Wednesday, July 31, 2024

J. Leino & The Blues Guys - From Now On...

Album: From Now On...
Size: 146,3 MB
Time: 63:23
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

1. Heap See (4:00)
2. It's Too Late, Baby (4:44)
3. Seems So Sad (5:04)
4. No More Homecoming (4:42)
5. That's What The Blues Is All About (5:15)
6. All Around The World (4:34)
7. Let Me Be The One (3:37)
8. Mr. Big D (5:22)
9. Do Me Right (5:06)
10. Now And Then (3:56)
11. Sensation, Communication Together (5:35)
12. No Need To Worry (4:50)
13. Sawdust (Bonus Track) (6:33)

Personnel: J. Leino (vocals, guitar); Jaako Heinonen (guitar, vocals); Jonne Kulluvaara (guitar); Kimmo Parviainen (keyborads); Jarmo Poutiainen (bass); Roope Rossi (drums).

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Big Al Jano's Blues Mafia Show - Lady That Digs The Blues

Album: Lady That Digs The Blues
Size: 116,1 MB
Time: 50:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2002
Styles: Blues/Rock & Roll mix
Art: Full

1. Problems Of My Own (3:50)
2. Lucille (3:03)
3. Good Enough Excuse (3:22)
4. Heart Of Stone (5:12)
5. Cherie, Cherie (3:58)
6. Give It Everything We Got (3:00)
7. Lady That Digs The Blues (3:31)
8. The Quest (8:26)
9. Cyberspace Sadie (4:08)
10. Chiquita Margaritta (4:02)
11. Shopping At The Supermarket (4:19)
12. The Hot Dog Man (3:17)

Big Al Jano's Blues Mafia Show is not your "typical" blues band, one with the obligatory strong front man or woman and an inhomogeneous assortment of back-up musicians. Quite the contrary, the boss of this well-dressed mob creates a "mini-blues revue" by giving each of his musical henchmen equal time at center stage. Big Al believes that this keeps the show moving and the ear candy stimulating in this day of audiovisual SoundBits.

This is one of the best blues acts around combining a mix of blues, R&B, 50's rock 'n' roll, doo-wop and swing. For an album that has the right mix of styles, humor and dance grooves, ya can't do much better than this slick disc.

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

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Kelly's Lot - The Blues Remind Me

Album: The Blues Remind Me
Size: 92,4 MB
Time: 39:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Blues/Roots/Soul mix
Art: Front

1. I Gotta Sing The Blues (Feat. Mo Beeks) (3:51)
2. Boogie Bus (3:11)
3. Mama's Blues (5:26)
4. It Ain't Always (2:55)
5. Man In The Moon (4:32)
6. Without You (3:36)
7. Just Tell Me The Truth (4:33)
8. Blessings (4:33)
9. Aces (4:15)
10. Love And Understanding (2:55)

Kelly’s Lot celebrates 30 years with a new release, "The Blues Remind Me". While this is only their third blues collection, they have included blues tracks on all previous sixteen albums and have played that genre since the first night they hit the stage at the Roxy in Hollywood.

With the strong rhythm section of Mike Sauer on drums and Matt McFadden on bass, the album has a solid foundation to present this all original selection of songs. Keyboard player Mo Beeks, adds hismagical touch playing on the majority of the tracks and singing a duet with Kelly Z. Longtime band member and sax player Bill Johnston arranged the horns as he had for the 2014 "Don’t Give My Blues Away".

Paulie Cerra on sax and Tomislav Goluban on harp, bring their "special guest" best while Didier Reyes, Chip Tingle and Aviva Maloney, who also played flute, round out the horn section with Bill and Paulie. Bandmates, Rob Zucca, Gary Bivona, and Frank Hinojosa added guitar, flugel horn, and harp to complete the recording of songs written by Zirbes and Robertson.

Guitarist and soundman Perry Robertson joined the band in 1996, started writing songs with Kelly and has recorded and produced all their music since. Adding mixer to his credits for the first time with the 2021 live album, "Where and When", Perry stayed at the mixing board for "The Blues Remind Me" and brought in Fred Paragano to do a Dolby Atmos mix. /Bluestown Music

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Albert Castiglia - Righteous Souls

Album: Righteous Souls
Size: 131,0 MB
Time: 56:28
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Blues/Blues-Rock
Art: Front


1. Centerline (Feat. Popa Chubby) (4:44)
2. Get Down To The Nitty Gritty (Feat. Alabama Mike) (4:10)
3. Mama, I Love You (Feat. Kevin Burt) (6:11)
4. You Can't Judge A Book By The Cover (Feat. Christone 'Kingfish' Ingram & Rayne Castiglia) (4:34)
5. All Our Past Times (Feat. Danielle Nicole & Joe Bonamassa) (5:40)
6. Till They Take It Away (Feat. Ally Venable) (4:28)
7. Come On In This House (Feat. Rick Estrin) (6:15)
8. You Were Wrong (Feat. Jimmy Carpenter) (4:35)
9. The Dollar Done Fell (Feat. Josh Smith) (6:00)
10. No Tears Left To Cry (Feat. Gary Hoey) (4:41)
11. What My Momma Told Me (Feat. Rick Estrin & Monster Mike Welch) (5:04)

While not as growly or as tall as the late English blues singer Long John Baldry, Albert (vocals/guitar) lays out his blues vocally & stylistically a little like Baldry with a ballsy tradition & peppers his efforts with stellar lead guitar throughout. There are 11 blessings on Righteous Souls produced by Kid Andersen (guitar/keys/vocals) & recorded in San Jose, CA. Several guest appearances sweeten the proceedings on this platter to bring out the flavors: Joe Bonamassa, Josh Smith, Christone Kingfish Ingram, Popa Chubby, Ally Venable, Monster Mike Welch & Gary Hoey (guitars), Rayne Castiglia, Danielle Nicole, Kevin Burt & Alabama Mike (vocals), Rick Estrin (harmonica) & Jimmy Carpenter (sax).

The album features some duets with well-engrained bluesy singers including a Brenda Patterson-Kathi McDonald-like Danielle Nicole on the Rick Danko-Eric Clapton piece “All Our Past Times.” On “You Can’t Judge a Book By the Cover,” an old Willie Dixon tune & was recorded by Baldry (produced by Rod Stewart & Elton John) a bit rawer Albert captures his more entertainingly with additional vocals by Christone Kingfish Ingram & Rayne Castiglia. This is a good set of blues. It has a mainstream appeal but don’t misunderstand me - I don’t mean like pop music commerciality. People who aren’t blues enthusiasts can & will be able to sink their teeth into this. It’s well played with an attractive swipe; the vocals are spiffy & dynamic as they are on Albert’s original tune “Till They Take It Away” with his Mason Ruffner (“Gypsy Blood”) type vocal & guitar attack.

There is some well-played basic stuff. The obligatory impressive takes that always draw out the hoots & howls. But I look for ingredients that have rendered the tunes spicier, the way a fruity flavor creeps up on the tongue after you swallow the wine. These songs are served without the gristle of the blues. Castiglia has the perfect vocal tone & blues continuity. He has the necessary timbre to ensure authenticity & a lived-in purity. With “You Were Wrong,” has a nice funky soul workout (a Bar-Kays “Soul Finger” exuberance & sax solo right out of “Wild Weekend,” by the early ’60s Rockin’ Rebels. There’s a little Paul Butterfield Blues Band tradition with the vocalizing & guitar machinery that spews smoke in every direction with harmonica bursts on “What My Momma Told Me” - invigorating, exciting. /John Apice, Americana Highways

Personnel: Albert Castiglia (vocals, guitar); Jerry Jemmott (bass); Jim Pugh (keys); Derrick D’Mar Martin (drums); Lisa Andersen (background vocals); Jon Otis (percussion); Jack Sanford (baritone sax); Eddie Tarczy (harpsichord).

