Saturday, December 22, 2018

Jesse Thomas - Lookin' For That Woman

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 52:26
Size: 122.4 MB
Released: 1996/2009
Styles: Acoustic Texas blues
Art: Front

1. Blue Goose Blues (3:14)
2. Behind Closed Doors (2:58)
3. Lookin' For That Woman (3:18)
4. Jack Of Diamonds (3:16)
5. Boogie Woogie On MKT (2:32)
6. Zetetter Blues (4:08)
7. Guess I'll Walk Alone (3:17)
8. Blues Is A Feelin' (4:03)
9. Merry Christmas (3:24)
10. Your Ways and Actions (2:55)
11. Gumbo (3:55)
12. Bessie Lavon (3:22)
13. All That Stuff (2:46)
14. Another Friend Like Me (3:25)
15. Call Me (3:12)
16. Blue Goose Blues (2:34)

The brother of Texas bluesman Willard "Ramblin'" Thomas, Jesse "Babyface" Thomas never had the success of his more famous sibling. Born in the hamlet of Logansport, LA, near the Texas border in 1911, Jesse Thomas and his brother were personally close growing up, often working in the fields together, and he also aspired to a music career -- the two performed together. He moved to Dallas in 1929, at a time when Blind Lemon Jefferson and Lonnie Johnson were in their heyday; Thomas made his first recordings that year, at age 18, for Victor. He cut four sides, but found little success coming from those efforts. Whether by design or a simple process of selection, he decided not to emulate his more famous brother's slide guitar-based sound, instead playing in a fingerpicking style closer to that of Blind Blake, Lonnie Johnson, or Blind Lemon Jefferson himself.
In the early '40s, Jesse Thomas relocated to Los Angeles, losing contact in the process with both his sibling and the itinerant musician's life he'd led in the previous decade. He also got to hear and play with musicians who were more influenced by jazz, and the more sophisticated varieties of blues that had taken root in the big cities. These influences soon became clear when he resumed his recording career in the late '40s in Los Angeles; he also demonstrated his songwriting prowess. He tended to write and sing about more upbeat and romantic subjects than his brother, and favored a highly rhythmic and animated style on his instrument. "Double Do Love You" recalled T-Bone Walker at his best, and anticipated the work of Chuck Berry by six or seven years. Jesse Thomas also worked well in a band setting, playing his instrument off against piano accompaniment by Lonnie Lyons and Lloyd Glenn, amongst others, and also saxmen such as Sam Williams and Conrad Johnson. He recorded for Milltone, Freedom, Modern, Swing Time, Hollywood, Specialty, and Elko between 1948 and 1958, and briefly had his own label, Club Records, at the end of the '40s.
It may have been Thomas' sheer versatility that hurt him as a recording artist, at least in terms of commercial success. Unlike his brother, who never evolved too far out of his rural life or roots, Jesse Thomas was always adding strings to his bow, so that by the late '40s he was doing what amounted to R&B rather than pure blues, as both a singer and guitarist, and altering his sound with almost every release, working in different group contexts -- all effective, but all different. He was doing what would later be defined as rock & roll years before it got that name, and was cutting perfectly fine, Chess Records-style rock & roll music in the mid-'50s. He was back in Shreveport from 1957 on, cutting sides of Hollywood Records, He kept working at least into the '70s and '80s, even founding another label, Red River. He cut his last session in 1992, at age 81, working once more in a country-blues vein and a small group setting, and showed his playing skills still intact. Thomas died in 1995 at the age of 84, after a 60-year career in music. ~bio by Bruce Eder

Jesse Thomas (guitar)
Steve James (guitar)
Paul Harrington (harmonica)
Dennis Cavalier (piano)
Tyrone Starks (drums).

Lookin' For That Woman

Jeff Ray - Last Great Winter

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 49:48
Size: 114.0 MB
Released: 2007
Styles: Piedmont blues, Acoustic delta blues
Art: Front

1. Dear Grenadine (2:42)
2. Low Wage Mood (5:35)
3. Higher Hilltops (3:51)
4. This Land Is Your Land (5:00)
5. Cindy Sang (5:32)
6. Human Hillsides (5:18)
7. Valley (4:24)
8. Crane (6:26)
9. Maggie's Farm (5:38)
10. My My My (5:19)

Jeff Ray's third and most compelling album to date. A blues-influenced tour de force of resonator slide-guitar, Ray weaves the grit of the Mississippi Delta into a tapestry of poetic americana.
Since the release of his rockin' multi-instrumental 2004 sophomore release, JUNE GENERATION, Ray embarked on a life of touring solo from the Midwest to the South where he found the inspiration for LAST GREAT WINTER. Influenced by the Midwest resonator guitar scene, Ray picked up a National steel guitar and eventually landed opening slots for some of his biggest influences, including Chris Smither.
Drawing from those performance experiences, Ray left behind the studio band and found his solo groove on LAST GREAT WINTER. On the album, he weaves his stylistic diversity with unmatched simplicity using only a resonator guitar, his voice, and a stomping foot that blends seamlessly into each song. Jeff reveals with great clarity his unique style that he calls Zen Blues - a style marked by alternate guitar tunings and songs that unsuspectingly shift between thumb-thumping slide-guitar ballads to worldly folk-inspired jams.
Ray even throws in a few surprises, including a bluesy rendition of Bob Dylan's "Maggie's Farm" and a catchy version of Woody Guthrie's timeless anthem "This Land Is Your Land", one of the most surprising versions ever recorded. Originally a protest song, "This Land Is Your Land" eventually morphed into a childhood sing-along, stripped bare of it's most controversial verses. But Ray returns this song to its original purpose and gives it new life by altering the melody, changing the rhythm, accentuating the forgotten verses, and even altering the final lines to give new meaning.
Jeff Ray continues to gain recognition as an emerging influence in the acoustic roots music scene.

Last Great Winter

Jay Howie - Live

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 39:09
Size: 89.6 MB
Released: 2009
Styles: Acoustic blues
Art: Front

1. Killing Floor (7:00)
2. Alberta/Cry (9:35)
3. Crossroads (4:57)
4. Hold On I'm Coming (4:39)
5. All Along The Watchtower (8:33)
6. Hoochie Coochie Man (4:24)

With Jay’s song writing and arranging abilities well beyond his years, he has the unique ability to take even the most disinterested listener on a journey through what he calls, “the wild lands” of the blues.
Singing about love, loss and life you can feel every inch of his heart and soul going into every song he performs. This makes for an extremely emotional and heartfelt performance.

Live

Kunio Kishida - Still In Time

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 28:23
Size: 66.0 MB
Released: 2011
Styles: Delta blues
Art: Front

1. Still In Time (5:41)
2. You Are Free (3:42)
3. Nobody Cares About You (5:42)
4. Stay In My Arms (5:38)
5. He's Livin' In the Stomphouse (3:04)
6. Ohayo (4:34)

An intimate solo singer-songwiter playing original folk blues on Dobro.

Still In Time

James Mathus & His Knockdown Society - Play Songs For Rosetta

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 43:03
Size: 98.6 MB
Released: 1997
Styles: Delta blues
Art: Front

1. I Got Mine (2:35)
2. Keep Your Hands Off (2:43)
3. Diggin' My Potatoes (2:47)
4. Jesus Is A Dying Bed Maker (2:53)
5. Blues For Blind Melon (2:36)
6. Mississippi Moan (3:01)
7. Hey, Hey (1:52)
8. Turkey Buzzard In A Pork Pie Hat (4:07)
9. Don't Make Me Wait (3:19)
10. Who'll Sop My Gravy (3:36)
11. Goin' Down The Road (3:16)
12. Memphis Bound (4:13)
13. She's All Right (2:11)
14. Some Of These Days (3:48)

Mathus, one of the masterminds behind the Squirrel Nut Zippers, here cuts it Clarksdale style for the sake of bluesman Charlie Patton's daughter, Rosetta. Not surprisingly, Rosetta doesn't see a dime from the sale of Patton's music, and Mathus saw an opportunity to give back. Give back to the music? Well, yes, but also to Rosetta herself, who helped raise Mathus from knee-pants. And the result is a righteous paella of roots music: rattling Delta style, jug band and parlor jazz with Dixieland and country-blues to boot. It's all so fresh and lively you may wonder how you lived your life without it. Dig the winking ragtime cover of Leadbelly's "Keep Your Hand's Off Her" or the country scrawl of Mathus' "Turkey Buzzard in a Pork Pie Hat." ~Tim Sheridan

Play Songs For Rosetta

Jake Leg Stompers - Hot Feet

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 66:47
Size: 156.8 MB
Released: 2007
Styles: Folk, Jug band
Art: Front

1. Big Bad Bill (2:45)
2. Cow Cow Stomp (4:00)
3. Tain't No Sin (2:58)
4. Limehouse Blues (3:17)
5. Alabama Jubilee (3:28)
6. Georgia Crawl (3:40)
7. Cuckoo (2:43)
8. Hard Travelin' (3:17)
9. Dallas Rag (4:00)
10. Miss The Mississippi (3:23)
11. Viola Lee Blues (3:04)
12. Run Mountain (3:33)
13. Cocaine Blues (3:54)
14. Sugar In My Bowl (3:27)
15. Sweet To Mama (3:48)
16. Sippin' On Jake (3:19)
17. Mobile Line (12:02)

Based in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, the Jake Leg Stompers offer tangy tastes of chicken-fried, pre-war, hokum-billy jug music to gourmet audiences throughout the greater Nashville, Middle Tennessee region. Acclaimed for their spirited, eclectic, and wildly unpredictable street performances, the Stompers are equally at home playing for dozens in night clubs or hundreds on festival stages.

