Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Paul Black & The Flip Kings - How How

Year: 1985
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:32
Size: 86,9 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: LP front & back

1. (Got To) Rockabye My Baby (4:29)
2. Ghost Town Gal (3:59)
3. Lies Lies (4:41)
4. Is Everything Allright (3:56)
5. Wee Wee Hours (7:47)
6. I Cross My Heart (3:39)
7. The Red Rooster (6:27)
8. Rock My Blues Away (2:34)

Paul Black is a bad guy. He rides a black horse and that ain't all. Sometimes he even got the bad attitude. Check out his lyrics on "Rockabye". The title sounds like maybe it's a lullabye, right? Wrong. Paul sings "I'll take out your teeth and I'll suck on your gums". Bring this guy home to momma and you're out of the will. But Paul also got the goods. He's a gunslinger, like Bo Diddley wishes he were. His guitar is on fire. It's all over the music, like grease on a ball bearing or like slither on a snake. This boy is hard to handle.

The band is real nice too. "Lies Lies" in particular shows that Billy McDuffee has no problems going to his left, and Fat Richard makes a tasty horn section throughout. I also want to say a big warm hello to my friends Ted Wingfield and Jers Baby, two guys that don't compromise when it comes to the blues. I highly recommend these tunes by Paul Black & The Flip Kings to civil servants, foreign dignities, members of the press corps and anybody passing through life and looking for an interesting bend in the road. /Album liner notes by Ben Sidran

(For full personnel details, see artwork included.)

How How mc
How How zippy

Floyd Lee - Ain't Doin' Nothin' Wrong

Year: 2003
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:25
Size: 126,6 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Ridin' On Empty (2:15)
2. In Trouble Again (3:27)
3. Red Sun (3:57)
4. Tell Me Baby (3:56)
5. Crack Alley (4:05)
6. Someday (3:08)
7. Bad Little Girls (5:23)
8. Am I Tough Enough (4:21)
9. Tie A String (4:35)
10. My Weakness (3:50)
11. Nowhere Is Where I Belong (3:22)
12. Sometimes I Love You (4:19)
13. Got Love Now Waitin' (2:37)
14. Shake Your Moneymaker (2:00)
15. Can't Stand To See You Go (3:02)

Hailing from New York City, the Floyd Lee Band was formed in early 2001. Fronted by 75 year old Mississippi bluesman Floyd Lee, and at his side the dynamic guitarist Joel Poluck who represents the next generation of guitar heroes, they have created their own sound and style without compromise. With the release of their debut "Mean Blues", they carried on the tradition of pure, raw blues and the album reached #1 on Blues Radio Charts around the world including XM Satellite Bluesville.

"Ain't Doin' Nothin' Wrong" is the follow-up to the sensationally good 2001 debut. Slightly different in style, but still a very good record containing mainly self-penned material, including a few great almost hypnotic slow tunes, but also three covers - two by Jimmy Reed and one by Elmore James.

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Ain't Doin' Nothin' Wrong mc
Ain't Doin' Nothin' Wrong zippy

Melissa Martin & The Mighty Rhythm Kings - Lucky Girl

Year: 2009
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:40
Size: 112,8 MB
Styles: Electric blues, jump blues
Scans: Front

1. As Long As I'm Moving (3:50)
2. Everything I Do Is Wrong (3:03)
3. How Can I Sing The Blues (4:37)
4. It's Allright (2:50)
5. Send Me To The 'Lectric Chair (4:23)
6. I'm Not Gonna Fall In Love With You (2:59)
7. Sweet Thief (4:35)
8. Nobody Loves You Like Me (4:02)
9. I Want To Shout About It (3:13)
10. You Break It You Bought It (3:01)
11. Big Time Operator (3:57)
12. Woke Up This Morning (4:12)
13. Don't Be True (2:01)
14. As Long As I'm Moving (Reprise) (1:49)

Melissa Martin is one of today's leading blues and swing vocalists. Longtime leading lady of the blues, Melissa's voice and performance simmer irresistibly, equally adept at rockin' jump blues, drivin' R&B, and jazz torch ballads. This band is energy. You won't sit still!

Personnel: Melissa Martin (vocals); David Sagherian, Neil Taylor (guitar); Robin Poggi (drums, vocals); Jeff Michael (bass); Paul Matecki (piano, vocals).

Lucky Girl mc
Lucky Girl zippy

Monday, June 29, 2020

Li'l Ronnie & The Grand Dukes - Do What Cha Do

Size: 97,8 MB
Time: 41:19
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2005
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Full

01. Long Distance Lover (3:25)
02. Wine Headed Woman (3:18)
03. Just Like A Woman (4:11)
04. Take A Chance (2:37)
05. Life Changes (3:37)
06. Love Trance (4:07)
07. Walk The Talk (3:04)
08. Just A Fool (4:41)
09. She Wild (2:35)
10. Sugar Babe (4:41)
11. Still Sweatin' (4:57)

Personnel:
Ronnie Owens: Harmonica, Vocals
Michael Dutton: Guitar
Steve Utt: Piano, Organ
Tommy Hannigan; Bass
Geoge Sheppard: Drums

One of the finest retro blues bands from the east coast. Produced by Anson Funderburgh they are delivering a nice set of eleven originals. Rooted in Chicago style blues and urban swing and r&b. Naturally enough, Ronnie Ownes and the band did not re-invent the blues. They album has class, though. It should be a treat for all lovers of the more traditional styles in blues.

Do What Cha Do MP3
Do What Cha Do FLAC

Mandi Strachota & The Major 7S - Pictures

Size: 94,2 MB
Time: 40:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Acoustic/Electric Blues, Blues Soul
Art: Front

01. Pictures (2:52)
02. Daredevil (4:32)
03. Government Vacation (5:55)
04. Bird (3:25)
05. Have You No Shame? (5:00)
06. Water, Weed, And Whiskey (5:24)
07. Don't Worry 'bout Me (5:40)
08. Love Songs (3:59)
09. Secret Tacos (3:39)

Atlanta has plenty of talented roots and blues singers. Mandi Strachota might be the best.

At least that’s the opinion of judges that voted her winner of 2019’s Atlanta Blues Challenge (for solo/duo act) sending her to represent this city in the prestigious International Blues Challenge held in Memphis in February of this year. While she didn’t win in her category, Strachota advanced to the semi-finals. She was also chosen Best Acoustic Artist (reader’s choice) in CL’s annual Best of Atlanta listings, recently opened Delbert McClinton’s Atlanta show, and is currently on a national tour to promote her third release, Pictures, which dropped in early March. It has taken years and lots of one-nighters, both with and without her band, but as of 2020, Mandi Strachota is well on her way.

What makes her path more difficult, but ultimately more rewarding, is her wide range of styles. While blues accounts for a large part of her approach, Strachota’s talents are far broader. Soul, jazz, reggae, New Orleans funk and especially gospel are also part of her repertoire. Her latest release, though it focuses more directly on blues, even features a musical saw (played by local musician Andrea Colburn of Andrea and Mud fame) on the opening track and Daryl Dunn’s flute fluttering on another selection, appropriately titled “Bird.”

