (Four Hands Sweet & Hot). He kept busy as a solo act as well, releasing Live Now, Metric Time, and Blues Reflex early in the new millennium.
Brozman traveled to Papua New Guinea in 2003 and 2004 to record and be filmed with local string bands, and the resulting CD/DVD set, Songs of the Volcano, appeared in 2005. Continuing to show off his versatility in performing compositions influenced by varying cultures, he released two albums in 2007, Lumiere and Post-Industrial Blues. Brozman died at his home in Santa Cruz, California on April 23, 2013; he was 59 years old.
''FIRE IN THE MIND''
JANUARY 8 2013
46:55
1/Breathing the Blues/4:17
2/Cannibal Stomp/3:47
3/American House Fire Blue/5:01
4/Rhythm Is the Thing/3:51
5/Strange Mind Blues/4:49
6/Blue Mars Over Sorrento/4:09
7/Banm Kalou Banm/6:04
8/Ow! My Uke's On Fire!/1:57
9/Nightmares and Dreames/5:06
10/Memory Blues/4:31
11/Lonesome Blues/3:50
Bob Brozman/vocals, baritone guitar, baglama, ukulele, marimba, percussion
John Pearse/strings
Jim Norris/drums
Daniel Thomas/triangle
REVIEW
By Al Hensley
Ever since the days of Charley Patton, successive blues artists have pushed their tradition forward by absorbing ideas from other kinds of music outside their culture. New York-born master of slide, fingerstyle and percussive guitar and lifelong student of ethno-musicology Bob Brozman, here expands this concept way beyond the confines of the Mississippi Delta. A world traveller with a deep understanding of a plethora of styles from the Americas, Europe, Africa and the Asia-Pacific, the acoustic guitar genius whose recorded repertoire has grown by over thirty titles since his 1981 solo debut album, creatively blends his blues roots with diverse global influences. Playing traditional and exotic guitars, marimbas, ukulele, tabla and bouzouki, Brozman’s musical state of mind knows no boundaries as he floats comfortably through an all-original set of instrumental pieces and songs of travel, despair, loneliness, love and death, spanning a wide range of timbre and emotion. The combination of Brozman’s staggering fretwork and rhythmic dexterity and Jim Norris’ expert drumming generates a unique musical rapport, from the tribal pulse of ‘Breathing The Blues’, through the Andalusian feel of ‘American House Fire Blues’ and the Hellenic sounds of ‘Strange Mind Blues’, to the Gypsy jazz of ‘Blue Mars Over Sorrento’. A ghostly cerebral effect comes with the closer ‘Lonesome Blues’ where Brozman’s falsetto vocal and melodic chording invokes the spectre of Skip James.
BIOGRAPHY
by Richard Skelly
Multi-instrumentalist, historian, and educator Bob Brozman was born in New York on March 8, 1954. His uncle, Barney Josephson, was a prominent club owner who ran Cafe Society in Greenwich Village, one of the first places in New York, or anywhere, where black and white musicians played on-stage together.
Brozman studied music and ethnomusicology at Washington University in St. Louis. Brozman became not only a master of classic blues from the '20s and '30s, but also a competent performer of early jazz and ragtime. In the mid-'70s while still in college, he would make trips down South to find, interview, and play with the older blues artists from the 1920s and '30s whom he admired.
Brozman recorded several fine albums in the early and mid-'80s for the Kicking Mule and Rounder labels, and for students of early vintage blues and vintage guitar aficionados, they're well worth looking for. In 1985, he recorded Hello Central...Give Me Dr. Jazz for the Massachusetts-based Rounder label and followed up in 1988 with Devil's Slide. Truckload of Blues appeared on Rounder in 1992.
Brozman also collaborated on album projects with a number of musicians from around the world, including the Tau Moe Family (Remembering the Songs of Our Youth), Debashish Bhattacharya (Mahima), René Lacaille (DigDig), Takashi Hirayasu (Jin Jin and Nankuru Naisa), Djeli Moussa Diawara (Ocean Blues), Led Kaapana (In the Saddle), David Grisman (Tone Poems III), Jeff Lang (Rolling Through This World), Woody Mann (Get Together), and Cyril Pahinui (Four Hands Sweet & Hot). He kept busy as a solo act as well, releasing Live Now, Metric Time, and Blues Reflex early in the new millennium.
Brozman traveled to Papua New Guinea in 2003 and 2004 to record and be filmed with local string bands, and the resulting CD/DVD set, Songs of the Volcano, appeared in 2005. Continuing to show off his versatility in performing compositions influenced by varying cultures, he released two albums in 2007, Lumiere and Post-Industrial Blues. Brozman died at his home in Santa Cruz, California on April 23, 2013; he was 59 years old.