Brandon Armstrong (string bass, trombone, tuba, jug, balaphone, mandolin, banjo, percussion, vocals)
Ron Bombardi (fiddle, guitars, mandolin, tinwhistles, accordian, jews harp, percussion, autoharp, vocals)
Bill Steber (vocals, guitars, banjo, ukelele, banjo-uke, harmonica, saw, mandolin, dujo, diddly-bow, autoharp)
Charlee Tidrick (vocals, fiddle, mandolin, washboard, percussion)
Sam Rorex (drums, percussion, guitar)

Hot Feet

Friday, December 21, 2018

Eddie C. Campbell - King Of The Jungle

Year: 1977/1996
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:56
Size: 104,2 MB
Styles: Electric blues, Chicago blues
Scans: Full

1. Santa's Messin' With The Kid (3:24)
2. Still A Fool (4:58)
3. Cheaper To Keep Her (3:02)
4. Poison Ivy (3:21)
5. The Red Rooster (4:17)
6. Smokin' Potatoes (3:06)
7. King Of The Jungle (4:01)
8. She's Nineteen Years Old (4:51)
9. Look Whatcha Done (2:42)
10. We Both Must Cry (4:40)
11. Weary Blues (3:54)
12. Blues On The Highway (2:35)

Flamboyant West Side-styled guitarist's debut album, first issued on the short-lived Mr. Blues logo, remains his best, with his slashing guitarist and lowdown vocals beautifully presented on covers of material by Magic Sam, Muddy Waters, Percy Mayfield, Willie Mabon, and his own Yuletide perennial "Santa's Messin' with the Kid." Great band, too: harpist Carey Bell, pianist Lafayette Leake, bassist Bob Stroger, and drummer Clifton James. /Bill Dahl, AllMusic

King Of The Jungle mc
King Of The Jungle zippy

Holland K. Smith Band - Enough Is Enough

Year: 2004
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:35
Size: 103,0 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Front

1. Mean Ol' Lies (3:34)
2. Trouble (4:42)
3. Good Mind To Wander (4:15)
4. Mess Around (2:32)
5. No More Doggin' (3:25)
6. That's What You Do To Me (3:46)
7. Come Back Baby (4:42)
8. As Long As I Live (3:53)
9. Enough Is Enough (3:34)
10. Walkin' With My Baby (3:10)
11. Trainyard Blues (3:38)
12. Cookin' With Gas (3:17)

Holland K. Smith is a veteran Texas bluesman and associate of U.P. Wilson. He released his debut album Jungle Jane in 1997.

Personnel: Holland K. Smith (guitars, vocals); Jim Milan (bass); Phillip Law (drums); Brian "Hash Brown" Calway (harmonica); Danny Ross (piano, organ); Mark "Kaz" Kazanoff (horns).

Enough Is Enough mc
Enough Is Enough zippy

BJ Hegen Blues Band - Lonesome Road

Year: 2002
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:03
Size: 138,6 MB
Styles: Electric blues, harmonica blues
Scans: Front, tray

1. My Heart's Crying (2:59)
2. You Know Blues (3:48)
3. The Lonesome Road (6:04)
4. Cracks On The Ceiling (4:25)
5. Tough Times (3:45)
6. Hard Luck And Trouble (3:12)
7. Backdoor Friend (6:52)
8. Shake It Up And Go (2:40)
9. Show That Poor Dog A Bone (2:59)
10. All Night Long (1:43)
11. Driftin' Blues (5:25)
12. The Road Is Rough (3:25)
13. I Got In My Gin (3:17)
14. Sometimes I Cry (3:30)
15. I Think I Heard (2:50)
16. New Automobile Blues (3:02)

(Haven't found any proper info for this album.)

Lonesome Road mc
Lonesome Road zippy

William Howse & Jack Pearson - S/T


File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 49:42
Size: 115.8 MB
Released: 1999
Styles: Acoustic blues
Art: Front

1. I Can't Stop Tumblin' (3:28)
2. Blackbird (4:34)
3. I Feel All Right (3:56)
4. Minkslide Blues (3:43)
5. Mr. Engineer (5:14)
6. My Dog Don't Bark (4:25)
7. Every Time It Rains (4:43)
8. Feel Like A Stranger Here (3:52)
9. Turn To Blue (3:36)
10. Jb Blues (3:50)
11. Waiting On Your Love (4:03)
12. It Won't Change A Thing (4:12)

William Howse & Jack Pearson is a 1999 Candlefly release showcasing the very special talents of two extraordinary musicians who have been playing together for more than 20 years. Jack Pearson paired up with longtime friend, William Howse, to create this authentic acoustic blues collection. William is featured on the CD on harmonica and vocals. Jack provides vocals on two songs on the disc, but for the most part plays fingerstyle guitar with lots of slide in open and standard tunings. William's harmonica playing is in the tradition of John Lee Williamson, Big Walter and Deford Bailey. And his singing is reminiscent of Muddy Waters. William is one of the few true bluesmen around today. He's played with such artists as Lonnie Mack and Tinsley Ellis. He gave a special performance at the dedication ceremony of the Tennessee Historical Marker commemorating harmonica player Deford Bailey, the first black musician to appear at the Grand Ole Opry. And William's playing was featured on the soundtrack for the TNN production of "The Life and Times of Willie Nelson." Jack is probably best known for his blues/rock lead and slide guitar playing with The Allman Brothers Band from 1997 to 1999. But on this CD, he plays acoustic and resonator guitars. He fills the disc with solid, swinging rhythm and blistering slide using a hambone. Through the years, the acoustic duo has shared the bill of festivals and theatres with performers such as The Fairfield Four, Johnny Shines, Yank Rachell, The Nashville Bluegrass Band and Willie Eason. They've also played for young children and teens at many schools in the South. A memorable performance for them took place at the dedication ceremony of the Tennessee Historical Marker commemorating blues harmonica legend, John Lee "Sonny Boy" Williamson.

William Howse & Jack Pearson

Pedro Arevalo - And Friends Too

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 50:44
Size: 119,4 MB
Released: 2009
Styles: Electro/Acoustic Blues, Folk
Art: Front

1. Mi Guajirita (4:05)
2. Oh Lord What Have I Done (4:23)
3. My Baby's Gone (4:12)
4. Country Blues (3:05)
5. Keep On Rollin' On (4:10)
6. To The Sky (3:02)
7. Descarga Arevalo (3:20)
8. Long Road Ahead (3:42)
9. My Friend (5:24)
10. Christy Leigh (2:18)
11. Since I Found You (3:56)
12. El Gitano Errante (3:43)
13. Things 'bout Comin' My Way (4:26)
14. El Gato Loco (0:51)