Despite the three year gap between 2017’s Unleashed and Pictures, the recording process for the new disc went quickly. “After winning the Atlanta Blues Challenge, I was offered free studio time,” she explains. “So we recorded it all in four or five days.” Thankfully most of the songs had been written, some specifically for the Blues Challenge. Due to economics, schedules, and the fact that she is a full-time musician, Strachota doesn’t always play with backing musicians, though when she does, it can be with up to seven pieces. “I’m all over the board with that. Sometimes I do solo stuff, sometimes duo stuff … my tour is solo because I’m just not at the level yet that I can get bandmates to commit to traveling cross-country with me.” Still, she finds either method of performing rewarding. “I like both. The band (named the Major 7s — a witty play on their size and the major seventh chord) has so much energy, so it’s really fun to vibe off of them. But solo, I have more liberty … because I can play music the band doesn’t know.”

It helps that she’s adept on a variety of instruments too. “I play guitar and keyboard pretty regularly. Also a little bit of drums, saxophone, and violin, but I don’t play those on stage,” she says. Strachota started with classical piano when she was four but didn’t get serious on guitar, on which she was primarily self-taught, until she moved to Atlanta around 2003. It was around that time that she started playing professionally — sometimes doing private parties with Mudcat, then working with blues man Larry Griffith, and finally around 2007, getting paid for her own gigs. It has been a slow but steady growth from there.

The local connection extends to one of the finest and most moving tracks on the new album, “Have You No Shame,” written by the late Donnie McCormick, a legendary figure in Atlanta’s country and blues underground scene. The only non-original on Strachota’s albums, it’s given a feverish, inspirational gospel treatment. She first heard it when McCormick was playing weekly at the Northside Tavern where she hung out. “That was my favorite song of his. To me, Donnie was like getting to listen to Stevie Wonder in your living room. I didn’t understand why he wasn’t more adored. He was a superstar to me.”

Strachota’s churchy qualities come naturally. “My grandparents on both sides of the family were very religious, but very different. My dad’s side was Catholic and my mom’s side was Southern Baptist. I was in the gospel choir at (the University of) Notre Dame. We (she and her band) were doing a regular gospel show at Darwin’s before it closed.”

That’s just one of the eclectic approaches Strachota reveals on her releases. “I have many influences in so many different genres. This album is kind of the same (as her last). It’s mostly blues but there are obvious country, gospel, and R&B (and folk, jazz, and reggae) styles.” That makes it harder to classify Strachota’s music, other than tagging it with the somewhat vague “rootsy Americana” label. Songwriters she has been most influenced by range from Carole King and Willie Nelson to Bob Dylan. “They (the music industry) encourage you to pick one style and go with it.” She laughs, as if realizing the futility of trying to describe her music, or focus it in any single direction. “But my influences are so all over the board.”

There’s a joyful exuberance and vitality to everything on Pictures. It’s a perfect representation of Mandi Strachota’s diverse gifts. This is just the next chapter, though, from one of Atlanta’s most extraordinary musicians; one who has paid her dues and is finally getting the belated recognition she deserves. ~Hal Horovitz

Pictures

Grant Dermody - My Dony

Size: 121,2 MB
Time: 51:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues, Harmonica Blues
Art: Full

01. My Dony (4:14)
02. One Step At A Time (3:58)
03. It Hurts To Be In Love (3:33)
04. Springtime Blues (4:33)
05. Real Time Man (5:09)
06. Too Late To Change Your Mind (2:46)
07. Corner Strut (3:46)
08. I Can't Turn Back Time (4:01)
09. Great Change (3:39)
10. Morning Train (3:42)
11. Come On Sunshine (4:05)
12. 35-59 (3:57)
13. Hometown Blues (4:10)

Harmonica player Grant Dermody is from Seattle but traveled to Louisiana to record this album with producer and guitarist Dirk Powell, with whom Grant worked on his previous album, 2015’s Sun Might Shine On Me. That one was acoustic but this time it’s a full band affair, with Grant handling the vocals and harp and Dirk on guitar, keys and B/V’s, as well as engineering the sessions. Rhiannon Giddens’ rhythm section is in support, bassist Jason Sypher and drummer Jamie Dick, and there are guest appearances by Corey Ledet on accordion and washboard. There are eight originals, three each from Grant and Dirk and two credited to the whole band, two traditional tunes and three covers.

The album opens with Dirk’s title song, his gruff vocals suiting the traditional, old-school feel of the song which is clearly about a woman, so I assume that the word is some form of local term. There is then a run of the three covers: Clifton Chenier’s “One Step At A Time” mixes Jimmy Reed-style harp with Corey’s wheezy accordion; “It Hurts To Be In Love” (Julius Dixon/Rudy Toombs) has been recorded many times since Annie Laurie’s 1957 original, including versions by artists as diverse as Frankie Lymon, Marcia Ball and John Mayall! Grant’s version shuffles along with his vocals dubbed over his harp work and Dirk pulling double duty on guitar and organ. Sonny Boy 1’s “Springtime Blues” is classic harmonica blues on a tune that recalls “It Hurts Me Too”.

Grant’s ‘Real Time Man’ sounds like “Help Me” played by a Cajun band: indeed, the Louisiana feel is particularly evident on the six tracks to which Corey contributes. “Too Late To Change Your Mind” is a stripped back affair with Dirk handling the vocals and the rhythm section almost absent. “Corner Strut” is credited to the whole band and, with the assistance of Corey on both accordion and washboard, it’s a lively little tune before Dirk’s ballad “I Can’t Turn Back Time”, a song in which he looks back wistfully at how he was saved from a dissolute life by the love of a good woman, supported by Kelli Jones’ harmony vocal. There are also superb harmonies from Rhiannon Giddens, Allison Russell and Amythyst Kiah on the traditional ‘Great Change’ which develops into a rousing piece of gospel music with Dirk’s mandolin picking featured. Another traditional zydeco tune “Morning Train” marks Corey’s final contribution before the album closes with three originals: a funereal pace belies the title of Grant’s “Come On Sunshine” which again finds his vocal dubbed over his harp; “35-59” is the second whole band composition, plus Lee Tedrow, the title explaining the age difference in ages between the two protagonists: “She’s 35, I’m 59, you know I still got lots of time. Oh baby, I can love you strong and slow, come on over baby, one more time before I go”.

Closing track “Hometown Blues” has a military marching drum behind Grant’s lyrics about how he feel a stranger in his own town.

Grant is a harp player with a strong reputation among harmonica experts and there is plenty for harmonica fans to enjoy on this album. ~John Mitchell

My Dony MP3
My Dony FLAC

Jason Robert - The Death Of Stone Stanley

Size: 105,3 MB
Time: 45:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Acoustic Blues
Art: Front

01. Someday (4:24)
02. Soul Of A Man (4:30)
03. All I Need (2:34)
04. Mr. Bell (3:50)
05. Moonshiner (5:17)
06. You Gotta Move (3:27)
07. Good Vibes (3:26)
08. Sat Around (3:25)
09. Never Gonna Die (3:31)
10. John The Revelator (4:13)
11. Hereafter (2:54)
12. Woke Up This Morning (3:43)

Former front man for the Californian band Stone Stanley, guitarist Jason Robert has released his first solo album, a mix of seven originals and five traditional blues/gospel tunes. Jason plays guitar, drums and kalimba and handles all vocals; two of his band-mates from the new Jason Robert Band join him, Scott Longnecker on bass and, on two tracks, Jim McComas on lead guitar and harmonica.