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Fog Blues and Brass Band - Twelve Bar Prescription

Size: 141 MB
Time: 23:09
File: Flac
Released: 2023
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

1. Twelve Bar Prescription (3:28)
2. Too Deep (3:42)
3. Seven Year Itch (4:11)
4. Beaterland (5:00)
5. Hey Lucy (3:13)
6. Who's Gonna Suffer (3:31)

Following the success of their 2023 EP Twelve Bar Prescription, which garnered a Maple Blues Award nomination for Horn Player Of The Year for FOG Blues & Brass Band saxophonist Dan Jancar, the Kitchener, Ontario based band have released this self recorded/produced single tribute to Copperpenny. Originally written & recorded by Copperpenny, "Sittin’ On A Poor Man’s Throne" was released in 1973. In 1977, Bobby “Blue’ Bland (seven time Grammy nominee and Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee) released his own version. Fast forward to 2024, FOG Blues & Brass Band (with the blessing and encouragement of original writers Bill Mononen, Ron Hiller and Rich Wamil) release their version simply called "Poor Man’s Throne" Bobby Becker (FOG Keyboardist) and Bill Mononen (Copperpenny) have been friends since the early 70’s. This friendship eventually led to a song writing collaboration with FOG and Mononen. In fact, the collaboration brought forth the title track on FOG’s 2018 debut album Into The Fog. Bill also co wrote "Automatic Blues" the first track on the 2018 release. “Recording and releasing ‘Poor Man’s Throne’ is in many ways us saying thank you to Bill, and of course paying tribute to Copperpenny", says Jancar. “Poor Man’s Throne has been a staple in our live shows since the early days of FOG Blues & Brass Band. Friendship and collaboration are not the only connections Copperpenny and FOG Blues & Brass Band have. They share roots in Kitchener Ontario, where both bands were formed and cultivated followings. Copperpenny in 1968, FOG Blues & Brass Band in 2016. Nearly 50 years passing between the two bands. Yet, the love of creating music binds them. Music will always find a way!

Twelve Bar Prescription FLAC

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Albert Macon & Robert Thomas - Blues And Boogie From Alabama

Size: 250 MB
Time: 44:58
File: Flac
Released: 1981
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

1. Flat Foot Floogie (3:59)
2. Stoptime (1:10)
3. Someday Baby (3:28)
4. Frisco (4:14)
5. My Baby Don't Wear No Drawers (1:39)
6. She Wanna Do The Boogie Woogie (4:34)
7. Cat Man Blues (3:54)
8. 16-20 (3:35)
9. Jump Little Children (3:45)
10. Pearline (2:30)
11. Jody Man (3:45)
12. Don't Nothing Hurt Me But My Back And Side (2:43)
13. I Can Lay (1:28)
14. Got To Move (4:07)

The untimely death of blues guitarist Albert Macon last month surprised and saddened Alabama blues fans, many of whom were looking forward to annual performances by Macon and musical partner Robert Thomas at the Alabama Folklife Festival in Montgomery and City Stages music festival in Birmingham. Friends report that Macon's death followed complications from a shooting injury received while he was cleaning his gun. After being treated by a doctor for the gunshot wound in his leg, he returned home and appeared to be mending well. His condition took a rapid turn for the worse, however, and he was admitted to the East Alabama Medical Center in Opelika where he died May 12 of kidney failure. Macon, born in 1920 in Society Hill, played a type of music he called "boogie and blues," which he learned from his father, Buster Macon, at house parties and frolics in the rural Macon County community. They played old-time, country blues tunes, such as "John Henry," and "Staggerlee," in a rousing style intended for dancing. In a 1991 interview with music researcher Joyce Cauthen, Macon described set dances held in neighbors' homes where his father played guitar and Robert Thomas' father called the figures that guided the couples on the dance floor. He also described another type of dance involving rhythmic foot shuffling and tapping, known as buckdancing. Macon, who was an excellent buckdancer himself, recalled the competitive nature of the scene. "They'd be singing what I'd be playing. Like 'Sixteen-Twenty' and 'Mean Old Frisco.' And then all the ladies would stand back and the men would come around and do the dance and see which one do the best dancing. He'd get out there and do the buck dance and other'n get out there and do another kind of dance and then another'n come in and see which one beat. And they had a little pot they give him, which one do the best dancing. They had the hat around, they'd give him a tip." Albert Macon began teaching Robert Thomas to play blues guitar when Thomas, who was nine years younger than Macon, was about 15 years old. For the past 40 years the two men had been playing music together at fish fries, parties and festivals in the greater Auburn, Tuskegee, and Columbus, Georgia area. The two men also received national and international attention, playing such venues as the Knoxville World's Fair and the American Blues Festival in the Netherlands and the WDR Blues Festival in Bonn, Germany. Macon and Thomas recorded Blues and Boogie from Alabama, an album on the Dutch Swingmaster label, and are also featured on the recording In Celebration of a Legacy: Traditional Music of the Chattahoochee River Valley, produced by the Columbus Museum of Art. Albert Macon defies the stereotype of the itinerant blues musician. He lived his entire life and raised his large family Society Hill, Alabama. He drove a school bus for 40 years in Tuskegee, where the town's leading citizens, including school principals, teachers, police officers and even the mayor, he said, were once students who rode his bus. He was one of the very few country blues musicians left in Alabama today who actually lived and learned his music in the era, setting and social conditions that produced this powerful, African-American musical tradition. Fortunately before his death, he was beginning to receive recognition for the cultural treasure that he was. Let us hope his legacy continues.

Albert Macon & Robert Thomas - Blues And Boogie From Alabama (Swingmaster 2105) FLAC

Monday, July 29, 2024

Steve Lucky & The Rhumba Bums - Come Out Swingin'!

Album: Come Out Swingin'!
Size: 112,7 MB
Time: 48:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1998
Styles: Jump Blues/Swing
Art: Full

1. Jumptown (4:38)
2. Bye Bye Baby (2:58)
3. Rumpus Room Honeymoon (2:53)
4. Daddy-O (4:19)
5. Wall To Wall Sax (3:10)
6. Where's My Gravy (2:59)
7. Down Boy (3:57)
8. You've Got What It Takes (3:23)
9. Jump Back (3:23)
10. Ain't Gonna Quit Ya (4:03)
11. Do The Pup (4:08)
12. Play It Cool (5:21)
13. Hoopty-Do (3:12)

Pianist Steve Lucky and singer/guitarist Carmen Getit (Patsy Smith) are the stars of the Rhumba Bums, a hard-swinging band from San Francisco that specializes in late-1940s jump jazz and blues. The vocal interplay between Lucky and Getit (whose fine guitar playing is influenced by T-Bone Walker) is humorous and colorful. Their exciting disc has no slow moments, with many fine solos from Lucky, Getit, tenors Peter Cornell and Rob Sudduth, and occasional spots for tenors Jules Broussard, Sean Hiemstra, and Scott Patterson. The highlights include Lucky's "Jumptown", T-Bone Walker's "Bye Bye Baby", "Rumpus Room Honeymoon," "Wall to Wall Sax", "Down Boy", and "Hoppty-Do". One of the best retro swing sets of the 1990s. /Scott Yanow, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

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The Yardbirds - Shapes Of Things (4 CD)

Album: Shapes Of Things
Size: 149,0+138,4+129,3+145,3 MB
Time: 64:31+59:50+55:53+62:41
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1991
Styles: Blues/R&B/Rock
Art: Full

CD 1:
1. Smokestack Lightning (6:50)
2. Let It Rock (2:18)
3. Honey In Your Hips (2:25)
4. I Wish You Would (5:54)
5. You Can't Judge A Book By The Cover (2:58)
6. Who Do You Love (4:11)
7. Bye Bye Bird (3:34)
8. Mr Downchild (4:00)
9. The River Rhine (5:23)
10. 23 Hours Too Long (5:08)
11. A Lost Care (2:13)
12. Pontiac Blues (3:49)
13. Take It Easy Baby (5:42)
14. Out On The Water Coast (3:08)
15. I Don't Care No More (3:48)
16. Western Arizona (3:04)

CD 2:
1. I'm Talkin' About You (1:58)
2. Boom Boom (2:26)
3. Honey In Your Hips (2:19)
4. Too Much Monkey Business (3:49)
5. Got Love If You Want It (2:43)
6. Smokestack Lightning (5:33)
7. Good Morning Little Schoolgirl (2:50)
8. She's So Respectable (5:48)
9. Five Long Years (5:23)
10. Pretty Girl (3:34)
11. Louise (3:48)
12. I'm A Man (4:47)
13. Here 'Tis (5:23)
14. For Your Love (2:30)
15. I'm Not Talking (2:33)
16. I Ain't Got You (2:01)
17. Putty (In Your Hands) (2:16)

CD 3:
1. Got To Hurry (2:38)
2. I Ain't Done Wrong (3:41)
3. I Wish You Would (2:20)
4. A Certain Girl (2:20)
5. Sweet Music (2:35)
6. Good Morning Little Schoolgirl (2:49)
7. My Girl Sloopy (5:39)
8. I'm A Man (2:39)
9. You're A Better Man Than I (3:20)
10. Evil Hearted You (2:27)
11. Still I'm Sad (3:00)
12. Heart Full Of Soul (2:31)
13. Train Kept A Rolling (3:27)
14. Smokestack Lightning (5:37)
15. Respectable (5:25)
16. Here 'Tis (5:19)

CD 4:
1. What Do You Want (3:06)
2. Jeff's Blues (3:04)
3. Like Jimmy Reed Again (3:00)
4. Someone To Love (Part 1) (2:24)
5. Shapes Of Things (2:26)
6. Steeled Blues (2:35)
7. Someone To Love (Part 2) (4:18)
8. New York City Blues (4:11)
9. Stroll On (2:44)
10. For RSG (4:03)
11. Good Morning Little Schoolgirl (Backing Track) (3:21)
12. Good Morning Little Schoolgirl (Backing Track + Harp) (3:04)
13. Good Morning Little Schoolgirl (Master) (2:56)
14. Heart Full Of Soul (Sitar Version) (1:56)
15. Heart Full Of Soul (Master) (2:30)
16. Chris' Number (2:40)
17. Pounds And Stomps (2:34)
18. Got To Hurry (Take 1 Backing Track) (0:53)
19. Got To Hurry (Take 2 Backing Track) (2:43)
20. Got To Hurry (Master) (2:35)
21. Without You (2:28)
22. Climbing Through (3:00)

Of the bands that rose from British blues and R&B scene of the 1960s, few were as influential and stylistically adventurous as the Yardbirds. The group started out as blues purists, but with time they blazed trails in experimental pop, psychedelia, and hard rock, as well as introducing three of the most celebrated British guitarists of the era: Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and Jimmy Page.