Growing up in Cincinnati in a musical family allowed Pedro many opportunities to experiment with a number of different instruments. At 18 years old, Pedro was doing session work and production in styles as diverse as jazz, funk, reggae and hip-hop.
In 1996, the 20 year old multi-instrumentalist received a performance scholarship to the acclaimed Berklee College of Music. Between the years of 1997 & 2001, Pedro completed his musical studies in Boston, MA, while performing with two popular West African band leaders, Djeli Balla Tounkara and master drummer Sidi “Joh” Camara.
With these well renowned musicians, Pedro played throughout New England and traveled to Mali, West Africa, to perform and study Mande and Bambara music. Upon his return to the states, Pedro ventured south to Florida to join the gypsy fusion group, The Lotus Fire. The summer of 2001 found Pedro touring Europe to support the release of the group’s album, “Dance of the Wicked”.
Pedro’s next endeavor, The Vine Street Rumba Band, brought him together with internationally credited drummer, Paul Cartwright, and the great band leader, Keith Greene, who for three decades was conductor, arranger, and lead trumpeter of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus. In 2003, Pedro produced the group’s only album, “Rumba Florida”.
Amidst a steady schedule of performing and recording in Florida, Pedro spent time honing his craft and working with many instruments including a variety of National Reso-Phonic guitars, Contrabass, the Puerto Rican Cuatro, and of course, electric bass and slide guitars. Pedro incorporates many of these instruments in such musical styles as Folk, Ragtime, Jazz, Delta Blues, Country, Rock 'n' Roll as well as the Latin and Caribbean influences that come together to make what Pedro refers to as "Siesta Creole".
During this time Pedro caught the ear of Rock N Roll Hall of Fame member and Grammy winning veteran, Dickey Betts, founding member of the The Allman Brothers Band. Betts soon asked Pedro to play bass for his band, Great Southern. Pedro has filmed a DVD entitled “Back Where It All Begins” with Betts and Great Southern, at The Rock N Roll Hall of Fame, appeared on The Carson Daily Show, released a few live CD's and DVD's as well as touring internationally with Dickey Betts & Great Southern and Devon Allman's Honeytribe (on slide guitar), following the 2007 release of Devon's "Torch" LP featuring Arevalo on several songs.
While home on breaks Pedro recorded his (2006) solo album entitled, “Pedro Arevalo & Friends.” The follow up (2009) "& Friends Too" is currently underway for an early March release. These albums features guest appearances by Dickey Betts & Great Southern, T.C. Carr, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's own Jimmy Fadden, Jack Kirkner, Thorson Moore, Berry Oakley, Jr. and many others. The albums are an interesting mix of Blues, Country, and Rock n Roll. With plans to tour in support of the new records, Pedro continues to write, perform, and produce his "Psycho-Tropic" music...

And Friends Too

J.P. Reali - Bottle Of Blooze

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 39:23
Size: 91,1 MB
Released: 2010
Styles: Piedmont Blues, Delta Blues
Art: Front

1. Crazy 'bout A Barbeque (3:17)
2. I Can't Love You Like Your Mama (3:18)
3. The Wiggle Tight Rag (2:58)
4. Ode To A Caboose (3:30)
5. The Powder Blues (4:16)
6. Workin' In A Minefield Blues (4:11)
7. Struck By Lightnin' (4:57)
8. Blind Whiskey's Blues (2:55)
9. She Likes To Ride (2:49)
10. The Presidential Blues (3:18)
11. Sinner Man (3:50)

A veteran of the DC music scene for almost thirty years, J.P. Reali has played in numerous venues throughout the city. From his days as the lead guitar player in the psychedelic blues band The Next Step in the 1980’s, to his days as half of the acoustic blues/roots duo The Reali Brothers in the 1990’s, through his current solo career, J.P.’s playing has electrified listeners. He has performed extensively throughout the east coast, and spent 16 weeks in residence in Japan thrilling listeners with his musical prowess.
In April 2007, J.P. released his long-awaited solo acoustic blues debut recording “Cold Steel Blues.” The album, which features nine originals and six cover songs by such blues greats as Robert Johnson and Reverend Gary Davis, showcases J.P.’s proficiency in both the delta and piedmont styles. The independent recording was well received by local “guide to fun” magazine On Tap.
While J.P.’s repertoire is steeped in the traditions of Piedmont and Delta blues and includes such classics songs as Statesboro Blues, and Walkin’ Blues, it also showcases his original blues compositions in a conscious effort to keep these traditional styles alive in the 21st century.
In July of 2010 J.P. released his second self-produced album, “Bottle of Blooze." This album features nine original songs by J.P. and two by his brother Chris Reali. On Tap said of “Bottle of Blooze”– “Reali’s acoustic guitar picking is crystal clear and at times mesmerizing. In a city where real blues can be hard to find Reali is a solid purveyor of the form.”
J.P. won the D.C. Blues Society’s Battle of the Bands in the solo category in 2010 and 2011, and went on to compete in The International Blues Challenge in Memphis Tennessee both years. He also received Washington Area Music Association nominations for Best Blues Instrumentalist, and Best Traditional Blues Recording for 2010 and 2011.
He is currently performing at a variety of venues and events in and around the D.C Metro region, and has an exciting new 2012 release of original music “The Road To Mississippi” available now.
He is a member of The D.C. Blues Society, The Piedmont Blues Preservation Society, The Washington Area Music Association, and The Baltimore Blues Society.

Bottle Of Blooze

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Marcio Maresia - Mr. Powerharp / Blues Brasileiro

Album: Mr. Powerharp
Size: 123,6 MB
Time: 52:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Electric Blues, Harmonica Blues
Art: Front

01. Here I Am (4:00)
02. When You Shake That Way (3:58)
03. Blue Groove (3:38)
04. Can't You See (4:18)
05. Mr. Powerharp (3:22)
06. The Spell (5:26)
07. We Can Make It! (6:21)
08. Mr. Slick (Feat. J.J. Jackson) (3:38)
09. Things Are Not What They Used To Be (Feat. J.J. Jackson) (5:04)
10. Bullet Train (3:28)
11. To Love You And Have The Blues (6:35)
12. How Sweet Life Can Be (2:51)

The renowned harmonica player Marcio Maresia chose to celebrate his 25 year career, to honor the great icon of the harmonica, the American Little Walter, who is one of the most influential blues artists.

Márcio Maresia honors the harmonica player with a CD recorded live at the Sensorial Lab studio in Jundiaí, accompanied by a super band and co produced by guitarist and singer Netto Rockfeller.

With 25 years of road the musician Marcio Maresia brings in his baggage experience, technique and musicality. Beginning his career in the Blues stood out for the modern technique of playing harmonica. From his 20 years of experience, he played 15 with the great American singer JJJackson, with whom he recorded 2 CDs. He is a teacher and owner of one of the best music schools in Jundiaí, his native city, having trained many players who now act professionally on the stage Brazilian musical like, Big Chico, Marcelo Naves, Fernando Xavier and others.

Mr. Powerharp

Album: Blues Brasileiro
Size: 87,9 MB
Time: 37:20
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Electric Blues, Harmonica Blues
Art: Front

01. A Rede (5:49)
02. Na Beira Do Mar (3:17)
03. 100% (3:59)
04. O Que E O Blues (3:17)
05. J.H. (1:45)
06. Um Dia Me Paga (3:57)
07. Lado A Lado (4:22)
08. Mapa Da Mina (3:32)
09. Tradicional Brasileiro (2:52)
10. O Vento (4:24)

Blues Brasileiro

Henry Townsend - 'Mule' (Expanded Edition)

Size: 179,2 MB
Time: 76:56
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1980
Styles: Piano Blues
Art: Front

01. Bad Luck Dice (3:12)
02. Nothing But Trouble (3:51)
03. Things Have Changed (3:46)
04. The Old Man's Soul (3:58)
05. Tears Come Rollin' Down (2:39)
06. It's A Hard Road To Travel (3:09)
07. Talkin' Guitar Blues (3:27)
08. I'm Just An Ordinary Man (2:54)
09. Alley Strut (2:35)
10. Can't You See (4:23)
11. Dark Clouds Rising (4:48)
12. The Train Is At The Station (3:20)
13. Overstayed My Time (3:48)
14. The Other Night (Bonus Track) (4:27)
15. Broken Home Blues (Bonus Track) (4:00)
16. Going Back To My Baby (Bonus Track) (3:28)
17. Nice And Kind (Bonus Track) (3:55)
18. Goin' Back Down South (Bonus Track) (4:01)
19. Turned On And Off (Bonus Track) (4:20)
20. Look Over Yonder (Bonus Track) (2:25)
21. Since You've Come Back Home (Bonus Track) (4:20)

Legendary St. Louis country bluesman’s 1980 album remastered from original tapes with 8 previously unissued tracks.