As befits the title of the album, the palette is generally dark and sombre, not least with two of Blind Willie Johnson’s gospel tunes: “John The Revelator” adds Jim’s electric guitar to a slowed down, chugging rhythm though “Soul Of A Man” is played at a more sprightly pace, with Jason on resonator – a good version of a very well known song. Jason’s vocals work well, a touch of grit suiting the mood created here. “You Gotta Move” is usually credited to Mississippi Fred McDowell though it dates much further back. Jason’s version is stripped back and played at a slow pace, emphasizing the traditional Christian message. Another nod to Mississippi Fred comes in “Woke Up This Morning”, a funereal dirge which Jason suggests is about the death of Stone Stanley, now awakening on a distant shore – a metaphor for his own new career beyond the band? The fifth cover, “Moonshiner”, is an Irish folk song that dates back to the late 1800’s, the longest track here at over five minutes and the closest to a full band sound with Jim’s harp and attractive lead work to the fore.

The originals are all just Jason, sometimes with bassist Scott. “Someday” opens the album with a hopeful message about casting off the chains that bind us and looking to a future after our time on Earth, very much in line with the messages in the Blind Willie songs. Jason suggests that we need to stop worrying about the divisive tones of our politicians and concentrate on what we have to hand – sunshine, ocean, love – “All I Need”, indeed. The dark “Mr Bell” recounts the tale of a notorious mining camp boss but could also represent death, the enemy that awaits us all in the end. Similarly dark is “Never Gonna Die” which Jason sees as ‘a more aggressive way of echoing similar thoughts to Bind Willie Johnson’s “Soul Of A Man” and certainly the electric guitar work here has more attack than the acoustic tracks. “Hereafter” then contemplates what may await us in the afterlife and the result does not seem altogether positive!

Among these dark songs “Sat Around” is a gentle acoustic song about unrequited love and “Good Vibes” sounds positively light-hearted with its lyrics about simple pleasures set over an island rhythm. The phrase “just let the rough side drag, it just might smooth” is a quote from Jason’s grandfather that sums up the song.

This reviewer was not familiar with Stone Stanley’s music but Jason Robert can certainly play the blues, solo and accompanied. It will be interesting to hear what the new band produces when it releases a new project in 2020. ~John Mitchell

The Death Of Stone Stanley

VA - Come On, Little Mama!: Hot Stuff & Rare Tracks #3 (Last Buzz Records 1975-1995)

Size: 159,3 MB
Time: 68:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01 L.C. 'Good Rockin'' Robinson - The Sky Is Crying (4:49)
02 Freddie Wadling - Demented Perverts (1:37)
03 Hausswolff - Traktorn (Short Remix) (4:33)
04 Silent Rockers - Come Dance With Me (1:30)
05 Bel Airs - Peggy Sue (2:20)
06 Teddy Hill - Mean Mama Boogie (Short Remix) (3:26)
07 Jan Kerbosch - Highway Song (On The Run) (3:05)
08 Milton Lewis Band - Kisses For Once (Short Remix) (2:41)
09 The Underdogs - Allright? (2:30)
10 Max & His Walkin' Shoes - Dead Flowers (4:05)
11 Sky High - Voodoo Chile (5:25)
12 Dr. Zipp - Gatornas Lösning (4:10)
13 The Slickers - Shake, Rattle'n'roll (3:01)
14 Boogie Station - Route 66 (2:40)
15 Blues Mobile - Can´t Be Satisfied (3:45)
16 Emma Halmas - We Wanna Stay On (2:02)
17 Bert Deivert & Copperhead Run - Let The Buffalo Roam (3:22)
18 Day Warren - That Old Juke-Box (Remix) (3:33)
19 Rocking Barber - Boogie Guitar (1:28)
20 The Manish Boys Blues Band - Can't Fool Myself No More (3:11)
21 Feelin' Blue - Fool No More (2:40)
22 Wreckless - Come On, Little Mama! (1:57)

Come On, Little Mama!

Ruth Brown - Blues & Rhythm Series 5084: The Chronological Ruth Brown 1951-1953

Size: 310 MB
Time: 64:23
File: FLAC
Released: 2004
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Front & Back

01. Don't Cry (3:06)
02. The Shrine Of St. Cecilia (3:00)
03. It's All For You (2:45)
04. Withouth My Love (2:55)
05. Shine On (2:53)
06. Be Anything (3:05)
07. 5 -10 -15 Hours (3:15)
08. Have A Good Time (3:19)
09. Daddy Daddy (2:54)
10. Good For Nothin' Joe (3:21)
11. Three Letters (3:01)
12. Mama He Treats Your Daughter Mean (2:55)
13. Mend Your Ways (2:50)
14. I Would If I Could (2:43)
15. Wild Wild Young Men (2:31)
16. The Tears Keep Tumbling Down (2:57)
17. Ever Since My Baby's Been Gone (2:47)
18. If I Had Any Sense (2:53)
19. If You Don't Want Me (2:39)
20. Too Many Men (2:41)
21. Love Contest (3:02)
22. Hello Little Boy (2:40)

They called Atlantic Records "the house that Ruth built" during the 1950s, and they weren't referring to the Sultan of Swat. Ruth Brown's regal hitmaking reign from 1949 to the close of the '50s helped tremendously to establish the New York label's predominance in the R&B field. Later, the business all but forgot her -- she was forced to toil as domestic help for a time -- but she returned to the top, her status as a postwar R&B pioneer (and tireless advocate for the rights and royalties of her peers) recognized worldwide.

Young Ruth Weston was inspired initially by jazz chanteuses Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday, and Dinah Washington. She ran away from her Portsmouth home in 1945 to hit the road with trumpeter Jimmy Brown, whom she soon married. A month with bandleader Lucky Millinder's orchestra in 1947 ended abruptly in Washington, D.C., when she was canned for delivering a round of drinks to members of the band. Cab Calloway's sister Blanche gave Ruth a gig at her Crystal Caverns nightclub and assumed a managerial role in the young singer's life. DJ Willis Conover dug Brown's act and recommended her to Ahmet Ertegun and Herb Abramson, bosses of a fledgling imprint named Atlantic. Unfortunately, Brown's debut session for the firm was delayed by a nine-month hospital stay caused by a serious auto accident en route to New York that badly injured her leg. When she finally made it to her first date in May 1949, she made up for lost time by waxing the torch ballad "So Long" (backed by guitarist Eddie Condon's band), which proved to be her first hit.

Brown's seductive vocal delivery shone incandescently on her Atlantic smashes "Teardrops in My Eyes" (an R&B chart-topper for 11 weeks in 1950), "I'll Wait for You" and "I Know" in 1951, 1952's "5-10-15 Hours" (another number one rocker), the seminal "(Mama) He Treats Your Daughter Mean" in 1953, and a tender Chuck Willis-penned "Oh What a Dream," and the timely "Mambo Baby" the next year. Along the way, Frankie Laine tagged her "Miss Rhythm" during an engagement in Philly. Brown belted a series of her hits on the groundbreaking TV program Showtime at the Apollo in 1955, exhibiting delicious comic timing while trading sly one-liners with MC Willie Bryant (ironically, ex-husband Jimmy Brown was a member of the show's house band).

After an even two-dozen R&B chart appearances for Atlantic that ended in 1960 with "Don't Deceive Me" (many of them featuring hell-raising tenor sax solos by Willis "Gator" Jackson, who many mistakenly believed to be Brown's husband), Brown faded from view. After raising her two sons and working a nine-to-five job, Brown began to rebuild her musical career in the mid-'70s. Her comedic sense served her well during a TV sitcom stint co-starring with MacLean Stevenson in Hello, Larry, in a meaty role in director John Waters' 1985 sock-hop satire film Hairspray, and her 1989 Broadway starring turn in Black and Blue (which won her a Tony Award).

