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Showing posts with label Johnny V. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Johnny V. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Latvian Blues Band & Johnny V 2000 Blues Party


Genre: Blues
Rate: 128 kbps CBR / 44100
Time: 00:54:47
Size: 50,16 MB

Latvia Canada

The recordings were done in the Ex-Red Army Barracks, and the mixes were done in the Ex-Communist Party Headquarters. This CD is the end result of a collaboration between Johnny and some very young Latvian blues musicians. There are 12 excellent tracks with some special guests from the blues world in Latvia adding their expertise. (http://users.xplornet.com/~jam/jv.html#recordings)



Tracklist:

01 - Jumping With Eddy B 03:38


02 - Hey Pocky A-Way 05:16

03 - Last Night 08:06

04 - Hey Now Baby 05:07

05 - Hepcats Live Nine Lives 03:25


06 - So Far, So Good 04:16

07 - Shame On You 04:52

08 - Wilma Jean 04:47

09 - Dead Shrimp Blues 03:57

10 - Gee Baby Ain't I Good To You 03:22

11 - Too Late 03:07

12 - Funk You Very Much 04:54





Latvian Blues Band & Johnny V here:

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Thursday, May 3, 2012

Johnny V's Blues Allstars 1996 If My Daddy Could See Me Now


Genre: Blues
Rate: 320 kbps CBR / 44100
Time: 00:53:56
Size: 123,31 MB

Canada

Review by Ann Wickstrom

If My Daddy Could See Me Now features the heartfelt music of one of Canada's most prominent blues performers. Originally from Toronto, Johnny V -- whose real last name is Mills -- moved to Calgary in 1979 and got serious about the blues after growing up listening to his father play acoustic blues guitar and harp. Just before he died in 1976, Johnny V's "Daddy" made him promise that he would follow music, something his father could never really do since he was struggling to raise six children. In 1996, V was chosen as Best Canadian Guitarist by the West Coast Blues Review. In addition, he works as a session man and record producer. The Allstars are a seven-piece band that includes piano, organ, sax, and trumpet.

If My Daddy Could See Me Now is as much a tender and touching release as it is a smokin' affair. Tunes range from swing (Ruth Brown's "As Long As I'm Movin") to slide (the V original "I Ain't Gonna Dust My Broom Again," an interesting take on the Robert Johnson/Elmore James classic). In addition to five other fine originals and one of his dad's, "Depression Blues," Mills throws in a couple of horn-punctuated Son Seals songs ("Four Full Seasons of Love" and "Don't Bother Me) as well as one from Magic Sam ("You Belong to Me"). One of the best cuts, however, is a spare, guitar-bass-drums-only approach to the blues standard "Next Time You See Me." From the sly dusting of the brushes on the snare to the haunting echo in Johnny's guitar, this tune is bad to the bone. Much like Little Junior Parker's version, it couldn't possibly be any slower, or any better. Johnny V's sound is definitely within the blues realm, yet he doesn't sound entirely like any other blues performer. Johnny V is his own man. This album will warm you up inside!



Tracklist:

01 - As Long As I'm Movin 04:18

02 - Four Full Seasons Of Love 03:20

03 - Maxine 02:59

04 - I Ain't Gonna Dust My Broom Again 05:56

05 - Don't Bother Me 03:58

06 - Walkin' Blues 03:57

07 - Next Time You See Me 05:17

08 - 29 Ways 01:41

09 - Missin' The Flu 02:57

10 - What's Up With You 03:52

11 - Is This The Game To Play 04:19

12 - You Belong To Me 04:54

13 - The Depression Blues 03:38

14 - Mail My Letter 02:50



Johnny V's Blues Allstars here:

On request of the artist, please visit his website:

http://www.johnnyv.org/

or check out his bio:

http://users.xplornet.com/~jam/epk/JV_EPK_Bio.pdf


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Sunday, April 8, 2012

YVR3 2001 Mustard And Relics



Genre: Blues
Rate: 224 kbps CBR / 44100
Time: 00:59:15
Size: 94,92 MB

Canada

As a non-player who's never been able to penetrate the eternal mystery of the instrument, I've found the simplest way to measure a guitarist's prowess is to attend a show and count the number of fellow fretmen shaking their heads in a combination of appreciation and disbelief. Having witnessed the phenomenon first-hand at a Johnny V show, where I picked up this platter, I can safely state that Calgary's Johnny V is an absolute monster.

Fortunately, those who can't conveniently catch the band live can still be transported to Johnny's version of blues/rock heaven via "Mustard & Relics," a thirteen-slice platter culled from a number of live dates. These represent the band's favourite takes, warts and all; they opted not to overdub or fix things up in the studio, rightfully recognizing the absurdity of tinkering with live recordings after the fact.

While Johnny's previous outings have encompassed many a style, this outing remains resolutely within the power-trio format, with Johnny's guitar crunching out the chords front and centre. Backed by very muscular accompaniment of bassist Glen Yorga and drummer Andrzej Ryszka, Johnny here favours a thick, fuzzy tone, judiciously employing effects to achieve a somewhat distorted sound reminiscent of an earlier era. In lesser hands, pedals and such often take over, rendering things more sonically than musically interesting; Johnny, however, keeps firm rein on proceedings, never allowing technology to override the sheer musicality of his fretwork.

Liner notes mention a fondness for the blues-rockers of the sixties and seventies, and the disc could almost be taken as homage to those heroes, back when musical exploration ruled the day, and only the scholars worried too much about the authenticity of it all. Johnny wrote everything on the disc (a couple with assistance from Richard Newell, Canada's legendary King Biscuit Boy); not one to confine himself to restrictive formulae, he mixes in elements of funk, swamp, country, and yes, plain ol' rock. Yet no one's likely to call this anything but a blues album.

Perhaps the biggest surprise here is just how good a singer Johnny is. There's a soulful intensity to his singing, with just the right measure of grit and grease, that never seems forced; indeed, he sounds thoroughly relaxed throughout, having as much fun as though these were the very first times he'd ever had the pleasure of performing in public.

Ultimately, that to me is what makes this disc such a winner; sure the music is great, the band extraordinarily accomplished, but there's no shortage of either quality on the market; but how often does one hear veterans for whom the sheer joy of performing shines through?

Excellent stuff! (John Taylor)



Tracklist:

01 - I'm Crying 04:19

02 - Lost At Love 03:21

03 - Let The Door Hit You 03:12

04 - Wrapped Around Your Finger 07:15

05 - Missing The Flu 09:29

06 - One Night Stand 04:11

07 - Takin' That First Step 03:09

08 - I Ain't Gonna Dust My Broom Again 05:56

09 - That's All That You Need To Do 03:34

10 - What's Up With You 03:34

11 - I've Got To Get Back To My Squeeze 06:15

12 - I Ain't Lyin' 03:54

13 - Thanks 01:06



YVR3 here:

On request of the artist, please visit his website:

http://www.johnnyv.org/

or check out his bio:

http://users.xplornet.com/~jam/epk/JV_EPK_Bio.pdf


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