Henry Jesse “Mule” Townsend made his first recordings for Columbia Records in 1929. His history incorporates much of the St. Louis blues story and provides insight into the development of the ensemble style of postwar Chicago blues. He was born in Shelby, Mississippi in 1909 and moved to St. Louis circa 1921 and began playing guitar a few years later under the tutelage of pioneer figures Dudlow Joe, Son Ryan, and Henry Spaulding. In 1931 he recorded for both Paramount Records and Victor/Bluebird, an association with the latter lasted until 1938. His vocal performances appeared credited to Henry Townsend, Jesse Townsend, and Henry Thomas, but it was in his role as accompanist that Henry reached his widest audience, appearing on dozens of Walter Davis, Big Joe Williams, Pinetop Sparks, Roosevelt Sykes, Sonny Boy Williamson, and Robert Nighthawk sides including classics like “Baby Please Don’t Go” (Big Joe Williams) and “Every Day I Have The Blues” (Pinetop Sparks).

Henry’s close association with Robert Nighthawk and Sonny Boy Williamson gave him an important role in the very beginnings of the Chicago ensemble style which Robert Nighthawk, Sonny Boy Williamson, and Big Joe Williams originated. After Henry’s discharge from the army in 1944, he moved to Chicago (following Nighthawk and Williamson) and found himself performing with Little Walter, Othum Brown, and Eddie Boyd. He returned to St. Louis in 1947 and renewed his long association with Walter Davis. They recorded for Bullet Records of Nashville in 1949 and Victor in 1952. In the ’60s he made an album for the Prestige Bluesville imprint and a mid-’70s album appeared on Adelphi.

“Mule” appeared in 1980 on the St. Louis Nighthawk Records label. The label was to turn its attention to reggae after 1980, but had started as a blues label in 1976 releasing a series of blues compilation albums leading up to “Mule.” From the original album: “The production of this record was undertaken with two goals in mind: to create, finally, an album worth of Henry Townsend’s unique genius, and thus secure for him the recognition that an artist of his stature and historical importance deserves. We at Nighthawk have become convinced that Henry is perhaps the greatest living country bluesman.”

'Mule'

Peter Karp - The American Blues

Size: 129,5 MB
Time: 55:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Treat Me Right (4:53)
02. Alabama Town (4:37)
03. Train O Mine (2:57)
04. The Turning Point (4:13)
05. The Nieztsche Lounge (3:45)
06. Nobody Really Knows (4:06)
07. Rolling On A Log (4:19)
08. That's How I Like It (4:01)
09. Her And My Blues (7:39)
10. I'm Not Giving Up (5:34)
11. The Arson's Match (Live) (5:20)
12. Y'all Be Lookin (Live) (3:57)

Karp is best known recently for his work on the Blind Pig label with Canadian guitarist, Juno Award winner and partner Sue Foley. Raised in south Alabama and New Jersey, his stylings embrace swamp, country and R&B in addition to the blues. Primarily a slide guitarist who’s influenced by Freddy King and Elmore James, he’d released the albums Roadshow and The Turning Point previously as a vehicle for his songs rather than stardom. But his work with Foley has reached the top of blues charts around the world.

The American Blues

Danny Adler - The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 1 to Vol. 6

Born in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1949, Danny Adler is firmly established among the finest blues guitarists of the rock & roll era, a solidly original stylist whose early exposure to the jazz and R&B scenes of his hometown was quick to explode into a thoroughly individual style. The string of albums he kicked off in the mid-'70s with his band Roogalator, and which continues through to 2012's multi-disc Archive series of retrospectives, remains a work of constant rediscovery, both for veteran fans and the new audience that has discovered him through the Internet.

In addition, Adler has played alongside some of rock's most storied names, including stints in Charlie Watts' Rocket 88 with Ian Stewart, Jack Bruce, and Alexis Korner, and the Deluxe Blues Band with Bob Brunning and Mickey Waller. He was a founding member of Dave Edmunds and Nick Lowe's Disco Brothers studio band in 1975, and many more.

Gigging around Ohio, Adler made his professional debut in Amos Milburn's band, a setup which broadened his musical exposure by placing him on-stage with legends Chuck Berry, Memphis Slim, Slim Harpo, Arthur Crudup, and T-Bone Walker, among others. Another early band, the Blues Doctors, can be heard on the first volume of the Archive series, and includes a number of the guitarist's earliest compositions. A stint in California in the late '60s was followed by relocation to New York City, where Adler was a member of Elephant's Memory, cutting the "Skyscraper Commando" single with them, but departing shortly before the band's union with John and Yoko.

Moving to Europe, Adler performed across the musical spectrum, swinging from Ginger Johnson's African Drummers to the Irish country circuit; studying jazz guitar in Paris and then forming the proto-glam band Smooth Loser with Jeff Pasternak, brother of the popular U.K. disc jockey Emperor Rosko. Smooth Loser recorded a handful of sessions (available now on volume three of the Archive series), including an excellent session at 10cc's Strawberry Studios. Despite the band's connections, however, no deal was forthcoming and Adler quit to form a new band, Roogalator, in 1973.

Several lineup changes later, Roogalator were being feted as the next big thing by the pre-punk U.K. press, touring with Dr. Feelgood and signing with the fledgling Stiff Records for 1976's legendary All Aboard single. Momentum was lost, however, when Stiff was forced to withdraw the single's picture sleeve over copyright issues, and when Roogalator resurfaced, the musical climate had changed dramatically. Bands that had once opened for Roogalator, the Sex Pistols and the Clash included, were the new media heroes, and while Roogalator rocked on, it was a very different band that cut their debut album.

Unlucky when the much-loved 45 "Love and the Single Girl" flopped, Roogalator broke up in 1979, Adler moved into session work at the same time as becoming a founding member of Rocket 88. The Deluxe Blues Band followed, and the two groups who were a constant presence on the U.K. club scene of the early to mid-'80s.

The Danny Adler Band swiftly joined them and a staggering discography followed, the four Deluxe Blues Band albums (A Streetcar Named De Luxe and Live at Half Moon Putney, both 1981; Urban DeLuxe in 1983; and Motorvating in 1988) being joined by no less than nine solo and band LPs, all released to critical acclaim in Europe throughout the '80s: Funky Afternoons (1979), Gusha Gusha Music (1980), Live (1982), an eponymous set (1983), Hubcap Heaven (1986), Hometowns and High Iron (1987), Night Shift (1987), Mackinaw City (1989), and Homestretch (1990). In addition, Adler also pulled off one of the great blues hoaxes of the decade, with the "discovery" of Otis "Elevator" Gilmore in 1986 -- an unknown legend of the blues whose true identity, Adler himself, eluded many otherwise impeccable scholars.

Adler returned to the U.S. in the early '90s, fading from invisibility somewhat, but remaining a breathtaking performer on the occasions when he did resurface; the live album Jazzin at RVGs, from 1993, is a dynamic performance, and in 1999, Adler returned to action with the Mother's Day CD. Boat Diddley followed, while Adler has also been active remastering both his back catalog and a voluminous archive for the much-acclaimed Archive series. He also engineered a 2011 Roogalator live reunion in the U.K., while 2012 brought the single "Political Dancing." ~by Dave Thompson

Album: The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 1: The Blues Doctors 1963, 1966, 1967
Size: 116,4 MB
Time: 49:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues, Rock, R&B
Art: Front

01. Shotgun (3:13)
02. Whoa Baby (4:21)
03. Bottleneck Blues (3:34)
04. Banana On A Tree (6:06)
05. You Say (2:00)
06. Promised Land (2:50)
07. Return My Love (2:22)
08. Blue Water (3:15)
09. You Just Don't Know Your Own Strength (2:08)
10. Double Trouble (2:50)
11. Sugar Mama (2:22)
12. Cool Night (2:22)
13. Return My Love (2:16)
14. Whoa Baby (3:27)
15. Mackinaw Line (2:56)
16. Avondale Rock (1:50)
17. Summer Travel Boogie (1:56)

The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 1

Album: The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 2: Pre Roogalator 1971-72
Size: 157,5 MB
Time: 67:21
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues, Rock, R&B
Art: Front

01. Look Into The Sunset (3:11)
02. Sock It To My Pocket (4:25)
03. You Got Me Percolatin' (3:10)
04. Sweet Little Angel (4:12)
05. You Said It Would Be (2:43)
06. Walkin' In The Heat (4:12)
07. Rainbow Horseman (2:32)
08. Memories (4:12)
09. Smoke Without Fire (3:17)
10. You Need Someone Too (3:02)
11. Girl (2:42)
12. Mr. Fatback (6:58)
13. The Waiting Wind (2:50)
14. Too Tired (3:51)
15. Garden Of Wind (4:19)
16. Water (3:38)
17. Trying To Get Home (4:58)
18. Rockin' On The Railroad (2:59)