There were more records for Fantasy in the '80s and '90s (notably 1991's jumping Fine and Mellow), and a lengthy tenure as host of National Public Radio's Harlem Hit Parade and BluesStage. Brown's nine-year ordeal to recoup her share of royalties from all those Atlantic platters led to the formation of the nonprofit Rhythm & Blues Foundation, an organization dedicated to helping others in the same frustrating situation. In 1993 Brown was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and 1995 saw the release of her autobiography, Miss Rhythm. Brown suffered a heart attack and stroke following surgery in October 2006 and never fully recovered, passing on November 17, 2006. ~Bill Dahl

The Chronological Ruth Brown 1951-1953

Joe Lutcher - Blues & Rhythm Series 5075: The Chronological Joe Lutcher 1947

Size: 152 MB
Time: 54:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Full

01. Rockin' Boogie (2:26)
02. Blues For Sale (2:28)
03. The Traffic Song (2:41)
04. Society Boogie (2:37)
05. Shuffle Woogie (2:43)
06. Sunday Blues (2:55)
07. Lucy Lindy Boogie (2:25)
08. Strata Cruiser (2:44)
09. Bebop Blues (2:45)
10. How Fine Can You Be (2:39)
11. Mo-Jo (2:49)
12. Bagdad Bebop (3:00)
13. Sauterne Special (3:05)
14. Hit The Block (2:39)
15. I Knew You When (2:29)
16. No-Name Boogie (2:30)
17. Watch It Gate (2:59)
18. Joe-Joe Jump (2:34)
19. Walk Into My Heart (2:53)
20. Toodle-Oo (2:48)

Alto saxophonist and vocalist Joe Lutcher had R&B hits in the late '40s with "Shuffle Woogie" (for Capitol in 1948), "The Rockin' Boogie" (for Specialty in 1948), and "Mardi Gras" (for Modern in 1949). While he was a competent vocalist, his true forte was the sax. His repertoire mixed instrumentals with vocal numbers, employing an approach that generally fell within the Los Angeles jump blues-R&B style of the late '40s and early '50s, although he often added New Orleans accents and sometimes went into a straighter big-band jazz mode. He's not nearly as well known, though, as his sister Nellie Lutcher, who was a more successful hitmaker as a vocalist.

Lutcher was born in Lake Charles, LA, moving to Los Angeles in the early '40s, following his sister (who had moved there in the mid-'30s). He played sax with the Nat King Cole Trio for a time before forming his own band and signing to Specialty in 1947. After some success with both Specialty and Capitol (where Nellie Lutcher recorded), he joined Modern in 1949. Modern encouraged him to add New Orleans spice to his recordings, and one of those tracks, "Mardi Gras," was an R&B Top 20 hit, preceding the more famous version of the song by Professor Longhair.

Lutcher did some subsequent records for Peacock, London, and Masters Music, but left R&B for gospel music, forming the gospel label Jordan Records. It's been written that he was influential in advising Little Richard to leave rock & roll for religious studies in the late '50s. ~Richie Unterberger

The Chronological Joe Lutcher 1947

T-Bone Walker - Blues & Rhythm Series 5074: The Chronological T-Bone Walker 1947-50

Size: 147 MB
Time: 68:31
File: FLAC
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Full

01. That Old Feeling Is Gone (2:54)
02. The Time Seems So Long (2:48)
03. Prison Blues (2:51)
04. Home Town Blues (2:58)
05. Wise Man Blues (3:01)
06. Misfortune Blues (3:02)
07. I Wish You Were Mine (2:55)
08. I'm Gonna Move You Out And Get Somebody Else (3:00)
09. She's The No Sleepin'est Woman (3:07)
10. Plain Old Down Home Blues (3:08)
11. Born To Be No Good (3:14)
12. Go Back To The One You Love (3:06)
13. I Want A Little Girl (2:49)
14. I'm Still In Love With You (2:58)
15. You're My Best Poker Hand (2:57)
16. West Side Baby (2:48)
17. Glamour Girl (2:45)
18. Strollin' With Bones (2:31)
19. The Sun Went Down (2:21)
20. You Don't Love Me (2:56)
21. Travelin' Blues (2:22)
22. The Hustle Is On (2:34)
23. Baby You Broke My Heart (2:45)
24. Evil Hearted Woman (2:31)

This is the third volume in Classic Records' attempt to chronologically present the complete recorded works of Texas guitarist T-Bone Walker, this time concentrating on Walker's 1947 recordings for the Black & White and Comet labels, with his early 1950 work for Imperial Records tacked on at the end. The high level of creativity in play here isn't obvious on a cursory listen, since a lot of the tracks favor the same sort of mid-tempo blues shuffle, but a closer listen reveals a stunning guitarist who plays the blues with a jazzman's soul, and while Walker isn't a flashy singer, he gets the job done with enough conviction that you can feel the country dust settling in behind his urbane delivery. Check out the guitar and sax interplay on "The Time Seems So Long," or the big band boogie swing of "Strollin' With Bones" to catch a glimpse of the subtle range of this guitar player, who used the blues as a base, but refused to let it restrict him. Walker even strays into pop territory here, singing "I Want a Little Girl" with the assured ease of a crooner, only it still comes out all blue, and wonderfully so. Another highlight on this solid collection is "Plain Old Down Home Blues," which features odd percussion behind an inspired and interesting arrangement. This isn't an ideal introduction to Walker (mostly because his signature tunes, "Stormy Monday" and "Mean Old World," aren't here) but it makes a fine second purchase, and is a must for Walker fans and electric guitarists everywhere. ~Steve Leggett

The Chronological T-Bone Walker 1947-50

Hal Singer - Blues & Rhythm Series 5073: The Chronological Hal Singer 1948-1951

Size: 202 MB
Time: 67:58
File: FLAC
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B, Jazz
Art: Full

01. Swanee River (2:48)
02. Plug For Cliff (2:58)
03. Cornbread (2:57)
04. Rent Party (2:36)
05. Singer Song (2:26)
06. Rice And Red Beans (2:23)
07. Swing Shift (2:25)
08. Cooking With Cookie (2:53)
09. Blue Monday Caravan (2:56)
10. Jiblets (3:12)
11. Disc Jockey Boogie (2:44)
12. Teddy's Dream (2:26)
13. Beef Stew (2:32)
14. One For Willie (2:43)
15. Neck Bones (2:33)
16. Happy Days (2:41)
17. Midnight Jump (2:52)
18. Hot Bread (3:02)
19. Loose Riff (2:36)
20. Travelin' Shoes (2:35)
21. I Feel So Good (2:45)
22. Rock Around The Clock (2:57)
23. Fine As Wine (2:40)
24. Buttermilk And Beans (2:29)
25. Blue Velvet (2:37)

Tenor sax player Hal "Cornbread" Singer spent his career moving with ease between jazz, R&B and early rock & roll, and his hard, muscular sax sound is unmistakable, practically defining the words "searing" and "scorching" on key instrumentals like "Cornbread" (his first big solo hit) and its follow-up, "Beef Stew." Both tracks are included here in this collection of his earliest solo sides for Savoy Records, along with two late-'40s sessions with pianist Sir Charles Thompson and Chicago shouter Carl Davis, Singer's first side with Coral Records, and "Spo-Dee-O-Dee," his lone Mercury Records recording. Singer was never wilder or more dynamic than on these wonderful sides, and he shows remarkable versatility on pieces like "Disc Jockey Boogie" and his slightly slowed version of "Rock Around the Clock," even though his attack mode is roughly the same. The horn-blasts during the breaks in the latter song are nothing less than a force of nature, while his rough-hewed gentleness on "Blue Velvet," the final track here, is full of a kind of rugged beauty. This is a marvelous compilation, and an ideal introduction to an important sax man. ~Steve Leggett