They pioneered what they called the "rave-up," enhancing their songs by adding intense, high-energy instrumental passages with frantic guitar and harmonica soloing, and while their recorded legacy was not especially large, few if any of their peers could match them for both power and originality. The 2001 collection Ultimate! Is a well-curated career overview, 1964's Five Live Yardbirds is a riveting document of their blues period, and 1966's Roger the Engineer captured them at the peak of their psychedelic era, and is arguably their best album. /Excerpt from biography by Mark Deming, AllMusic

From the booklet liner notes: The main purpose of this collection is to bring together the Yardbirds material recoded between 1963 and 1965 (or in few cases, 1966) and, where applicable, present them in a manner that reflects the original albums. Since the first two American Yardbirds albums were essentially compilations of previously released British material, some duplication occurs.

Basically, this CD-set covers the period when the Yardbirds were managed by Giorgio Gomelsky and with only a few exceptions contains all the material released during that time. The set also contains various out-takes and alternative versions, some of which had been released before, that were first brought together for the vinyl version.

(For personnel and recording details, see artwork included.)

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Mick Kolassa - All Kinds Of Blues

Album: All Kinds Of Blues
Size: 112,5 MB
Time: 48:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

1. Thank You Memphis (2:39)
2. Where Love Takes Me (Feat. Dexter Allen) (2:52)
3. Did You Ever Wonder? (Feat. Doug MacLeod) (3:38)
4. Too Old To Die Young (3:03)
5. Happy Endings (3:04)
6. Amy Iodine (5:42)
7. You Bumped Me Again (4:04)
8. Does Your Mama Know? (2:34)
9. Eating My Soul (3:32)
10. Can't Sing No Blues Tonight (3:08)
11. That Don't Mean (2:56)
12. Somebody Else's Whiskey (3:53)
13. Bad Decisions (Feat. Eric Hughes) (4:42)
14. A Yankee Heading Home (2:47)

Mick Kolassa has been a blues fan most of his life – all kinds of blues. His previous albums have all contained a few subgenres of blues, but in this album, his 15th blues, he wanted to include as many as he could – the result is the aptly named All Kinds Of Blues.

The album opens with "Thank You Memphis", which reflects not only that special Memphis sound, but Mick’s appreciation for the place he has called home for the past few years. "Where Love Takes Me" is a blues song in the tradition of Mississippi electric blues style, Dexter Allen’s guitar work on this track is special. "Did You Ever Wonder" is a New Orleans style rhumba co-written by Mick and Doug MacLeod, who joins Mick on vocals. The blues rocker "Too Old To Die Young" is Mick coming to terms with his latest birthday. "Happy Endings" is one of Mick’s slow, minor key blues songs, but done in a jazz style, again with Dexter Allen on guitar.

To be sure he covered as many styles as possible, Mick penned his first song about AI love, "Amy Iodine". The band decided that this song is the first of a new subgenre: Post-Contemporary Acid Blues. Hang on, it’s different. "You Bumped Me Again" is a very funky song about repeated rejection, while "Does Your Mama Know" is a blues love song almost rockabilly. "Eating My Soul" is a dark and brooding slow minor key blues.

"Can't Sing No Blues Tonight" is an acoustic blues tune, drawing heavily from old Delta blues, that tells the story of a very sad experience for a fictional musician. "That Don't Mean" is a Chicago blues style protest song and "Bad Decision", co-written by Mick and Eric Hughes is a country blues tune about a lonely man in a bar – with an interesting idea. The album closes with "A Yankee Heading Home", an Americana song explaining Mick’s decision to move back to Michigan after living in and around Memphis for over three decades.

This album, produced by Jeff Jensen, is Mick’s 15th blues album. It displays and celebrates Mick’s love of the world of blues – in all its styles and all of its glory.

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Fog Blues and Brass Band - Into the Fog

Size: 296 MB
Time: 42:07
File: Flac
Released: 2018
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

1. Automatic Blues (3:03)
2. Steady Rollin Man (5:16)
3. High Maintenance Love (4:33)
4. Would You Care (3:46)
5. C'mon Down By The River (3:44)
6. Into The Fog (4:50)
7. Ramblin (4:48)
8. In The Back Woods (4:33)
9. She's Alright (3:09)
10. One Of A Kind Things (4:19)

Recording artists FOG Blues & Brass Band from Kitchener Ontario, Canada, have seen great success with their debut CD Into The Fog! Every track has tasted air time on live radio locally and abroad. Comprised of well-seasoned musicians, FOG is a powerhouse live! Hitting the stage as a 7-piece band, they always thrill their audience with an energetic live performance! FOG’s classic Blues with an R&B / Rockin’ sound with a twist of infused purposeful horn lines and harmonies. Fronted by a commanding lead vocalist supported by strong soloists, FOG’s live show is not to be missed!

Into the Fog FLAC

Sunday, July 28, 2024

Flying Tadpole's Travelling Blues Band - Flying Tadpole's Travelling Blues Band

Size: 286 MB
Time: 56:04
File: Flac
Released: 2019
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

1. Flying Tadpole's Travelling Blues Band (3:43)
2. Cats of Utah (2:57)
3. Chicken on My Way to Freedom (3:44)
4. Motorcycle Love (3:51)
5. Storm so Bad (3:28)
6. Coffee Coffee (2:33)
7. Globalstar Camel (3:17)
8. I'm a Believer (Credulous Nerd) (3:40)
9. Creative Obsession (2:12)
10. Got My Dashcam Working (5:20)
11. Loose Dollars (2:50)
12. Trolleys Outside Our Gate (3:38)
13. Racing the Thunderstorms (3:16)
14. Raining on the Dog and Me (3:31)
15. Never Going Back (1:13)
16. Byron Bay (3:34)
17. Blue Endnote (3:10)

FLYING TADPOLE is mainly the blue angst, cruel humor and general mayhem of the dark alter ego of Tim Fatchen, so why can't Flying Tadpole have alter egos too? And here they are, performing in a row. Piano, cigarbox guitar, bass, tam, sticks, reverby Strat and strange voices, all travelling down the slippery slope together for your pleasure. AND THE BLUES? Manic 12-bar, ragtime, poppy and even Blues/Surf songs will have you laughing and cheering--it's the only way to survive disasters and miseries, people! Real handmade in a loose and comfortable lo-fi vibe. Recorded sequential-live--Flying Tadpole's schizo-clones playing and singing the lot (wearing different hats) via the aforementioned Tim Fatchen.

Flying Tadpole's Travelling Blues Band FLAC

Saturday, July 27, 2024

The Jive Aces - Recipe For Rhythm

Album: Recipe For Rhythm
Size: 119,3 MB
Time: 51:16
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2008
Styles: Swing/Jump Blues
Art: Front, tray

1. Aces Shuffle (Feat. Jeremy Wakefield & Miss Carmen Getit) (2:53)
2. Something Can Be Done About It (Feat. Miss Carmen Getit & Steve Lucky) (3:26)
3. Love Me Or Leave Me (Feat. Mark Isham) (3:28)
4. Buona Sera (Feat. Toni Elizabeth Prima) (3:44)
5. Once More (Feat. Chick Corea) (3:05)
6. London Rhythm (Feat. Vic Flick) (2:50)
7. Fever (3:34)
8. Affinity, Reality And Communication (Feat. Mark Isham) (4:37)
9. The Few (3:53)
10. Up A Lazy River (3:29)
11. Summertime (Feat. Chick Corea) (3:46)
12. Happy All The While (Feat. Jeremy Wakefield) (2:58)
13. Sway (3:11)
14. Heading Home (Feat. Miss Carmen Getit) (3:00)
15. We'll Meet Again (Feat. Mr. Acker Bilk & Toni Elizabeth Prima) (3:16)

The Jive Aces are a six-piece UK-based, swing band that was formed in 1989. They were Britain's Got Talent semi-finalists in 2012. They have released 11 albums, as well as compilations, EPs and singles and have performed at numerous music festivals. The band was founded by vocalist Ian Clarkson, drummer Peter Howell (who went to school with Ian in Billericay), bassist Ken Smith and saxophonist "Big" John Fordham. The four met in East London jive and jazz clubs. They cut their teeth street entertaining and were soon being offered shows in UK and Europe. After several years of touring the band with various other musicians, the four met Alex Douglas (trombone, bongos, blues harp, washboard) and Vince Hurley (piano) who became permanent members. Grazia Clarkson, the band's publicist, has also become a regular performing member playing several featured songs on accordion.