The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 2

Album: The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 3: Smooth Loser 40th 1971-72
Size: 130,0 MB
Time: 55:23
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues, Rock, R&B
Art: Front

01. You Said It Would Be (2:43)
02. Smoke Without Fire (3:16)
03. Lost Our Way (4:33)
04. Rainbow Horseman (2:30)
05. Mr. Fatback (6:58)
06. Lay Down Your Shame (1:50)
07. The Waiting Wind (2:50)
08. Trying To Get Home (4:58)
09. Same Wrong Train (3:23)
10. Darling (4:34)
11. Dead Tree Lane (4:06)
12. Water (3:36)
13. Garden Of Wind (4:19)
14. Beautiful Music (5:40)

The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 3

Album: The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 4: Birth Of Roogalator
Size: 103,2 MB
Time: 44:20
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues, Rock, R&B
Art: Front

01. Ride With The Roogalator (3:55)
02. Water (3:39)
03. Garden Of Wind (4:02)
04. Come Down To Earth (4:27)
05. (Get Me In Your) Magic Oooeee (3:39)
06. Stop! (3:07)
07. All Aboard!! (3:56)
08. Midnight Man (4:16)
09. The Waiting Wind (3:17)
10. Sweet Mama Kundalini (2:52)
11. You Need Someone Too (2:47)
12. Walkin' In The Heat (4:18)

The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 4

Album: The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 5: London To Hollywood 1974
Size: 134,7 MB
Time: 57:36
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues, Rock, R&B
Art: Front

01. Just Another Rag (3:12)
02. Wanting The Need (2:57)
03. Cincinnati Fatback (5:12)
04. Lifeboat (3:09)
05. Garden Of Wind (4:23)
06. Ain't Gonna Fight No Cure (2:40)
07. Walkin' In The Heat (4:47)
08. You Need Someone Too (2:48)
09. All Aboard!! (4:03)
10. Lifeboat Part II (3:55)
11. After Hours (5:19)
12. After Hours Part II (5:00)
13. Daylight Special (2:39)
14. Santa Monica Pico Blvd (3:51)
15. Mambo Azul (3:34)

The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 5

Album: Roogalator Collector's Items 1975-1977
Size: 139,5 MB
Time: 59:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues, Rock, R&B
Art: Front

01. All Aboard!! (1976) (5:43)
02. Cincinnati Fatback (Unissued 1975) (6:15)
03. Magic Oooeee (1976) (2:47)
04. All Aboard!! (Unissued Edit 1976) (3:31)
05. Water (1976) (2:57)
06. Ride With The Roogalator (Unissued 1975) (3:20)
07. Tasty 2 (Unissued 1975) (4:31)
08. City Is A Summer Festival Parts 1 & 2 (Unissued 1975) (4:46)
09. You Need Someone Too (Unissued 1975) (4:48)
10. All Aboard!! (Unissued 1975) (4:34)
11. Ride With The Roogalator (1976) (3:37)
12. Tasty 2 (1976) (4:42)
13. Get Ready For The Get Ready (1975) (4:10)
14. Sock It To My Pocket (1977) (3:50)

The Danny Adler Legacy Series Vol. 6

Henry Gray & The Cats - Blues Won't Let Me Take My Rest

Year: 1999
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:35
Size: 167,5 MB
Styles: Piano blues, Chicago blues
Scans: Full

1. Greyhound Blues (5:47)
2. Rock Me Baby (5:20)
3. Dust My Broom (3:30)
4. Sweet Home Chicago (4:10)
5. Out On The Road (4:08)
6. They Raided The Joint (3:17)
7. Ain't Goin' For That (4:10)
8. Worried Life Blues (5:37)
9. The Twist (5:02)
10. It Ain't No Use (5:25)
11. CC Rider (3:58)
12. Stagger Lee (4:50)
13. Fannie Mae (6:44)
14. Blues Won't Let Me Take My Rest (5:19)
15. Lord Have Mercy (5:12)

Louisiana-based pianist and singer Henry Gray has a career in American roots music that goes back more than 60 years. Gray was born January 19, 1925, in Kenner, LA, now a suburb of New Orleans. He grew up in Alsen, LA, a few miles north of Baton Rouge. Henry began playing piano as an eight-year-old, and he learned from the radio, recordings, and Mrs. White, an elderly woman in his neighborhood. As a youngster, he began playing piano and organ in the local church, and his family eventually got a piano for the house. While blues playing was not allowed in his parents' home, Henry was encouraged to play blues at Mrs. White's house, and by the time he was 16 he was asked to play at a club near the family home in Alsen. After he told his father, his father insisted on going with him, and once he saw that little Henry made decent money playing blues, he had no ethical or moral problems with his son playing blues piano.

After a stint in the Army in the South Pacific in World War II, Henry relocated to Chicago where he had relatives. After arriving in Chicago in 1946, Gray began hanging out in the bustling postwar club scene there, checking out the Windy City's best piano players. One day while he was sitting in at a club, he caught the attention of Big Maceo Merriweather, then a big fish in a small pond of Chicago piano players. Merriweather kindly took Gray under his wing and showed him around the city's blues clubs, and he got to know stars of the scene, including Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf. In 1956 Wolf asked Henry to join his band. Gray quickly accepted the offer and stayed on as Wolf's primary piano player until 1968. Gray also became a session player for other recordings made by Chess Records, and over the years he has recorded with many icons of the blues.

In addition to Wolf, Gray has recorded or performed with Robert Lockwood Jr., Billy Boy Arnold, Muddy Waters, Johnny Shines, Hubert Sumlin, Lazy Lester, Little Walter Jacobs, Otis Rush, Buddy Guy, James Cotton, Little Milton Campbell, Jimmy Rogers, Jimmy Reed, and Koko Taylor, among others. Although Howlin' Wolf did not pass away until 1976, Gray left Wolf's band in 1968, following the death of his father, and returned to Alsen to assist his mother with the family fish market business. Gray worked with the East Baton Rouge Parish School Board as a roofer for the next 15 years.

In the past 30 years, since he's been back in Louisiana, Gray has performed at nearly every New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival as well as other prestigious gatherings, including the Montreal Jazz Festival, the Chicago Blues Festival, and the San Francisco Blues Festival. In 1999 he was nominated for a Grammy for his playing on the Tribute to Howlin' Wolf album released by the Cleveland-based Telarc label, and in 1998 he was handpicked by Mick Jagger himself to play Jagger's 55th birthday soiree in Paris, along with a few other noted blues musicians. Having spent so much of his life as a sideman, Gray's recordings under his own name were few and far between, but that all began to change in the 1990s.

Gray's recordings include Lucky Man for Blind Pig in 1988; Louisiana Swamp Blues, Vol. 2 for Wolf Records in 1990; Watch Yourself in 2001 for Lucky Cat; Henry Gray Plays Chicago Blues for Hightone Records in 2001; and the Henry Gray and the Cats CD and DVD sets for the Lucky Cat label in 2004. /Biography by Richard Skelly, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Blues Won't Let Me Take My Rest mc
Blues Won't Let Me Take My Rest zippy

Climax Blues Band - Big Blues (The Songs Of Willie Dixon)

Year: 2003
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:29
Size: 114,7 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Front, sleeve, back

1. Little Red Rooster (4:58)
2. Spoonful (4:47)
3. The Seventh Son (4:47)
4. Third Degree (5:12)
5. I'm Ready (3:19)
6. Wang Dang Doodle (4:25)
7. My Babe (3:04)
8. I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man (4:07)
9. You Can't Judge A Book By Looking At The Cover (3:06)
10. Big Boss Man (4:40)
11. I Love The Life I Live (2:56)
12. That's My Baby (4:02)

Bring up the name of Willie Dixon outside the circle of blues fans, and the chances are that it will be greeted with little recognition. Start talking about the songs he has written, however, and you will find that anyone with the slightest interest in popular music over the past forty years will be familiar with them. The list includes 'Little Red Rooster', 'Hoochie Coochie Man', 'Spoonful', 'You Can't Judge a Book by Looking at the Cover', and that is just scratching the surface. Willie Dixon was born in Vicksburg, Mississippi on July 1st 1915, and arrived in Chicago in 1935. After a stint as a professional heavyweight boxer, he turned to music for a living, playing upright bass in a number of groups, and, incidentally, serving a ten-month prison sentence for resisting the WW2 draft, long before such protests became fashionable.