The Chronological Hal Singer 1948-1951

Lil Green - Blues & Rhythm Series 5072: The Chronological Lil Green 1940-1941

Size: 141,3 MB
Time: 60:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Full

01. Cherry Tree Blues (2:57)
02. Romance In The Dark (3:23)
03. Just Rockin' (3:21)
04. What Have I Done (2:43)
05. Give Your Mama One Smile (2:33)
06. My Mellow Man (3:00)
07. I Won't Sell My Love (3:02)
08. Why Don't You Do Right (2:59)
09. Love Me (2:59)
10. Let's Be Friends Because I Love My Daddy So (3:02)
11. I'm Going To Start A Racket (3:12)
12. You're Just Full Of Jive (3:06)
13. Country Boy Blues (2:56)
14. How Can I Go On? (2:42)
15. Hello Babe (2:50)
16. If I Didn't Love You (2:48)
17. Let's Be Friends (3:18)
18. Because I Love My Daddy So (3:15)
19. I'm Going To Start A Racket (2:59)
20. You're Just Full Of Jive (3:04)

Lil Green was a fine blues singer who is often remembered merely as a footnote to the Peggy Lee story. The two women were linked by the song "Why Don't You Do Right?," originally recorded in 1936 by the Harlem Hamfats as the "Weed Smoker's Dream." Its composer Kansas Joe McCoy modified the words and changed the title for Lil Green, who recorded it with Big Bill Broonzy in 1941. Fast forward to July 1942, when the Benny Goodman Orchestra backed North Dakota native Peggy Lee (née Norma Deloris Egstrom) on a career-defining rendition of this disarmingly honest ode to the vagaries of human nature; by the following January, it had become a lucrative hit. Peggy Lee admired Lil Green's pungent, bittersweet, tough girl delivery, and her famous cover version carried borrowed ballast from this African-American woman who led a difficult existence and passed away in 1954 before attaining the age of 35. The first of three CDs devoted exclusively to the works of Lil Green offers 20 tunes recorded between May 1940 and July 1941. "Romance in the Dark" sounds like a cousin to Lonnie Johnson's hit record "Tomorrow Night"; "I'm Going to Start a Racket" is stocked with charmingly delivered threats, and "Knockin' Myself Out (Gradually, by Degrees)" has got to be one of the most revealing accounts of casual if reckless self-medication ever caught on record. Green portrays the substance abuser's state of mind with uncanny accuracy, almost certainly because she was drawing upon personal experience. Melodically speaking, both "Love Me" and "I'm Going to Copyright Your Kisses" are very similar to "Knockin' Myself Out." Four titles by Broonzy are characteristically wonderful; indeed almost everything the man ever came up with was warmly suffused with his personal blend of musk and magnetism. Several recordings from the second half of the collection find Lil Green comfortably languishing at the crossroads of blues and small group swing. This collection and two subsequent volumes, released by the Classics reissue label in 2003, 2004, and 2005, are highly recommended for people who seek a better understanding of 20th century popular music. The combined stories of Peggy Lee's success and Lil Green's abbreviated career are representative of a pattern of cultural appropriation that has characterized the U.S. entertainment industry since the 1890s ~arwulf arwulf

The Chronological Lil Green 1940-1941

Lowell Fulson - Blues & Rhythm Series 5071: The Chronological Lowell Fulson 1947-1948

Size: 165,8 MB
Time: 70:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Full

01. Night And Day (3:14)
02. Double Trouble Blues (3:35)
03. Stormin' And Rainin' (2:51)
04. Good Woman Blues (3:17)
05. Jelly, Jelly (3:01)
06. Mean Woman Blues (2:57)
07. 9:30 Shuffle (2:58)
08. Thinkin' Blues (2:55)
09. Tell Me Baby (3:13)
10. Fulson Boohie (3:01)
11. Tryin' To Find My Baby (2:56)
12. Let's Throw A Boogie Woogie (2:57)
13. Highway 99 (2:49)
14. Whiskey Blues (3:08)
15. Scotty's Blues (2:58)
16. The Train Is Leavin' (3:13)
17. Crying Blues (2:26)
18. You're Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone (2:37)
19. Miss Katie Lee Blues (2:32)
20. Rambling Blues (2:43)
21. Fulson's Blues (3:00)
22. San Francisco Blues (2:23)
23. Fulson Boogie (2:45)
24. Mean Woman Blues (2:47)

This is a collection of early Lowell Fulson sides recorded for several small labels in 1947 and early 1948, prior to Fulson's signing with Swing Time Records (two of his Swing Time sides are included here, "Scotty's Blues" and "This Train Is Leaving"). Although there is a charming and unadorned simplicity to several of these tracks, including the opener "Night & Day" and the fiery "Fulson Boogie," which pairs Fulson with his brother Martin Fulson on twin guitars, Lowell Fulson's mature sound didn't develop until he began working with pianist Lloyd Glen and alto saxist Earl Brown a little further down the road. ~Steve Leggett

The Chronological Lowell Fulson 1947-1948

Sunday, June 28, 2020

The Mighty Blue Kings - Alive In The City

Year: 2001
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:23
Size: 88,8 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Tryin' To Have A Good Time (3:28)
2. Lonely For Your Love (2:23)
3. Alive In The City (3:02)
4. Devils On My Back (3:18)
5. Will It Go Round In Circles (3:48)
6. My Heart Is True (3:29)
7. Ain't No Fun To Me (2:50)
8. Call Me Honey (3:04)
9. How Long, How Long (4:50)
10. Your Good Thing (4:19)
11. Gimme Love (3:46)

Ross Bon was part of the Chicago music scene beginning in 1992 as a harmonica player and vocalist. He recorded with artists such as Willie “Big Eyes” Smith, Buddy Scott, Pinetop Perkins, Junior Wells, Dave Specter, James Cotton and Kim Wilson. In 1995, he joined with guitarist Gareth Best, bassist Jimmy Sutton, drummer Bob Carter, pianist Donny Nichilo and saxophonists Samuel Burckhardt and Jerry DeVivo to form the Mighty Blue Kings. They made their debut performance opening for the late Junior Wells at Buddy Guy's legends in Chicago; and followed up with a weekly residence at Chicago jazz club The Green Mill. Later, the band toured the US.

The band's lineup for their 1997 release, Come One, Come All, consisted of Bon, Best, DeVivo on drums, bassist Brett Simons, keyboardist Simon Sweet and saxophonists Jonathan Doyle and Mark Colby. The band released two studio albums, Meet Me In Uptown (1995), and Come One, Come All (R-Jay Records). Together, they sold over 100,000 copies, with the latter having debuted in the top ten on Billboard's Blues Album chart.

They subsequently released three additional albums, Live From Chicago, (reaching #14 on Billboard's Blues Album charts), the holiday record, The Christmas Album and Alive In The City. The Mighty Blue Kings disbanded around 2001. In early 2010 Ross Bon formed a new band under the name, Ross Bon & The Mighty Blue Kings. /Wikipedia

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Alive In The City mc
Alive In The City zippy

Floyd Lee & Joel Poluck - Full Moon Lightnin' (Limited Edition Soundtrack)

Year: 2009
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:21
Size: 104,9 MB
Styles: Blues
Scans: Full

1. Nella (1:38)
2. Lunar Landing (8:20)
3. Ridin' On Empty (2:18)
4. Bird With A Broken Wing (1:48)
5. Down In Lamar (5:57)
6. Mean Ol' Frisco (4:08)
7. Red Sun (4:00)
8. Full Moon Lightnin' (3:54)
9. Can't You See (5:44)
10. Mean Blues (5:01)
11. Blues Is A Beautiful Woman (2:28)

A spiritual journey of two tortured souls... one seeking to discover what will make him whole again... the other desperate to hold on to what he already has. It has been over 60 years since New York City blues man, Floyd Lee, left the hill country of Mississippi and with his exodus he turned his back on a troubled childhood and a harsh life in the cotton fields. Abandoned by a mother he never knew, Floyd still wrestles with unanswered questions to his mysterious and painful past.