The band is recognized as one of the top swing bands in the world, something borne out by their extensive international travel (the band has performed in over 40 countries). The June 2015 issue of Vintage Rock magazine described them as the "UK's number one jive and swing band". They have received awards from Variety, the Children's Charity and the City of Derry International Music Award in 2006. On 12 September 2018 The Jive Aces won "Best Band" at the Boisdale Music Awards. The award was presented by Jools Holland, who then joined the band for a boogie woogie jam session. /Wikipedia

Personnel: Ian Clarkson (vocals, trumpet); Ken Smith (double bass); Peter Howell (drums); Vince Hurley (piano, Hammond organ); John Fordham (tenor & baritone saxophone, clarinet); Alex Douglas (trombone).

Recipe For Rhythm mc
Recipe For Rhythm gofile

Giles Robson & The Dirty Aces - Crooked Heart Of Mine

Album: Crooked Heart Of Mine
Size: 94,3 MB
Time: 40:40
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Art: Full

1. The Mighty Incinerator (3:16)
2. Swindler For You (3:26)
3. Keep On Diggin' (2:59)
4. Some Kinda King (2:21)
5. Devil Led Evil (3:20)
6. Stick To The Promise (3:52)
7. Crooked Heart Of Mine (3:45)
8. Twenty Gallons Of Muddy Water (4:14)
9. Solidor (2:33)
10. Cooling Board (3:00)
11. Magic Tricks (2:47)
12. Hometown (1:25)
13. Ain't Dead Yet (3:38)

Ranked in Classic Rock Magazine’s top ten blues albums of 2012, Giles Robson has already been hailed as the most exciting new harmonica virtuosos of his generation by blues harp legends such as Sugar Blue and Paul Jones. Rising at breakneck speed through the blues world since forming, Giles Robson & The Dirty Aces raw and unique twist on the blues have not gone unnoticed, with everyone from BBC Radio 2’s Chris Evans & Radio 6’s Tom Robinson to Blues in Britain giving the band rave reviews.

With a voice recalling the legendary Charlie Musselwhite, Robson is already establishing himself as one the freshest, most exciting new Blues artists to arrive in recent times and is sure to continue his fast ascent through the vibrant UK and international blues scenes.

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Crooked Heart Of Mine mc
Crooked Heart Of Mine gofile

Christopher Wyze & The Tellers - Stuck In The Mud

Album: Stuck In The Mud
Size: 123,7 MB
Time: 53:21
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Blues/Roots
Art: Full

1. Three Hours From Memphis (4:22)
2. Stuck In The Mud (3:54)
3. Cotton Ain't King (4:36)
4. Soul On The Road (3:17)
5. Back To Clarksdale (4:11)
6. Money Spent Blues (4:39)
7. Caution To The Wind (3:31)
8. Hard Work Don't Pay (3:40)
9. Life Behind Bars (4:24)
10. Looking For My Baby (3:35)
11. Wake Up (4:14)
12. Good Friend Gone (5:13)
13. Someday (3:38)

“I learned about Wyze & the Tellers from a producer-friend. Their blues, it grabbed him,” says Johnny Phillips, who heads the label. Phillips listened and quickly decided he wanted Wyze’s Stuck in the Mud sound for his new and growing Big Radio Records label. “These guys lay down a fresh sound, but with an ‘old as mud’ feel to it,” he adds with a smile.

And Johnny Phillips should know. The label he runs operates within industry trailblazer Select-O-Hits, established in 1960 by his father, Tom Phillips and his uncle Sam Phillips of Sun Records fame. The company has been a part of more than 300 gold, platinum and Grammy winning albums, including many blues hits over the past six decades, the latest being a Grammy for Best Contemporary Blues Album for Brother Johnny by Edgar Winter.

And while the band name Chistopher Wyze & the Tellers may be new to the blues scene, frontman, harp-player and singer-songwriter Wyze is anything but. “I spent two decades doing blues standards,” says the Indianapolis-based Wyze. “It gets inside you and the stories just bubble up.” He penned lyrics for the album in Clarksdale, Miss. Recently, Nashville Songwriters Association International named Wyze a “One to Watch” songwriter (December 2023). A co-writer joins Wyze on each Stuck in the Mud track.

Recording in Muscle Shoals, AL and Clarksdale, MS, producer Ralph Carter directed the sessions. Classic rock lovers may know Carter from the prominence he reached early in his career as tour musical director, bass player and song co-writer with Eddie Money. His works include the smash hit, Shakin. In the blues world, Carter has written, toured, recorded and produced with Sugar Ray Rayford and Franck L. Goldwasser (Paris Slim), among others. Christopher Wyze handles lead vocals on all thirteen tracks, adding blues harp to seven of them. Other featured artists include Eric Deaton on acoustic, electric and slide guitar for Muscle Shoals tracks and Cary Hudson on electric, acoustic and slide guitars for Clarksdale tracks.

Deaton has been a key contributor to the Grammy-winning sound of the Black Keys, on tour and in studio, notably on their hit blues album Delta Kreme. Singer-songwriter/guitarist Cary Hudson, called “a national treasure” by Jason Isbell, formerly fronted beloved rock band Blue Mountain. In 2023, he was named Artist of the Year by Southland Music Line. /Bluestown Music

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Stuck In The Mud mc
Stuck In The Mud gofile

Friday, July 26, 2024

Floyd Dixon - Live In Sweden

Source: Vinyl
Size: 103.6 MB
Time: 44:32
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1976
Styles: Piano Blues, West Coast Blues
Art: Front & Back

A1. Please Send Me Someone To Love (4:41)
A2. Jumping With Floyd (4:32)
A3. Operator 210 (5:28)
A4. Hey Bartender (4:12)
A5. What I Say (6:23)
B1. Broken Hearted (4:58)
B2. Every Day I Have The Blues (5:24)
B3. My Friends + Going Down Slow (4:52)
B4. Caldonia (4:01)

Floyd Dixon was one of many Texans to find fame in the post-war rhythm & blues field. Others include T-Bone Walker, Charles Brown, Amos Milburn and Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson.

Dixon began playing piano and singing as a child. In Texas he was exposed to a range of blues and gospel influences, as well as a little jazz and hillbilly. In 1942 the Dixon family moved from Texas to Los Angeles, where Floyd came into contact with fellow ex-Texan Charles Brown,who took the young piano player under his wing and became a major musical influence throughout Dixon's life. When Brown left Johnny Moore's Three Blazers in 1948 to make it on his own, Dixon was the natural choice for his replacement as pianist-singer. The first company to record Dixon was Supreme Records, in 1947. His next company, Modern, would bring him his first commercial success. Floyd went to see Jules and Saul Bihari (Modern's owners) without the intention to record. When he ran through "Dallas Blues", he didn't know that they were recording it in the back. Dixon : "They said 'We would like to put it out' and I was shocked! They wrote me out a check for just doing those couple of tunes and asked me if I was in the union. I said no, and they gave me money to go join that day."

By 12 March 1949, "Dallas Blues" had risen to # 10 of the "Most Played R&B Recordings" on Billboard's Jukebox chart. Jules Bihari wanted more from Dixon, but wasn't interested in another Charles Brown clone. The hottest R&B artist at that time was Amos Milburn and Bihari started to steer Dixon in the Milburn direction. Floyd's trio (piano, bass, guitar) was augmented with the inclusion of various tenor sax players, including Maxwell Davis and Buddy Floyd. Al Wichard was added on drums and later Chuck Norris on guitar (replacing Tiny Webb from Dixon's own trio). The Milburn influence is particularly clear on "Doin' the Town" (Modern 797), which sounds suspiciously like "Chicken Shack Boogie". Dixon had further hits with "Mississippi Blues" (# 14, 1949) and "Sad Journey Blues" (# 8, 1950). The latter was recorded for Don Robey's Peacock label in Houston. Perhaps fearful of Robey's violent reputation, Floyd went to Aladdin's Eddie Mesner and asked him to buy back the eight sides he had recorded for Peacock, so Floyd would be free to record for the bigger (and closer) company. Mesner called Don Robey, who, to everyone's surprise, was willing to go along. Aladdin would reissue all eight tracks on four singles.