In 1951 he produced his first session for the Chess brothers' Aristocrat label. Over the next fifteen years or so Willie organised, produced, played on and wrote songs for recording sessions for a who's who of Chicago-based blues artists. Muddy Waters, Howling Wolf, Bo Diddley, Sonny Boy Williamson and Chuck Berry are just a few of the greats who worked with him. No one will ever be able to unravel the tangle of truth, legend and fiction that surrounds those years, but what is certain is that the records which came out of the Chess studios in that era influenced and inspired an entire generation of young musicians, particularly in the UK, and had a massive effect on the development of popular music. There are few artists whose work cuts across cultural, geographical, economic and generational divides.

In the blues field, Robert Johnson and Louis Jordan are two that spring to mind, but there can be no doubt that the name of Willie Dixon, who died in 1992, is right up there with the very, very best. It is in acknowledgement of the musical debt owed by our generation of British musicians that we dedicate this album to him and the great artists who worked with him during that golden era. /Colin Cooper, 2002

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Big Blues (The Songs Of Willie Dixon) mc
Big Blues (The Songs Of Willie Dixon) zippy

Monday, December 17, 2018

Freddy King - Hideaway

Size: 140,2 MB
Time: 60:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1992
Styles: Texas Blues
Art: Full

01. See See Bay (2:17)
02. You've Got To Love Her With A Feeling (3:15)
03. Have You Ever Loved A Woman (3:07)
04. Hideaway (2:37)
05. I Love The Woman (2:51)
06. Country Boy (2:30)
07. That's What You Think (2:36)
08. Lonesome Whistle Blues (2:51)
09. It's Too Bad Things Are Going So Tough (3:07)
10. I'm Tore Down (2:39)
11. Sen-Sa-Shun (2:53)
12. Side Tracked (3:09)
13. The Stumble (3:14)
14. San-Ho-Zay (2:39)
15. Christmas Tears (2:48)
16. In The Open (3:08)
17. Takin' Care Of Business (2:47)
18. Driving Sideaways (2:49)
19. Someday After Awhile (You'll Be Sorry) (2:49)
20. (The Welfare) Turns It's Back On You (2:46)
21. Let Me Down Easy (3:02)

A compilation between 1956-1968

Hideaway

Nuno Mindelis - Live At The Suwalki Festival, Poland

Size: 141,5 MB
Time: 61:00
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. Meddley: Funky Mama, Don't Break Our Thing, Hugs (Live) (10:29)
02. Mona Ki Ngi Xica (Live) ( 6:14)
03. Texas Bound (Live) ( 5:05)
04. Meddley: They Call Me The Beast, A Ra (Incidental), Looking Good (Incidental) (Live) ( 8:53)
05. It's All About Love (Live) ( 7:26)
06. Meddley: Nbiri Nbiri, In Trouble, BB King Tribute (Live) (14:32)
07. Mas Que Nada No. 1 (Live) ( 1:23)
08. Mas Que Nada No. 2 (Live) ( 6:55)

Born in Cabinda (Angola, at the time a portuguese colony) on Aug. 7, 1957, Nuno Mindelis became a guitar enthusiast at the very young age of 5. By the age of 9 he began building and playing self-made guitars.

A primary influence at that time was Otis Redding and his great rhythm section, Booker T. & The MG’s, made up of Booker T., Steve Cropper, Donald “Duck” Dunn, and Al Jackson. Nuno continues to enjoy the work of these musicians to this day.

Because of a civil war, which made Nuno lose everything he had, he was forced to leave his country as an exiled at the age of seventeen. He joined an older cousin in Canada.

He remained there for about a year, jamming where possible and increasing his guitar knowledge. In 1976, following a year of separation from his family, he decided to rejoin them in their newfound home of Brazil.

Nothing eventful happened until 1990, when an independent recording he had made there began to receive airplay on local radio stations. In 1991 he was invited to record his debut solo album, “Blues & Derivados”, which received very positive reviews in Brazilian media.

He records his second solo album, “Long Distance Blues” for “Movieplay Records”, joined by Larry McCray and French harp player J.J. Milteau, considered as the best Harp Player in France and one of the most important in Europe. The album received rave reviews from Brazilian media. As part of his promotional tour for the album, Nuno was fortunate to gain a spot in a blues festival in Sao Paulo featuring Robert Cray, Otis Clay, Ronnie Earl, Lonnie Brooks, and Bo Diddley.

First known recognition by a major American music magazine. “Guitar Player Magazine” profiled Nuno in an issue. In the article, Jas Obrecht (the editor at the time) compared Nuno to Jimmy Page. (“think Jimmy Page I can’t quit you baby”). Further recognition came in their May, 1998 issue, as Nuno was selected as “Best Blues Guitarist” in the 30th Anniversary Guitar Player Magazine Competition
In 1995 Nuno was invited to play at Antone’s 20th Anniversary in Austin, Texas, opening for Guy Forsite, Junior Wells, and others. Clarence Gatemouth Brown and Storyville also performed at this event. The headlines of the Austin Blues newspaper warned of Nuno’s forthcoming visit as “The South American Beast is coming!”.
Later that year Nuno would record his album “Texas Bound”, featuring newly made friends Tommy Shannon & Chris Layton, Stevie Ray Vaughan’s rhythm section supreme, “Double Trouble”.With this album Nuno gained audiences in the entire world, from Brasil to the US and Europe. Texas Bound came to be the 12nd top seller in Benelux (Belgium, Netherlands and Luxemburg) sharing the shelfs with the world’s biggest blues names ,BB King, Robert Cray , Buddy Guy.

In 1999 Nuno released “Blues On The Outside”, again with double Trouble, and tours with this superb rhythm section to release the album. Again, rave reviews from the media.Blues on The Outside’s first track (The Grass is greener) was the top chart in all Internet blues radio stations according to Live 365 (24 hours radio monitoring). A canadian promoter and record company executive heard the record and invited Nuno for the 25th edition of the Montreal International Jazz Festival in 2001, followed by other presentations in Quebec , Ottawa . He was considered by the critic as the best blues guitar player of the festival and his presentation one of the best of the latest editions of the festival.
Nuno was once again invited in 2004 , after the release of his album Twelve Hours and again played Quebec and Ottawa and also the Montremblant Blues Festival, announced along with Keb Mo, Jimmy Vaughan and others.
The reviews on Twelve Hours were so many and so praising that we may just mention a reviewer’s question in one of them : “Is the new King of the blues a man based in Brazil?” (Andy Grieg,Realblues Magazine – Canada) .

In 2005 , Nuno did an album especially dedicated for Brazil. All the songs were sang in portuguese and Nuno officially showed his poetical skills for the first time, highlighting the songwriting and the fusion with other musical elements (rap,hip hop,even samba) rather than his usual guitar playing. The album received very good reviews from the main newspapers and magazines in Brazil and was considered one of year’s best album by prominent brazilian critic Pedro Alexandre Sanches.

In 2010, Nuno released Free Blues, an attempt to modernize the blues language,by fusing some blues and rock songs that had great influence in his music when still a Kid (from Muddy Waters’s All Your Love to Dave Mason’s feeling Alright ) with contemporary elements. Free Blues received good reviews from important newspapers and magazines. Carol Borrington, Blues Matters Magazine-UK wrote: “In this Cd you will find some of the best blues guitaring around” .

In 2013 – Invited to join the cast of great guitar player and producer Duke Robillard and Jesse Finkelstein’s label Duchess Blue / Shinning Stone Records , he records his next album to be released in 2013 in Lakewest studios / Rhode Island with production and participation of Duke in some tracks. Jesse Finkelstein is the founder and producer of Radio Blues International, that broadcasts from the US and reaches subscribed listeners in more than 120 countries.

Nuno is considered by the media and fans of Brazil as the best blues guitarist to ever come out of their country. Fans of British guitar legend Eric Clapton identify with graffiti once spray-painted on a London wall; “Clapton is God”. In Brazil the graffiti says “Mindelis – Brazil’s Guitar God!”.