Now at the age of 73, Floyd and his band embark on a deeply personal journey back home to Mississippi to reconnect with the family he left behind and search for the family he never knew. Throughout, guitarist Joel Poluck steers Floyd's career towards musical success while his personal life spins out of control. /Movie synopsis by John C. Gardiner, Producer

Full Moon Lightnin' (Limited Edition Soundtrack) mc
Full Moon Lightnin' (Limited Edition Soundtrack) zippy

Blues DeLuxe - Bad Women, Good Whiskey

Year: 2017
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:04
Size: 97,2 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Front

1. Front Porch Blues (4:14)
2. Denny's (3:21)
3. Last Supper (4:24)
4. I'm Tired (Rickey's Groove) (4:27)
5. Hey Baby (3:58)
6. Walking Money (3:51)
7. Better When You Leave (4:58)
8. Highway 21 (3:30)
9. Will I Make It Home (5:34)
10. Bad Women, Good Whiskey (3:42)

Blues DeLuxe is based in Columbia, SC. They came in a close second in the Charlotte Blues Society 2016 Band Competition. Personnel: Deej May (vocals, harmonica); John Hartness (vocals, guitar); Ricky Ramsey (bass); James Casey (drums).

Bad Women, Good Whiskey mc
Bad Women, Good Whiskey zippy

Friday, June 26, 2020

VA - Popcorn Blues Party Vol. 3 (KMCD30)

Size: 134,8 MB
Time: 56:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Front & Back

01 Eddie Kirkland - Monkey Tonight (2:40)
02 Muddy Waters - I Won't Go On (2:56)
03 Sugar Pie Desanto - Going Back Where I Belong (2:27)
04 Otis Rush - Homework (2:37)
05 Jody Williams - Moanin' For Molasses (2:23)
06 Little Daddy Walton & Sons - Highway Blues (2:30)
07 Clear Waters - A Minor Cha-Cha (3:05)
08 Louisiana Red - I’m Louisiana Red (3:30)
09 George Smith - Come On Home (1:43)
10 Howlin' Wolf - Who’s Been Talking (2:24)
11 Buddy Ace - Screaming Please (2:31)
12 Willie West - Willie Knows How (2:36)
13 Nappy Brown - Well, Well, Well, Baby-La (2:37)
14 Magic Sam - She Belongs To Me (2:34)
15 Jimmy Nolen - The Way You Do (2:25)
16 Dave 'Baby' Cortez - Gettin To The Point (2:44)
17 Mecie Jenkins - Come Back Pretty Baby (2:36)
18 Eddie 'Guitar Slim' Jones - Well, I Done Got Over It (2:29)
19 Z.Z. Hill - One Way Love Affair (2:30)
20 Little Johnny Taylor - Somewhere Down The Line (2:13)
21 Jesse Fortune - Too Many Cooks (2:51)
22 Aaron McCray, Jr. - Inter Santum (2:26)

**Track 1 incorrectly listed as "Voo Doo Dust" by Mighty Joe Young.**

In an article for The Guardian titled ''Belgium's 'Popcorn: the last underground music scene in Europe'' musician and writer, Bob Stanley wrote ''the purity of Belgian Popcorn is its very impurity. R&B, Broadway numbers, tangos, Phil Spector-Esque girl groups, and loungey instrumentals, they are all constituent parts of a rare, and still largely undiscovered scene. It won't stay that way forever.''

Sadly the trademark ''Popcorn'' dance style (that reminds me in more than one way of the American ''Shag'' dance and culture still so popular in Carolina) stayed pretty much in Belgium. Everywhere else, the British ''vision'' of the Popcorn genre and dance seem to be the most popular version around the World (just like all the other similar genres I mentioned) and not the original and Belgian Popcorn. In the current ''international'' version of Popcorn (mainly focused on the gritty R&B side of the genre) the minor key seems to be almost mandatory and slower Northern Soul dance moves replaced the original hand dance that was actually a slower version of ''classic'' 1950s rock and roll dancing. On the other hand, this created a new ''buzz'' that seems to appeal to younger generations, while in Belgium the Popcorn crowd is mostly composed of people over 40. For strange that it seems only a few compilations of American and other R&B and pop music in the Belgian Popcorn style (also known as ''Oldies Popcorn'') have been released to this day. Before this series (of 3 volumes) none of them focused on blues (even if lotta songs included here are already regarded by many as ''classics'' of the genre) so I decided to change that. that with a truckload of boss platters straight from his old record box. This second helping of boss ''Popcorn Blues'' tracks anthology features more great tunes. Dig it! ~Little Victor (a.k.a. DJ ''Mojo'' Man)

Thanks to Nappyrags
Popcorn Blues Party Vol. 3 MP3
Popcorn Blues Party Vol. 3 FLAC

R.L. Burnside - My Black Name A-Ringin'

Size: 105,4 MB
Time: 44:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1999
Styles: Acoustic Blues
Art: Full

01. Goin' Down South (3:16)
02. Two Trains Runnin' (2:49)
03. Sat Down On My Bed And Cried (2:51)
04. Nine Days In Jail (4:36)
05. Long Haired Doney (4:11)
06. Hobo Blues (4:12)
07. My Black Name A-Ringin' (2:27)
08. Catfish Blues (2:52)
09. See My Jumper Hangin' On The Line (3:56)
10. Peach Tree Blues (3:41)
11. Goin' Away Blues (3:33)
12. Poor Boy (3:02)
13. Tom Wilson's Place (3:11)

R.L. Burnside has been playing the blues since the '50s, but providing for his large family (he would eventually have 13 children) and his love for his hometown kept him from supporting himself with his music until the '80s. These recordings were made in 1969 when blues musician Big Joe Williams led a carload of Adelphi Records filmmakers and sound engineers on a tour through the blues country from Chicago south to Mississippi. Burnside was one of the highlights of the trip, and the crew ended up setting up camp near his home for some time to record. My Black Name A-Ringin' presents Burnside in a stripped-down, acoustic form and shows his native north hill country style as well as some early influences. Each song shows off a different facet of his style: "Goin' Down South" is a hypnotic drone with short, repetitive rhythmic sections; "Two Trains Runnin'" features more of a traditional Delta style with its deep, sad harmonica; and "My Black Name A-Ringin'" shows what Burnside could do with a traditional song dating as far back as slavery. Overall, this album presents an interesting prequel to Burnside's recordings with Fat Possum Records and his experimentalism in the 1990s. ~Stacia Proefrock

My Black Name A-Ringin' MP3
My Black Name A-Ringin' FLAC

Neal Black & The Healers - A Little Boom Boom Boom

Size: 133,3 MB
Time: 56:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Texas Blues, Harmonica Blues
Art: Full