Dixon recorded extensively for Aladdin during 1950-52, first with Johnny Moore's Three Blazers, later with his own band. Sales were good, with two # 4 R&B hits, "Telephone Blues" (1951) and "Call Operator 210" (1952). Both were slow numbers, but Dixon recorded in as many R&B/ jump styles as there were, including some bawdy material, like "Too Much Jelly Roll" from the pens of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. In 1953, Floyd did two sessions for Art Rupe's Specialty label (resulting in three singles), followed by a 1954 stint on Atlantic's short-lived Cat subsidiary. His best known number from the two Cat sessions with Ertegun and Wexler is "Hey Bartender", which was revived by the Blues Brothers on their multi-platinum LP "Briefcase Full Of Blues" in 1978. Naturally this made Dixon, who wrote the song, a happy man. Several one-off recording deals followed : for Combo, Pearl (both 1955), Checker (1956), Cash (1957) and Ebb (May 1957). Ebb was owned by Leona Rupe (Art's ex-wife) and this session yielded genuine rock n roll in the shape of the Little Richard styled "Oooh Little Girl", recorded with Plas Johnson on sax and Earl Palmer on drums.

The 1960s saw Dixon recording for a number of tiny West Coast and Texas labels. He was totally ignored during the European blues revival of the 1960s, probably because he didn't play guitar or harmonica like his Delta and Chicago counterparts.

After a temporary retirement from the music business, Dixon made a comeback in 1975, beginning with a tour of Sweden, and he became the first artist to be featured on Jonas Bernholm's celebrated Route 66 reissue label. Dixon was commissioned to write "Olympic Blues" for the 1984 Los Angeles games. On the whole, the 1980s were a good decade for Floyd, with appearances at many major blues festivals, both in Europe and the USA.

In the mid-1990's he secured a contract with Alligator Records. His first album for the label, "Wake Up And Live" won him the 1997 W.C. Handy Award for Best Album Of The Year by a comeback artist. He continued to perform and record until his death, from kidney failure, in 2006, aged 78.
Floyd Dixon was an outstanding pianist, had a voice like a foghorn and was a seminal figure on the West Coast blues scene, one of the few to transform swing music into rhythm and blues.

Live In Sweden MP3
Live In Swede FLAC

Willie Dixon - Willie Dixon Live At Richard's Atlanta April 3rd. 1973 (Restauracion 2024)

Size: 171.8 MB
Time: 74:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front

01. Slow Instrumental (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (Feat. Carey Bell) (7:12)
02. After Hours (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (Feat. Lafayette Leake) (4:16)
03. Trouble (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (Feat. Lafayette Leake) (5:46)
04. Everyday I Have The Blues (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (Feat. Buster Benton) (3:57)
05. Spider In My Stew (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (Feat. Buster Benton) (5:00)
06. Crazy 'Bout My Baby (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (4:01)
07. Rock Me Shook Me (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (6:03)
08. I Don't Trust Nobody (When It Comes To My Girl) (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (Feat. Carey Bell) (5:50)
09. Wang Dang Doodle (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (5:41)
10. Fast Instrumental (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (6:26)
11. Everything's Gonna Be Alright (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (5:07)
12. It's Easy To Love (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (Feat. Buster Benton) (7:52)
13. Good To The Last Drop (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (Feat. Buster Benton) (3:58)
14. Sweet Sixteen (Fades Out) (Atlanta Live April 3rd. 1973) [Restauracion 2024] (Feat. Buster Benton) (3:12)

Willie Dixon's life and work was virtually an embodiment of the progress of the blues, from an accidental creation of the descendants of freed slaves to a recognized and vital part of America's musical heritage. That Dixon was one of the first professional blues songwriters to benefit in a serious, material way -- and that he had to fight to do it -- from his work also made him an important symbol of the injustice that still informs the music industry, even at the end of the 20th century. A producer, songwriter, bassist, and singer, he helped Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter, and others find their most commercially successful voices.

By the time he was a teenager, Dixon was writing songs and selling copies to the local bands. He also studied music with a local carpenter, Theo Phelps, who taught him about harmony singing. With his bass voice, Dixon later joined a group organized by Phelps, the Union Jubilee Singers, who appeared on local radio. Dixon eventually made his way to Chicago, where he won the Illinois State Golden Gloves Heavyweight Championship. He might have been a successful boxer, but he turned to music instead, thanks to Leonard "Baby Doo" Caston, a guitarist who had seen Dixon at the gym where he worked out and occasionally sang with him. The two formed a duo playing on street corners, and later Dixon took up the bass as an instrument. They later formed a group, the Five Breezes, who recorded for the Bluebird label. The group's success was halted, however, when Dixon refused induction into the armed forces as a conscientious objector. Dixon was eventually freed after a year, and formed another group, the Four Jumps of Jive. In 1945, however, Dixon was back working with Caston in a group called the Big Three Trio, with guitarist Bernardo Dennis (later replaced by Ollie Crawford).

During this period, Dixon would occasionally appear as a bassist at late-night jam sessions featuring members of the growing blues community, including Muddy Waters. Later on when the Chess brothers -- who owned a club where Dixon occasionally played -- began a new record label, Aristocrat (later Chess), they hired him, initially as a bassist on a 1948 session for Robert Nighthawk. The Chess brothers liked Dixon's playing, and his skills as a songwriter and arranger, and during the next two years he was working regularly for the Chess brothers. He got to record some of his own material, but generally Dixon was seldom featured as an artist at any of these sessions.

Dixon's real recognition as a songwriter began with Muddy Waters' recording of "Hoochie Coochie Man." The success of that single, "Evil" by Howlin' Wolf, and "My Babe" by Little Walter saw Dixon established as Chess' most reliable tunesmith, and the Chess brothers continually pushed Dixon's songs on their artists. In addition to writing songs, Dixon continued as bassist and recording manager of many of the Chess label's recording sessions, including those by Lowell Fulson, Bo Diddley, and Otis Rush. Dixon's remuneration for all of this work, including the songwriting, was minimal -- he was barely able to support his rapidly growing family on the 100 dollars a week that the Chess brothers were giving him, and a short stint with the rival Cobra label at the end of the '50s didn't help him much.

During the mid-'60s, Chess gradually phased out Dixon's bass work, in favor of electric bass, thus reducing his presence at many of the sessions. At the same time, a European concert promoter named Horst Lippmann had begun a series of shows called the American Folk-Blues Festival, for which he would bring some of the top blues players in America over to tour the continent. Dixon ended up organizing the musical side of these shows for the first decade or more, recording on his own as well and earning a good deal more money than he was seeing from his work for Chess. At the same time, he began to see a growing interest in his songwriting from the British rock bands that he saw while in London -- his music was getting covered regularly by artists like the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds, and when he visited England, he even found himself cajoled into presenting his newest songs to their managements. Back at Chess, Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters continued to perform Dixon's songs, as did newer artists such as Koko Taylor, who had her own hit with "Wang Dang Doodle." Gradually, however, after the mid-'60s, Dixon saw his relationship with Chess Records come to a halt. Partly this was a result of time — the passing of artists such as Little Walter and Sonny Boy Williamson reduced the label's roster of older performers, with whom he had worked for years, and the company's experiments with more rock-oriented sounds (especially on the "Cadet Concept" imprint) took it's output in a direction to which Dixon couldn't contribute. And the death of Leonard Chess in the fall of 1969 and the subsequent sale of the company brought about the end of Dixon's relationship to the company.

By the end of the 1960s, Dixon was eager to try his hand as a performer again, a career that had been interrupted when he'd gone to work for Chess as a producer. He recorded an album of his best-known songs, I Am the Blues, for Columbia Records, and organized a touring band, the Chicago Blues All Stars, to play concerts in Europe. Suddenly, in his fifties, he began making a major name for himself on-stage for the first time in his career. Around this time, Dixon began to have grave doubts about the nature of the songwriting contract that he had with Chess' publishing arm, Arc Music. He was seeing precious little money from songwriting, despite the recording of hit versions of such Dixon songs as "Spoonful" by Cream. He had never seen as much money as he was entitled to as a songwriter, but during the 1970s he began to understand just how much money he'd been deprived of, by design or just plain negligence on the part of the publisher doing its job on his behalf.

Arc Music had sued Led Zeppelin for copyright infringement over "Bring It on Home" on Led Zeppelin II, saying that it was Dixon's song, and won a settlement that Dixon never saw any part of until his manager did an audit of Arc's accounts. Dixon and Muddy Waters would later file suit against Arc Music to recover royalties and the ownership of their copyrights. Additionally, many years later Dixon brought suit against Led Zeppelin for copyright infringement over "Whole Lotta Love" and its resemblance to Dixon's "You Need Love." Both cases resulted in out-of-court settlements that were generous to the songwriter.