Live At The Suwalki Festival

The Bluesmen - The Devil Is A Bluesman

Size: 94,3 MB
Time: 40:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Acoustic Blues
Art: Front

01. The Devil Is A Bluesman (3:59)
02. Watching The Lines (3:47)
03. Paymaster Blues (4:54)
04. Workin' On That (3:28)
05. Walk On (4:43)
06. Don't Pave That Gravel Road (4:23)
07. Trash Talkin' (4:20)
08. Bluesmen Boogie (2:32)
09. Bailbondsman Blues (4:32)
10. Seems I Had A Chance With You (3:25)

The Bluesmen met at a Blues Society jam in Denton, TX around 2007. Casey James was working with the premier Stevie Ray Vaughn cover band in Dallas, and Billy Langley was playing in a local bar band, teaching guitar lessons and finishing his music degree at the University of North Texas. Both knew that the blues was their passion, and a genuine musical friendship was born. The Bluesmen have played on the streets of Denton, Dallas, Carbondale, Helena, Clarksdale, Nashville, Memphis, and all points in between. They learned to play the blues in the way of the old masters that taught them, and hope to honor their predecessors through their own music. Casey’s 12-string guitar and Billy’s harmonica are a black cat bone, and a mojo too! In 2018, The Bluesmen won the Simply Texas Blues Festival competition in the solo/duo category and a spot in the International Blues Competition in Memphis. The Bluesmen would like to thank the gypsy woman, mojo hands, and John the Conqueror root for making it all possible!

The Devil Is A Bluesman

Memphis Slim - The International Playboy Of The Blues 1948-1960: From Chicago To London, All The Hits And More

Size: 177,3 MB
Time: 74:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Front

01. Messin' Around ( 2:50)
02. Midnight Jump ( 2:42)
03. Frisco Bay ( 2:49)
04. Blue And Lonesome ( 2:36)
05. Help Me Some ( 2:20)
06. Angel Child ( 2:51)
07. Nobody Loves Me ( 2:48)
08. The Girl I Love ( 2:43)
09. Mother Earth ( 2:42)
10. Really Got The Blues ( 2:38)
11. Train Is Comin' ( 2:44)
12. The Question ( 2:53)
13. No Mail Blues ( 2:43)
14. Gonna Need My Help Some Day ( 2:48)
15. The Comeback ( 2:43)
16. Steppin' Out ( 2:00)
17. My Gal Keeps Me Crying ( 2:38)
18. Slim's Blues ( 3:08)
19. The Comeback (Alternate Version) ( 2:18)
20. Wish Me Well ( 2:41)
21. Rockin' The Blues ( 2:08)
22. Fattenin' Frogs For Snakes ( 2:26)
23. I Feel So Good ( 3:24)
24. Blues In London, Pt. 1 & 2 (10:05)
25. Rockin' The House ( 2:52)

Embracing the white college market like so many of his contemporaries Memphis Slim stepping into the international market and became a very famous ambassador for the blues around the world. This 25 track set is littered with hits and classic songs including "Messin' Around", "Frisco Bay", "Blue And Lonesome", "Help Me Some", "Angel Child", "Mother Earth" and "The Comeback". Also featured here is "Nobody Loves Me" and although not a hit for Memphis, it went on to be recorded by Lowell Fulson and B.B. King as "Every Day I Have The Blues" eventually becoming a hit and a blues standard. This modest selection of titles from the vast recorded legacy of Memphis Slim presents a vivid picture of the career path he followed from the juke joints of the South to the sophisticated bars of Paris, France and is a must for blues fans.

The International Playboy Of The Blues 1948-1960

Randy Casey - I Got Lucky

Size: 119,4 MB
Time: 50:41
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. Bed Bug Blues (3:54)
02. I Got Lucky (3:17)
03. Six Feet of Rain (5:46)
04. Soo Line (3:41)
05. Little Weed (3:43)
06. Strange (3:30)
07. One Step Ahead (3:17)
08. That Train (3:19)
09. The Chaperone (3:27)
10. The New Old Landlord Blues (5:18)
11. Broken Arm Blues (3:48)
12. Racing Stripes (7:34)

Randy Casey's 8th album, t Got Lucky, was inspired by a guitar that Casey beat out Rick Neilsen of Cheap Trick to get. ln fact, Casey was getting it back; the 1969 Gibson Les Paul Custom was the first guitar Casey had ever played as a kid. When decades later, the neighbor who had let him play the guitar back then got an offer from Neilsen to buy it, he offered it to Casey first. Casey dug deep, and the neighbor let him make payments, but at last, his first love was his. immediately, songs began to flow from the guitar, Casey said. lt's that guitar that produces the swampy slide of "Bed Bug Blues," "Broken Arm Blues," and "That Train," the Stonesy rock of "One Step Ahead," and the moody overdrive of "Strange."

Casey is a consummate guitarist; as Shannon Curfman's first music director, he has played the largest of stages with the biggest of stars. He's also gotten his instrumental work placed on NPR's "AllThings Considered" and other national shows. I Got Lucky reveals Casey's other prodigious talents as well, including creative and clever songwriting that captures the essence of classic blues while contributing tasteful innoyations to the genre. The result is a collection of songs that is at once impressively eclectic and firmly rooted in tradition.

I Got Lucky

Edward Taylor - Lookin' For Trouble: A Tribute To Eddie Taylor

Year: 1998
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:04
Size: 122,6 MB
Styles: Electric blues, Chicago blues
Scans: Full

1. Goin' Upside Your Head (5:58)
2. Bad Boy (6:17)
3. Lookin' For Trouble (3:33)
4. Ain't Gonna Cry (4:37)
5. Down In Virginia (5:15)
6. Soul Brother (3:51)
7. I'm Gonna Miss You (3:30)
8. Big Town Playboy (6:03)
9. Dust My Broom (5:12)
10. Greyhound Blues (4:39)
11. Tell Me Mama (4:02)

This CD is the first CD ever by Eddie Taylor Jr and a tribute to his father Eddie Taylor! His brothers Larry and Tim are here, both on drums! All great Taylor hits are on this CD – from “Big Town Playboy” to “Bad Boy”.

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Lookin' For Trouble: A Tribute To Eddie Taylor mc
Lookin' For Trouble: A Tribute To Eddie Taylor zippy

Eddie Kirkland - Have Mercy

Year: 1988/1993
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:28
Size: 107,8 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Eddie's Calling You (4:09)
2. Young Man Young Woman Blues (5:15)
3. Tomorrow May Bring A Better Day (4:45)
4. Golden Sun (4:07)
5. Mary Lou (4:12)
6. Somewhere In Your Heart (4:13)
7. Crying Time (2:54)
8. I've Got A Secret (4:40)
9. I Hear Music (4:39)
10. Too Far Gone (3:42)
11. Love Light (3:48)

How many Jamaican-born bluesmen recorded with John Lee Hooker and toured with Otis Redding? It's a safe bet there was only one: Eddie Kirkland, who engaged in some astonishing on-stage acrobatics over the decades (like standing on his head while playing guitar on TV's Don Kirshner's Rock Concert). But you would never find any ersatz reggae grooves cluttering Kirkland's work. He was brought up around Dothan, Alabama before heading north to Detroit in 1943. There he hooked up with Hooker five years later, recording with him for several labels as well as under his own name for RPM in 1952, King in 1953, and Fortune in 1959.

Tru-Sound Records, a Prestige subsidiary, invited Kirkland to Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey in 1961-1962 to wax his first album, It's the Blues Man! The polished R&B band of saxophonist King Curtis intersected with Kirkland's intense vocals, raucous guitar, and harmonica throughout the exciting set. Exiting the Motor City for Macon, Georgia in 1962, Kirkland signed on with Otis Redding as a sideman and show opener not long thereafter. Redding introduced Kirkland to Stax/Volt co-owner Jim Stewart, who flipped over Eddie's primal dance workout "The Hawg." It was issued on Volt in 1963, billed to Eddie Kirk.