01. Don't Follow Me There (5:31)
02. Why Do People Act Like That (4:13)
03. All For Business (4:54)
04. Green Bean Swing (3:23)
05. Little Boom Boom Boom (4:10)
06. Never Been Lucky (4:36)
07. Shoeshine Shuffle (4:04)
08. Break A Promise (4:04)
09. Forgive Yourself (3:16)
10. Saints Of New Orleans (4:25)
11. Going Down Together (4:28)
12. Alabama Flamenco (5:09)
13. Secrets (4:27)

Personnel:
Vocals, Electric Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Resonator Guitar – Neal Black
Lead Guitar – Fred Chapellier (tracks: 10, 12)
Harmonica – Nico Wayne Toussaint (tracks: 2, 4 to 7, 9)
Guitar – Robben Ford (tracks: 3)
Piano, Electric Organ – Mike Lattrell
Piano – Magali Bourderon (tracks: 4)
Bass Guitar – Abder Benachour, Kris Jefferson (tracks: 2, 6, 7, 9, 11)
Drums – Dave Bowler (tracks: 1, 3 to 5, 8, 10, 12, 13), Natan Goessens
Percussion – Olivier Perez (tracks: 1, 2, 6, 9, 12)
Baritone Saxophone – Jürgen Weiching (tracks: 3, 10, 13)
Bells – Alain Brunet (2) (tracks: 6)
Tenor Saxophone – Tommy Schneller (tracks: 1, 3, 10, 13)
Trumpet – Jens Buschenlange (tracks: 3, 10, 13)

'A Little Boom Boom Boom' marks the return of the "Smoky Voice of Blues" with its 12th album for Dixiefrog Records. Recorded between France, Germany and Tennessee, this record shows Neal Black at its best. Fueled with blues, rock and even latino roots, "A Little Boom Boom Boom" synthesize as never Neal Black's songwriting skills with the presence, for the recording sessions, of some famous guests such as Fred Chapellier, Robben Ford, Nico Wayne Toussaint or Tommy Schneller. A must have of his repertoire.

A Little Boom Boom Boom MP3
A Little Boom Boom Boom FLAC

Blues Escape - Blues Escape (Feat. Johanna Lillvik)

Size: 67,6 MB
Time: 29:02
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. Evil Gal Blues (2:43)
02. That's How I Got My Man (4:40)
03. Pig Foot Pete (3:33)
04. The Dream / Marie Laveau (6:23)
05. Junker Blues (3:03)
06. Trouble In Mind (4:35)
07. Marie Laveau (Radio Edit) (4:01)

“Swedish singer Johanna Lillvik and blues band Hill Blue Unit together formed a new jazz and blues group called Blues Escape. On their 1st album, they respectfully pay tribute to 6 genre classics from mainly New Orleans based female artists. Herewith they have demonstrated that their common future lies in this type of music.“ ~Valére Sampermans

Blues Escape

Willie Clayton - Born To Sing

Size: 134,8 MB
Time: 58:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Blues Soul, Southern Soul
Art: Front

01. Slow The Music Down (4:47)
02. Changes (4:04)
03. Sho Wasn't Me (5:20)
04. You Are The One (3:52)
05. Slow Motion (4:32)
06. When I Go Down (3:28)
07. If You Let Me Come Back Home (3:51)
08. Breaking Down Inside (4:25)
09. Drunk On Your Love (4:11)
10. Hole In The Wall (4:02)
11. It's Ladies Night (Feat. Calvin Richardson) (3:21)
12. Everlasting Love (4:26)
13. So Sexy So Fine (3:49)
14. Can You Back It Up On Me (4:01)

Willie Clayton is a singer-songwriter and producer. Like many other black singer/songwriters, he began performing gospel music in church settings as a youngster and then moved into the secular field as a lyricist, producer, and singer. An active recording artist since the 1970s, Clayton’s career has endured almost 40 years and has spanned a repertoire in the styles of R&B, soul, and gospel. Birthed into an era of soul and R&B legends, a time when music was pure, lyrics had meaning, and artists had pronounceable names, Willie Clayton is now one of the few working artists of his contemporaries. Since the 1970’s he’s been crooning with the likes of Ron Isley, Bobby Womack, Sam Cooke and Marvin Gaye, yet now he stands nearly alone, facing a new generation.

Born in the Deep South (Indianola, Mississippi) during the days of segregation, Clayton, unable to find proper management or the success he sought moved to Chicago in 1971. Like many other African American artists in the 1970’s, the young singer ended up contracted to Hi Records in Memphis, where he worked with producer Willie Mitchell and the vaunted Hi rhythm section. Hi issued a series of fine Clayton efforts on its Pawn subsidiary, including “I Must Be Losin’ You,” “It’s Time You Made Up Your Mind,” and “Baby You’re Ready,” but none of them hit. Finally, in 1984, Clayton enjoyed a taste of soul success when his “Tell Me” (produced by General Crook) and “What a Way to Put It”, scored on to the R&B charts. Let’s Get Together, Clayton’s 1993 album for Johnny Vincent’s Ace record label, was a smooth soul-blues hybrid dominated by originals but titled after Al Green’s immortal hit.

Born To Sing

Jim Wynn - Blues & Rhythm Series 5070: The Chronological Jim Wynn 1947-1959

Size: 129 MB
Time: 48:05
File: FLAC
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B, Jazz
Art: Full

01. Fat Meat (2:34)
02. Put Me Down Blues (2:33)
03. Muffle Joe Shuffle (2:37)
04. Cold Blooded Boogie (2:46)
05. P.S. I Love You (3:05)
06. J.W. Bop (2:30)
07. Blow Wynn Blow (2:10)
08. Farewell Baby (3:02)
09. Goofin' Off (2:12)
10. Strange Love (3:15)
11. West Coast Lover (2:42)
12. Dog House Blues (3:01)
13. Hollywood Stampede (2:45)
14. Snug As A Bug In A Rug (2:31)
15. Down To The Ocean (2:38)
16. I'm The Boss (2:47)
17. Rubber Legs (2:20)
18. Let's Rock (2:27)

This is the second of two volumes from Classics Records collecting saxophonist Jim Wynn's complete recorded output as a bandleader. Mostly instrumental small-combo and jump blues pieces, these sides are competent and professional without being particularly compelling or distinctive. Two of the later tracks, "Rubber Legs" and "Let's Rock," have an early rock & roll feel, straying nicely into King Curtis territory. ~Steve Leggett

The Chronological Jim Wynn 1947-1959

Lloyd Glenn - Blues & Rhythm Series 5069: The Chronological Lloyd Glen 1951-1952

Size: 157 MB
Time: 65:29
File: FLAC
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B, Jazz
Art: Full

01. Sleigh Ride (2:43)
02. Savage Boy (2:53)
03. Jungle Twilight (2:40)
04. Day Break Stomp (2:27)
05. Yancey Special (3:00)
06. After Hours (2:59)
07. Honky Tonk Train (2:48)
08. Pinetop Boogie Woogie (2:29)
09. Boogie Woogie On St. Louis Blues (2:47)
10. Tickle Toe Two Step (2:28)
11. Angora (2:40)
12. Cuba Doll (2:34)
13. It Moves Me (2:45)
14. Night Time (3:10)
15. Ugh (1:43)
16. You're Not The Girl For Me (2:35)
17. The Sheik Of Araby (2:32)
18. True Blue Lou (2:55)
19. On The Sunny Side Of The Street (2:55)
20. Liza (2:56)
21. Deep Blue Monday (2:58)
22. Rockin' And Swingin' (2:37)
23. You Don't Love Me (2:55)
24. Tomorrow (2:50)