The 1980s saw Dixon as the last survivor of the Chess blues stable and he began working with various organizations to help secure song copyrights on behalf of blues songwriters who, like himself, had been deprived of revenue during previous decades. In 1988, Dixon became the first producer/songwriter to be honored with a boxed set collection, when MCA Records released Willie Dixon: The Chess Box, which included several rare Dixon sides as well as the most famous recordings of his songs by Chess' stars. The following year, Dixon published I Am the Blues (Da Capo Press), his autobiography, written in association with Don Snowden.

Dixon continued performing, and was also called in as a producer on movie soundtracks such as Gingerale Afternoon and La Bamba, producing the work of his old stablemate Bo Diddley. By that time, Dixon was regarded as something of an elder statesman, composer, and spokesperson of American blues. Dixon eventually began suffering from increasingly poor health, and lost a leg to diabetes. He died peacefully in his sleep early in 1992.

Willie Dixon Live At Richard's Atlanta April 3rd. 1973 (Restauracion 2024) MP3
Willie Dixon Live At Richard's Atlanta April 3rd. 1973 (Restauracion 2024) FLAC

Pete Brown

Size: 111.4 MB
Time: 47:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Rock, Blues, R&B
Art: Front

01. Psychological Dog (3:44)
02. The Shadow Club (Feat. Eric Clapton) (5:30)
03. The Sound Of A Drum (Feat. Abass Dodoo & Joe Bonamassa) (5:14)
04. Whenever I Try To Sell Out (Feat. Joe Bonamassa) (3:53)
05. It's A Long Road Brother (Feat. Joe Bonamassa) (6:55)
06. Everything You Said (4:51)
07. Phantom Cheer (4:03)
08. With My Black Cat By My Side (Feat. Carla Olson) (4:26)
09. No You Can't Have That Money (Feat. Bobby Rush) (3:38)
10. Whodunnit (5:30)

One of the key eccentrics of the Harvest stable and a successful collaborative lyricist for Cream ("I Feel Free," "Sunshine of Your Love"), poet/percussionist/vocalist/trumpet player Pete Brown was one of the many artists to arise from the British beat movement in the mid- to late '60s. Like a lot of his peers, Brown's spin on progressive rock came from backgrounds in folk, jazz, and blues.

He was kicking around the scene as a poet until being approached by Cream to assist in songwriting. Upon achieving chart success with the trio, Brown decided to go the musician route. Graham Bond asked Brown to help out with some songs for the Graham Bond Organisation, and he was eventually invited to sing with the group on-stage. Once they broke up, Brown helped form the Battered Ornaments, hoping to work with musicians whose skills didn't dwarf his own. The group fell in with Harvest, the progressive subsidiary of EMI that housed the likes of Syd Barrett, Deep Purple, and Roy Harper. The Battered Ornaments' only record with Brown, A Meal You Can Shake Hands with in the Dark, was released in 1969.

The Battered Ornaments booted Brown from the band on the night prior to a supporting gig for the Rolling Stones at Hyde Park; his vocals on the recording of the group's second record were eventually wiped off. The sacked singer immediately set about forming Piblokto!, a group that, for 1970's Things May Come and Things May Go But the Art School Dance Goes on Forev…, comprised bassist Roger Bunn, guitarist Jim Mullen, organist Dave Thompson, and Battered Ornaments drummer Rob Tait. Bunn was replaced by Steve Glover for Thousands on a Raft, which was released six months after their debut. Another shift in the lineup pre-dated the final Piblokto! release, the single "Flying Hero Sandwich."

Brown teamed up again with Graham Bond for 1972's one-off Two Heads Are Better Than One, which featured contributions from several of Brown's former bandmates. With keyboardist Ian Lynn, who played on Thousands on a Raft, he formed Back to the Front, a group that performed but never recorded in their original form. They lasted until 1977; Brown faded away from music, at least in a performance sense, until 1983's Party in the Rain, which featured most of Back to the Front behind him.

The '90s saw Brown working again with Phil Ryan, a keyboardist who played with Man, the Eyes of Blue, and the final lineup of Piblokto! They made two records together, Ardours of the Lost Rake and Coals to Jerusalem. Toward the end of the decade, he formed the Interoceters, a group that performed songs from his lengthy career. Brown also maintained a working relationship with Jack Bruce and participated in the making of several records by other artists. Pete Brown died on May 19, 2023, while in treatment for cancer; he was 82 years of age. ~Andy Kellman

The Shadow Club MP3
The Shadow Club FLAC

Destini Rawls - I'm Movin' In

Album: I'm Movin' In
Size: 94.3 MB
Time: 40:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Blues, Soul, R&B
Art: Front

01. I Go Dancin' (3:08)
02. Keep On Comin' Home To You (3:01)
03. Lonely Street (4:21)
04. What's Wrong With You? (4:16)
05. If You Don't Love Me Baby (2:55)
06. Just You Baby (3:27)
07. I'm Goin Stonecrazy (3:15)
08. I'm Movin' In (4:46)
09. Just Call Me Junior (4:04)
10. This Broken Heart (3:33)
11. All I Ever Wanted Was You (3:16)

I'm Movin' In MP3
I'm Movin' In FLAC

Album: Carry On
Size: 91.8 MB
Time: 39:16
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Soul
Art: Front

01. Carry On (4:12)
02. I Don't Want No Man (2:58)
03. You Give Me The Blues (4:19)
04. Walking Shoes (4:29)
05. Blues Party (4:16)
06. The Blues Sometimes (4:49)
07. When You See Me Coming (3:45)
08. Move To The Country (3:50)
09. Whole Lot Of Money (4:57)
10. Motherless Child (1:37)

Destini's journey in music began when she was just a little girl. “I was told that when I was three years old, I was humming the melody to a song my father was playing on his guitar.” Destini was exposed early in life to the blues because of her father-The Legendary Johnny Rawls. As a little girl she would watch as her Dad would hang out with his friends (fellow Bluesmen) and listen to them working on their music - as long as she was allowed in the room. “It was amazing to hear the musical arrangements that was coming from the living room.” Destini didn’t even know that over the years she would be amongst some of the greatest artists in the industry, such as; O.V. Wright, Bobby Blue Bland, Otis Clay and Bobby Rush (just to mention a few). With all of this music surrounding her, Destini excelled in music in school. Her charming personality and dedication to her craft led her to sing her way through school including a boarding school called Piney Woods Country Life School, located in Piney Woods, Mississippi. PWS also recognized and helped to cultivate her voice to some of the vocal notes that you may hear in her performance. Now in hind sight she has realized that from childhood, she was predestined to follow in the footsteps of the Blues and create her own way in the entertainment industry!

After completing high school, Destini couldn’t wait to travel with her Dad. She first appeared on stage in the Blues arena at the tender age of 18. “I was so petrified!” Even though she had performed on many stages and had competed in competitions, this was so different! She gained so much experience just hanging out with her Dad. Her ability to entertain an audience, allowed her to travel to Russia, Germany, Switzerland, Canada and all across the United States singing the blues. “The blues is where it’s at!”

Destini couldn’t do music full-time because her Mom believed that she should receive a formal education. So, she went to college and received a degree in nursing. She works hard but she loves to play even harder! With her hard work ethics her time off from work was valuable to her. "I wanted to have fun!" So, over the years she learned that the Blues parties were the best parties. One day her Dad called and said “baby, you want to go to Aruba with me?” Filled with excitement she shouted “yes!!” She didn’t even know how they were going to get there until her Dad informed her that she was going on the Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise!” It was the best time of her life. Good people, good fun, good food, good drinks, beautiful scenery and most of all great live Blues music!
Fueled and on fire from her experience on the cruise it was then she realized it was time to live her dreams out loud. With her education being complete and her daughters being of age, Destini is filled with more soul than ever before and ready to share her new music with you!

Carry On MP3
Carry On FLAC

Freddie King - Freddie King (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) (Restauracion 2023)

Size: 148.9 MB
Time: 64:46
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2023
Styles: Texas Blues
Art: Front

01. Instrumental (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] ( 4:24)
02. I'm Tore Down (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] ( 5:25)
03. Someday Baby (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] ( 5:19)
04. Have You Ever Loved A Woman (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] (11:39)
05. Instrumental II (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] ( 6:45)
06. Key To The Highway (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] ( 7:03)
07. Going Down (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] ( 5:44)
08. Going Down Part Two (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] ( 2:18)
09. Ain't Nobody's Business If We Do (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] ( 6:33)
10. Hideaway (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] ( 4:07)
11. Dust My Broom (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) [Restauracion 2023] ( 5:23)

Guitarist Freddie King rode to fame in the early '60s with a spate of catchy instrumentals which became instant bandstand fodder for fellow bluesmen and white rock bands alike. Employing a more down-home (thumb and finger picks) approach to the B.B. King single-string style of playing, King enjoyed success on a variety of different record labels. Furthermore, he was one of the first bluesmen to employ a racially integrated group on-stage behind him. Influenced by Eddie Taylor, Jimmy Rogers, and Robert Jr. Lockwood, King went on to influence the likes of Eric Clapton, Mick Taylor, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and Lonnie Mack, among many others.