By the dawn of the '70s, Kirkland was recording for Pete Lowry's Trix label; he also waxed several CDs for Deluge in the '90s. Kirkland remained active into the 21st century, and was in Florida to perform at a show in the Gulf Coast community of Dunedin when he died from injuries sustained when the automobile he was driving collided with a Greyhound bus in Crystal River on February 27, 2011. Eddie Kirkland was 87 years old. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Have Mercy mc
Have Mercy zippy

Sunday, December 16, 2018

V.A. - Rags, Breakdowns, Stomps & Blues: Vintage Mandolin Music (1927-1946)

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 71:46
Size: 167.7 MB
Released: 2004
Styles: Traditional blues, Appalachian, Piedmont blues
Art: Front

1. Louie Bluie - State Street Rag (2:46)
2. Dallas String Band - Hokum Blues (3:25)
3. Phebel Wright - Lint Head Stomp (2:36)
4. Carolina Peanut Boys - You May Leave, But This Will Bring You Back (3:05)
5. The Blue Boys - Easy Winner (2:54)
6. John Estes - Milk Cow Blues (3:02)
7. John Estes - Watcha Doin' (3:03)
8. Dallas String Band - Dallas Rag (2:56)
9. Gid Tanner & His Skillet Lickers - Flop Eared Mule (2:57)
10. Arizona Dranes & Choir - I Shall Wear A Crown (3:26)
11. Mississippi Mud Steppers - Jackson Stomp (3:09)
12. Ishman Bracey - Brown Mama Blues (3:08)
13. The Two Poor Boys - Two White Horses In A Line (2:51)
14. Scottdale String Band - Carbolic Rag (3:16)
15. King David's Jug Band - Rising Sun Blues (3:09)
16. Johnson Boys - Prater Blues (3:11)
17. Carolina Peanut Boys - You Got Me Rollin' (2:31)
18. Nashville Washboard Band - Arkansas Traveller (2:08)
19. Nashville Washboard Band - Goin' Away To Make Me Lonesome (3:53)
20. Gid Tanner & His Skillet Lickers - Hawkins Rag (2:52)
21. Paul Warmack & His Gully Jumpers - The Little Red Caboose Behind The Train (2:55)
22. Al Miller & His Market Street Boys - Somebody's Been Using That Thing (2:47)
23. Arthur McClain & Joe Evans - Old Hen Cackle (2:43)
24. Blue Ridge Ramblers - Jug Rag (2:51)

This sprightly compilation from Document Records collects 24 vintage 78s recorded between 1927 and 1946 that feature the mandolin in a variety of settings, from blues to gospel, played by an assortment of jug, string, and hokum bands. There's a ton of energy here, and fans of the instrument will love this set, although the casual listener may find it a little repetitive.
Highlights include "State Street Rag" by the great Louie Bluie, a fluid version of "Lint Head Stomp" by Phebel Wright, the classic "Milk Cow Blues" (featuring the mandolin playing of Yank Rachell) by Sleepy John Estes, a jaunty "Jackson Stomp" by the Mississippi Mud Steppers, and the season-hopping "You Got Me Rollin'" by the Carolina Peanut Boys. Another gem is the wonderfully titled "Going Away to Make It Lonesome Here" by the Nashville Washboard Band, which features some particularly odd, cartoonish percussion. In essence Rags, Breakdowns, Stomps and Blues is a capsule history of early American mandolin playing, and the vitality and good humor of this collection should brighten any day. ~ Steve Leggett
Joe Evans & Arthur McClain, Arthur McClain (vocals, guitar, mandolin); Ishman Bracey, Sam Harris (vocals, guitar); Arizona Dranes (vocals, mandolin, piano); Coley Jones, Al Miller , Vol Stevens (vocals, mandolin); Sam Jones (vocals, pipe); Charlie "Bozo" Nickerson (vocals, harmonica); Marco Washington (vocals); Burt Hutcherson, Nap Hayes, Frank Dalton, Junior Morgan, Riley Puckett, Ted Bogan, Bo Carter, Charlie Burse (guitar); Roy Hardison, Gid Tanner (banjo); "Dude", Matthew Prater, James "Yank" Rachel, Charles Hurt, Paul Warmack, James Kelly, Louie Bluie, Phebel Wright (mandolin); Shelby David "Tex" Achinson (violin); Charley Arrington, Gordon Tanner (fiddle); Frank Melrose, Jab Jones (piano).

Rags, Breakdowns, Stomps & Blues: Vintage Mandolin Music (1927-1946)

V.A. - Blues In The Eisenhower Era

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 52:03
Size: 120.8 MB
Released: 2007/2012
Styles: Acoustic/electric blues
Art: Front

1. John Brim - Tough Times (3:07)
2. Ernest Lewis - West Coast Blues (2:54)
3. J.B. Lenoir - Fine Girls (2:34)
4. Little Papa Joe - Lookin' For My Baby (2:40)
5. Little Sammy Davis - 1958 Blues (2:18)
6. Johnny Lewis - Jealous Man (2:30)
7. Dusty Brown - Yes, She's Gone (2:39)
8. Nature Boy Brown - Blue Blues Boogie (2:57)
9. Baby Boy Warren - Santa Fe (2:27)
10. Willie Egan - Wow Wow (2:14)
11. Ernest Lewis - No More Lovin' (3:05)
12. Eddie Hope & The Mannish Boys - A Fool No More (2:21)
13. Little Willie Foster - Falling Rain Blues (2:40)
14. John Brim - Gary Stomp (2:48)
15. Albert King - (Be On Your) Merrry Merry Way (2:52)
16. Sunnyland Slim - Going Back To Memphis (2:56)
17. Baby Boy Warren - Mattie Mae (2:45)
18. Curtis Jones - Wrong Blues (3:12)
19. J.B. Lenoir - Eisenhower Blues (2:54)

A collection of raw blues from many classic artists that spans the era when Dwight D. Eisenhower was president. Includes J.B. Lenoir's famous diatribe "Eisenhower Blues" and John Brim's classic "Tough Times." All selections newly remastered.

Blues In The Eisenhower Era

J.B. Lenoir - Alabama Blues!

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 45:59
Size: 105.3 MB
Released: 1991
Styles: Chicsgo Blues
Art: front

1. Alabama Blues (3:14)
2. The Mojo Boogie (2:17)
3. God's Word - 3:41
4. The Whale Has Swallowed Me (2:26)
5. Move This Rope (3:35)
6. I Feel So Good (1:54)
7. Alabama March (2:54)
8. Talk To Your Daughter (2:44)
9. Mississippi Road (3:00)
10. Good Advice (2:44)
11. Vietnam (2:40)
12. Down In Mississippi (3:16*)
13. I Want to Go (1:40*)
14. If I Get Lucky (3:00*)
15. Born Dead (3:47*)
16. Feelin' Good (3:00*)

Newcomers to his considerable legacy could be forgiven for questioning J.B. Lenoir's gender upon first hearing his rocking waxings. Lenoir's exceptionally high-pitched vocal range is a fooler, but it only adds to the singular appeal of his music. His politically charged "Eisenhower Blues" allegedly caused all sorts of nasty repercussions upon its 1954 emergence on Al Benson's Parrot logo (it was quickly pulled off the shelves and replaced with Lenoir's less controversially titled "Tax Paying Blues").
J.B. (that was his entire legal handle) fell under the spell of Blind Lemon Jefferson as a wee lad, thanks to his guitar-wielding dad. Lightnin' Hopkins and Arthur Crudup were also cited as early influences. Lenoir spent time in New Orleans before arriving in Chicago in the late '40s. Boogie grooves were integral to Lenoir's infectious routine from the get-go, although his first single for Chess in 1951, "Korea Blues," was another slice of topical commentary. From late 1951 to 1953, he waxed several dates for Joe Brown's JOB logo in the company of pianist Sunnyland Slim, drummer Alfred Wallace, and on the romping "The Mojo," saxophonist J.T. Brown.
Lenoir waxed his most enduring piece, the infectious (and often-covered) "Mama Talk to Your Daughter," in 1954 for Al Benson's Parrot label. Lenoir's 1954-1955 Parrot output and 1955-1958 Checker catalog contained a raft of terrific performances, including a humorously defiant "Don't Touch My Head" (detailing his brand-new process hairdo) and "Natural Man." Lenoir's sound was unique: saxes (usually Alex Atkins and Ernest Cotton) wailed in unison behind Lenoir's boogie-driven rhythm guitar as drummer Al Galvin pounded out a rudimentary backbeat everywhere but where it customarily lays. Somehow, it all fit together.
Scattered singles for Shad in 1958 and Vee-Jay two years later kept Lenoir's name in the public eye. His music was growing substantially by the time he hooked up with USA Records in 1963 (witness the 45's billing: J.B. Lenoir & his African Hunch Rhythm). Even more unusual were the two acoustic albums he cut for German blues promoter Horst Lippmann in 1965 and 1966. Alabama Blues! and Down in Mississippi were done in Chicago under Willie Dixon's supervision, Lenoir now free to elaborate on whatever troubled his mind ("Alabama March," "Vietnam Blues," "Shot on James Meredith"). ~ AMG
Little did Lenoir know his time was quickly running out. By the time of his 1967 death, the guitarist had moved to downstate Champaign -- and that's where he died, probably as a delayed result of an auto accident he was involved in three weeks prior to his actual death.

Personnel:
J.B. Lenoir - vocals, guitar
Freddie Below - drums (2,4,6,8,12)
Willie Dixon - additional vocals (6)

Rec. March 5, 1965 in Chicago, IL.
* additional tracks from Down In Mississippi 1970. (L+R 42.012)

Alabama Blues!