Freddie King (who was originally billed as "Freddy" early in his career) was born and raised in Gilmer, TX, where he learned how to play guitar as a child; his mother and uncle taught him the instrument. Initially, King played rural acoustic blues, in the vein of Lightin' Hopkins. By the time he was a teenager, he had grown to love the rough, electrified sounds of Chicago blues. In 1950, when he was 16 years old, his family moved to Chicago, where he began frequenting local blues clubs, listening to musicians like Muddy Waters, Jimmy Rogers, Robert Jr. Lockwood, Little Walter, and Eddie Taylor. Soon, the young guitarist formed his own band, the Every Hour Blues Boys, and was performing himself.

In the mid-'50s, King began playing on sessions for Parrott and Chess Records, as well as playing with Earlee Payton's Blues Cats and the Little Sonny Cooper Band. Freddie King didn't cut his own record until 1957, when he recorded "Country Boy" for the small independent label El-Bee. The single failed to gain much attention.

Three years later, King signed with Federal Records, a subsidiary of King Records, and recorded his first single for the label, "You've Got to Love Her With a Feeling," in August of 1960. The single appeared the following month and became a minor hit, scraping the bottom of the pop charts in early 1961. "You've Got to Love Her With Feeling" was followed by "Hide Away," the song that would become Freddie King's signature tune and most influential recording. "Hide Away" was adapted by King and Magic Sam from a Hound Dog Taylor instrumental and named after one of the most popular bars in Chicago. The single was released as the B-side of "I Love the Woman" (his singles featured a vocal A-side and an instrumental B-side) in the fall of 1961 and it became a major hit, reaching number five on the R&B charts and number 29 on the pop charts. Throughout the '60s, "Hide Away" was one of the necessary songs blues and rock & roll bar bands across America and England had to play during their gigs.

King's first album, Freddy King Sings, appeared in 1961, and it was followed later that year by Let's Hide Away and Dance Away With Freddy King: Strictly Instrumental. Throughout 1961, he turned out a series of instrumentals -- including "San-Ho-Zay," "The Stumble," and "I'm Tore Down" -- which became blues classics; everyone from Magic Sam and Stevie Ray Vaughan to Dave Edmunds and Peter Green covered King's material. "Lonesome Whistle Blues," "San-Ho-Zay," and "I'm Tore Down" all became Top Ten R&B hits that year.

Freddie King continued to record for King Records until 1968, with a second instrumental album (Freddy King Gives You a Bonanza of Instrumentals) appearing in 1965, although none of his singles became hits. Nevertheless, his influence was heard throughout blues and rock guitarists throughout the '60s -- Eric Clapton made "Hide Away" his showcase number in 1965. King signed with Atlantic/Cotillion in late 1968, releasing Freddie King Is a Blues Masters the following year and My Feeling for the Blues in 1970; both collections were produced by King Curtis. After their release, Freddie King and Atlantic/Cotillion parted ways.

King landed a new record contract with Leon Russell's Shelter Records early in 1970. King recorded three albums for Shelter in the early '70s, all of which sold well. In addition to respectable sales, his concerts were also quite popular with both blues and rock audiences. In 1974, he signed a contract with RSO Records -- which was also Eric Clapton's record label -- and he released Burglar, which was produced and recorded with Clapton. Following the release of Burglar, King toured America, Europe, and Australia. In 1975, he released his second RSO album, Larger Than Life.

Throughout 1976, Freddie King toured America, even though his health was beginning to decline. On December 29, 1976, King died of heart failure. Although his passing was premature -- he was only 42 years old -- Freddie King's influence could still be heard in blues and rock guitarists decades after his death. ~Cub Koda

Freddie King (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) (Restauracion 2023) MP3
Freddie King (Live Fillmore West September 3rd. 1970) (Restauracion 2023) FLAC

Sauce Boss - The Sauce

Size: 94.0 MB
Time: 40:11
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Little Rhythm And Blues (2:19)
02. The Word (2:29)
03. Delta 9 Blues (5:04)
04. Space Ocean (1:44)
05. Down By The Sea (3:32)
06. Stop Breaking Down (2:49)
07. Don't Know How To Tell You (3:39)
08. I Will Play For Gumbo (3:20)
09. Lonely Crowd (3:04)
10. Gloria (5:13)
11. Little Rhythm And Blues Reprise (1:10)
12. Left Handed Smile (5:45)

"The Sauce" is a ride from the heights of blues rock to the most intimate of acoustic whisperings.

The disc begins with a set of one-man band tunes, each of which is a prescription for a better life. "Little Rhythm and Blues" is testament to the medicinal properties of the genre. My take on The Beatles' "The Word" lays it back into a smooth and funky plea for showing some love instead of all this hate that seems to be all around us." Delta 9 Blues", an atmospheric slow blues, touts the benefits of another kind of medicine. The first three tunes set the theme of healing with music in the genre-bending "The Sauce". It's what I do. I cook a pot of gumbo and I feed the audience, while splooging my hot sauce into the pot. I blurr definitions. I ignore boundaries. I make The Sauce.

"Down By the Sea" is solo, Hawaiian-style, on my 1933 National Steel Guitar

Along with my solo/one man band thing, I've lately been hanging in a high energy trio format. (two guitars and drums). The rest of the album is mostly with a trio. I'm joined by my friends, Neal Goree (guitar) and Brett Crook (drums). My good friend Damon Fowler joins me and Brett on a few tunes. There's also a few ballads (Don't Know How To Tell You, Lonely Crowd, and Left Handed Smile), but it's a soulful delivery throughout. Cure thyself with these 12 tunes. May The Sauce be with you.

The Sauce MP3
The Sauce FLAC

Flyin' Saucers Gumbo Special - Nothin' But

Size: 380 MB
Time: 55:04
File: Flac
Released: 2019
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

1. Zydeco Train (3:07)
2. Mister Bartender (3:53)
3. Louisiana Girl (5:15)
4. Nothin' but a Party (5:18)
5. Moonshine (3:03)
6. Keep on Hoping (6:00)
7. Gonna Roll (3:47)
8. How Can I Try ? (3:35)
9. Do What You're Supposed to Do (4:19)
10. Hey Tout Kelkun (3:39)
11. Angel at Home (4:33)
12. High Blood Pressure (3:23)
13. Sweet Sin (5:07)

When we talk about blues from Europe and evoke its topography, it is most often rivers and marshes that come to mind, with the Mississippi in mind of course. But we should probably be just as concerned with other watery spaces, such as seas and oceans. As proof, the blues of the West Coast is as distinct from that of the East Coast of the United States as the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans are. Similarly, in our country, the two major poles for French blues are increasingly coastal. Languedoc, the Garonne and Brittany have long been ardent hotbeds of French blues (Awek, Rosebud Blue Sauce, Fly & The Tox, Doo The Doo, etc.). As for the Opal Coast of Hauts de France, with its Blue Caps (Gris-Nez and Blanc-Nez), it has been asserting itself for several years as a breeding ground for blue note bands in the land of Potjevleesch (Blues Eaters, Nico Duportal, Thom & The Tone Masters, etc.). The capillarity with the effervescent Belgian Flemish blues scene is undoubtedly not unrelated to this, and we could therefore speak of an Atlantic scene for the former, and its North Sea equivalent for the latter. Who knows why, there are hardly any blues bands bordering this side of the Channel (its English shore already guaranteeing its share, it is true). While southern blues is mainly Italian, it is on the BBT axis (Brittany-Bordeaux-Toulouse) that the Flyin Saucers Gumbo Special have been relying for two decades. The aptly named “Zydeco Train,” as well as the title track, “Gonna Roll” and “Hey Tout Kelkun” (all from the pen of pillar Fabio Izquierdo) set the tone for this eighth album: guaranteed 100% bayou piano, whether in fast-paced (most often) or haunting mode (“Moonshine”). The rhythm section that established the combo’s reputation (Charlie Duchein, bass, and Stéphane Stanger on drums) keeps the engine room in charge, to the great delight of our hips and kneecaps (especially since Fabio remains one of the best European ember blowers on the harmonica). Signed and sung by Le Goff, “Mr Bartender” and “Keep On Hoping” evoke the humid funk of Zigaboo Modeliste’s Meters and Little Feat (with its Hammond B3 between Jimmy Smith and James Taylor Quartet, and its meaty brass as desired), while “Louisiana Girl” by the new guitarist, Lucas Gautier, borrows the stubborn swamp beat that Creedence popularized half a century ago. It is still him who polishes this brassy New Orleans ballad in the style of Dave Bartholomew (eternal respect), “How Can I Try”, on which he expresses what he owes to stylists such as Jimmie Vaughan and Guitar Slim. Great art, and one of the highlights of the album, with the funky and syncopated “Do What You're Supposed To Do” (and its cackling wah-wah on a carpet of gleaming brass). The only cover in this collection, “High Blood Pressure” does justice to its creators (Huey “Piano” Smith & The Clowns),with its doo-wop choirs on a limping beat. In short, the spirits of Clifton Chenier, Buckwheat and Archibald are in good hands on the opposite bank from the one that saw their birth, and if the floods of the Garonne do not prove to be as devastating as those of the Mississippi, the barbecues on its banks are no less spicy. One of our most successful export groups: everybody, boogaloo and jive!

Nothin' but FLAC

VA - Blues Singles Collection Vol. 80

Size: 231,4 MB
Time: 99:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Blues/Rock
Art: Front

01 Trevor Sewell - Don't Break The Law (Feat. Lorraine Crosby) (3:45)
02 Arnaud Decherf - The Blues Run In My Blood (3:35)
03 Chris Kramer - Kingfish Blues (2:43)
04 Jungle Jim Smith - Death And Whiskey (3:31)
05 Katie Skene - Whiskey & Wine (7:28)
06 Tom Breton - Austin's Weird (3:59)
07 Todd Cowden - Teacher Blues (2:39)
08 The Reverend Jesse Ray - Ring Finger Blues (3:07)
09 Mick Clarke - Night Time Is The Right Time (3:51)
10 J.D. Simo - Street People (3:10)
11 Duke Robillard - Just Kiss Me (4:48)
12 Marty Shirley - Alabama Drunk (4:53)
13 Julian Taylor - Running Away (4:55)
14 Sean Taylor - Way Down In Enniscorthy (3:30)
15 Mick Clarke - Gonna Miss You Like The Devil (2:58)
16 Shemekia Copeland - Tough Mother (4:14)
17 Jim Kahr - Ain't Nodody's Business (3:46)
18 Steve Cropper - Too Much Stress (3:13)
19 Hannah White - Chicken (3:48)
20 Austin John - I'm Tryin' (3:21)
21 Terry Marshall - I Got All You Need (4:05)
22 Greyhound's Washboard Band - The Blues (Will Not Leave Me Alone) (4:27)
23 Bobby Rush - 99 And 1/2 Won't Do (Feat. Dom Flemons & Dustbowl Revival) (4:15)
24 Lachlan Bryan - The Continuing Saga (3:55)
25 Luke Winslow-King - Peaches (5:05)

And the next one folks, thx to Bluestender/Kamane.

Blues Singles Collection Vol. 80 MP3

Thursday, July 25, 2024

Floyd Cramer - Hello Blues

Size: 128 MB
Time: 25:50
File: Flac
Released: 1960
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

1. I'll Never Be Free (2:09)
2. The Swingin' Shepherd Blues (1:56)
3. Midnight (2:04)
4. Have I Stayed Away Too Long (2:17)
5. Stormy Weather (2:17)
6. Trouble in Mind (2:49)
7. Tricky (2:09)
8. Blues Stay Away from Me (2:12)
9. Re-Enlistment Blues (2:44)
10. The Lonesome Road (2:46)
11. Yesterdays (2:22)

Hello Blues is Floyd Cramer's attempt to play the blues in his own distinctive, "slip-note," style. Of course, the laid-back tempos and gentle arrangements of all the music on the album mean that it never sounds as gritty or down-home as the best country blues, but that isn't the point of the record -- Hello Blues is a pleasant collection of bluesy easy listening, not a blues record, and taken on its own terms, it's entertaining. The CD reissue including four bonus tracks, which are not necessarily "blues": "Sentimental Journey," "Red Roses for a Blue Lady," "Mr. Lonely," and "Love Letters."

Hello Blues FLAC

Eric Burdon - Soul Of A Man

Album: Soul Of A Man
Size: 141,5 MB
Time: 60:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2006
Styles: Blues/Funk/Soul/Rock mix
Art: Full

1. Soul Of A Man (4:16)
2. Kingsize Jones (3:34)
3. Red Cross Store (4:18)
4. Como Se Llama Mama (3:39)
5. Forty Days And Forty Nights (3:00)
6. Feeling Blue (4:48)
7. Never Give Up Blues (4:13)
8. GTO (5:33)
9. Forty Four (4:30)
10. Slow Moving Train (5:26)
11. Don't Ever Let Nobody Drag Your Spirit Down (4:55)
12. Devil Run (3:21)
13. I Don't Mind (5:27)
14. Circuit Rider (3:44)

It can't be considered a comeback because he's never really been away and 2004's My Secret Life - recorded with the same basic band and producer - already proved there was plenty of gas left in Eric Burdon's seemingly bottomless tank. But Soul of a Man finds the ex-Animals lead singer in fine, even feisty form. Credit should be shared by producer/drummer Tony Braunagel and a backing band of veterans, led by guitarist Johnny Lee Schell and organist Mike Finnigan, who find the perfect tone to support Burdon's growling vocals.

Instead of originals, the singer sticks predominantly to covers, a smart move since his own songs have been at best a mixed bag. But aside from a handful of blues classics such as Howlin' Wolf's "44 Blues," "40 Days" (best known through Muddy Waters version), Mississippi Fred McDowell's "Red Cross Store" and Blind Willie Johnson's title track, these are predominantly obscure tunes that Burdon tears into with a gruff fury belying his age (he was 65 at the time of this recording). He's still proudly strutting about the size of his genitals on "Kingsize Jones" and can even meet classic Bad Company on its old turf in "Devil Run."

Without a deft production touch these songs could be embarrassing, but Braunagel keeps the band simmering and Burdon's worst impulses in check. Female backing vocals, horns and percussion fall in line with this funky gospel-laced blues-rock, nailing the ideal tone between a surprising subtlety and Burdon's more typically crusty approach. In this context, "Never Give Up Blues" becomes a rallying cry for a guy who, despite more downs than ups in his post Animals career, has kept releasing new music, mostly to a select hardcore following. He will continue to sing "House of the Rising Sun" nightly, but with albums as strong as this, Burdon is far from washed up and has plenty to be proud of.

Aging fans who might have abandoned him due to years of spotty releases will be shocked at how solid this is. Those who are just catching up will find Soul of a Man to be a dynamic new release from an old warhorse who should not be put out to pasture just yet. /Hal Horowitz, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Soul Of A Man mc
Soul Of A Man gofile

Little Mike & The Tornadoes - All The Right Moves

Album: All The Right Moves
Size: 132,5 MB
Time: 57:33
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

1. Hard Hard Way (3:37)
2. Problems (4:13)
3. Since My Mother's Been Ill (7:06)
4. (I Got) Drunk Last Night (3:46)
5. Sam's Stomp (2:04)
6. A Little On The Side (3:50)
7. All The Right Moves (4:41)
8. The Blues Is Killing Me (5:26)
9. You Wonder Why (3:55)
10. All The Time (4:51)
11. I Won't Be Your Fool (2:39)
12. Stuck Out On This Highway (5:49)
13. Close To My Baby (5:30)

Harmonica player and keyboardist Mike Markowitz, born in Queens, NY, and raised in New York City's burgeoning 1980s blues club scene, has made his mark in the blues world through a lot of hard touring and a bit of good, old-fashioned New York salesmanship, or "chutzpah."

Born November 23, 1955, Markowitz cites his earliest influences as John Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters, and Little Walter Jacobs. In 1978, he formed his first blues band and began playing the blues bars around lower Manhattan, but his reputation began to grow when he began backing up legendary musicians like pianist Pinetop Perkins, Hubert Sumlin, and Jimmy Rogers when they came to New York or New Jersey to perform. Markowitz's passion for blues, as a fan and as a performer, is legendary, and he carried it over into the producer's chair in 1988, when he recorded albums for Perkins and later for Sumlin.

In 1990, Little Mike & the Tornadoes got their own recording contract with Blind Pig, a San Francisco-based label, and his output has been quite prolific since then. The group's first album, Heart Attack, includes guest performances by Perkins, Paul Butterfield, and Sumlin. Two years later, he recorded Payday, also for Blind Pig, before recording his debut for Flying Fish Records (a label that has since been acquired by Rounder Records), Flynn's Place.

Markowitz is an extremely hard working, level-headed blues musician who will no doubt surface again and again on records, whether for Rounder or for some other label. All three of Markowitz's albums are available on compact disc, and worth seeking out. /Biography by Richard Skelly, AllMusic

Personnel: Michael "Little Mike" Markowitz (harmonica, vocals); Tony O. Melio (guitar); Brad Vickers (bass); Robert Piazza (drums); Jim McKaba (piano).

All The Right Moves mc
All The Right Moves gofile