As an integral behind-the-scenes fixture on the L.A. postwar blues scene, pianist/arranger/A&R man Lloyd Glenn had few equals. His rolling ivories anchored many of Lowell Fulson's best waxings for Swing Time and Checker, and he scored his own major hits on Swing Time with the imaginative instrumentals "Old Time Shuffle Blues" in 1950 and "Chica Boo" the next year. Glenn was already an experienced musician when he left the Lone Star state for sunny California in 1942. His early sessions there included backing T-Bone Walker at the 1947 Capitol date that produced the guitarist's immortal "Call It Stormy Monday." Glenn recorded for the first time under his own name the same year for Imperial with his band, the Joymakers, which included guitarist Gene Phillips, saxist Marshall Royal, and singer Geraldine Carter.
Massively constructed guitarist Tiny Webb introduced Glenn to Swing Time owner Jack Lauderdale in 1949, inaugurating Glenn's five-year stint as A&R man at the firm. After Swing Time's demise, the pianist moved to Aladdin Records, issuing more catchy instrumentals for Eddie Mesner's firm through 1959. There was also an isolated session for Imperial in 1962 that produced "Twistville" and "Young Date." The pianist remained active into the '80s, often touring as Big Joe Turner's accompanist. ~Bill Dahl

The Chronological Lloyd Glen 1951-1952

Mabel Scott - Blues & Rhythm Series 5068: The Chronological Mabel Scott 1938-1950

Size: 164 MB
Time: 65:18
File: FLAC
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B, Jazz
Art: Full

01. Mighty Like The Blues (2:44)
02. More Than That (3:05)
03. Just Give Me A Man (2:46)
04. Do You Know The Game (3:03)
05. Elevator Boogie (2:35)
06. Good Lookin' Fella (2:37)
07. When Did You Leave Heaven (2:43)
08. Don't Cry Baby (2:35)
09. A Bippity Be Bop Pony (2:29)
10. Every Time Doggie Has Its Day (2:58)
11. Right Around The Corner From Basin Street (2:38)
12. Boogie Woogie Santa Claus (2:21)
13. Googie Woogie (3:04)
14. That Ain't The Way To Love (2:40)
15. Gee (2:52)
16. Give Me A Man (2:58)
17. Fine Fine Baby (2:30)
18. Have You Ever Watched Love Die (2:32)
19. Baseball Boogie (2:40)
20. I Found My Baby (2:31)
21. Disgusted (2:32)
22. I'll Always Belong To You (2:48)
23. Willow Weep For Me (2:51)
24. Subway Blues (2:34)

Mabel Scott was born on April 30, 1915, in Richmond, VA, and raised in New York City. She developed her singing voice in the Metropolitan Baptist Church and led her own all-girl gospel group, the Song Cycles. It was around 1932 that 17-year-old Mabel Scott began singing at Harlem's Cotton Club with Cab Calloway's Orchestra and the dancing Nicholas Brothers. After moving to Cleveland in 1936, she and pianist Bob Mosley went to England, where she made her first recordings in 1938 for the Parlophone label. Scott toured Europe soon afterwards and would return repeatedly from 1940 through 1942. The Second World War forced her to relocate, and she chose to settle in Los Angeles. This placed her at the epicenter of the postwar West Coast jazz and R&B scene.

Following a short spell with Jimmie Lunceford's Orchestra, Scott established herself by 1943 as a mainstay at Central Avenue's Club Alabam, along with master of ceremonies Wynonie Harris. She sang with a group led by Lorenzo Flennoy during the mid-'40s and soon began recording again, first for the Hub label and then in 1947 for Excelsior. In 1948 she toured and scored Billboard R&B hits with "Boogie Woogie Santa Claus" and "Elevator Boogie." Scott married her pianist, Charles Brown, in 1949 -- this union would only last about three years. She made a series of excellent sides for King Records in 1950, for Coral in 1951, with both Brunswick and Coral in 1952, and four sides for the Parrot label -- with King Kolax blowing trumpet -- in 1953. Touring Australia in 1955, she made her final recordings there for Festival Records backed by Les Welch's jazz band. Disillusioned with the music business and unhappy after her second marriage, Mabel Scott now returned to her gospel roots, singing only in church for the rest of her long life. She passed away in Los Angeles on July 19, 2000. ~arwulf arwulf

The Chronological Mabel Scott 1938-1950

Johnny Otis - Blues & Rhythm Series 5067: The Chronological Johnny Otis 1949-1950

Size: 187 MB
Time: 66:32
File: FLAC
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Full

01. I Gotta Guy (2:57)
02. Mean Ole Gal (2:37)
03. Thursday Night Blues (2:47)
04. Good Ole Blues (2:18)
05. Boogie Guitar (Three Guitars) (2:37)
06. Ain't Nothing Shakin' (2:29)
07. Hangover Blues (2:53)
08. Get Together Blues (2:38)
09. I'm Not Falling In Love With You (2:42)
10. If It's So, Baby (3:06)
11. Our Romance Is Gone (2:36)
12. If I Didn't Love You So (3:13)
13. Rain In My Eyes (3:16)
14. Double Crossing Blues (2:49)
15. Head Hunter (3:05)
16. Going To See My Baby (2:40)
17. The Little Red Hen (2:31)
18. New Orleans Shuffle (2:42)
19. The Turkey Hop (Part 1) (2:38)
20. The Turkey Hop (Part 2) (2:43)
21. Blues Nocturne (2:50)
22. Cry Baby (3:02)
23. Lover's Lane Boogie (2:32)
24. I Found My Troubles (2:41)

This release catches Johnny Otis just as he made the switch from big band jazz-styled pieces to the pivotal R&B-based sound that would carry him into the rock & roll years. Everything here is from his first year with Savoy Records, but unfortunately doesn't include his biggest hits from that year with the label ("Double Crossing Blues," "Mistrustin' Blues," "Cupid's Boogie"). While this is an extremely satisfying disc, those omissions (each went to number one on the R&B charts) make this a poor choice for a first glimpse at this versatile and innovative musician. ~Steve Leggett

The Chronological Johnny Otis 1949-1950

Little Esther - Blues & Rhythm Series 5066: The Chronological Little Esther 1951-1952

Size: 171 MB
Time: 57:47
File: FLAC
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Front & Back

01. Looking For A Man (2:44)
02. Other Lips, Other Arms (2:40)
03. Heart To Heart (3:00)
04. The Deacon Moves In (2:48)
05. Don't Make A Fool Out Of Me (2:51)
06. I'm A Bad, Bad Gilr (2:56)
07. Cryin' And Singin' The Blues (2:49)
08. Tell Him That I Need Him So (2:22)
09. Ring-A-Ding-Doo (2:55)
10. I'll Be There (3:03)
11. The Crying Blues (3:04)
12. Summertime (3:13)
13. Hold Me (3:08)
14. Better Beware (2:38)
15. Somebody New (3:11)
16. Bring My Lovin' Back To Me (2:50)
17. Aged And Mellow (2:46)
18. I Paid My Dues (2:59)
19. Ramblin' Blues (2:33)
20. The Storm (3:07)

Listeners looking for an overview of Little Esther's Federal period will find it on the 2005 Collectibles release Best of Little Esther. But for a slightly more in-depth look there are two separate compilations on Classics R&B, 2003's 1951-1952 and 2005's 1952-1953. Both find Esther in her jump blues/slow-burn belter phase, before she changed her name to Esther Phillips and explored genres like country-blues and soul. Though neither collection includes her earlier work for Savoy (for whom she recorded some hit singles), stuff like the Johnny Otis collaborations "Crying Blues" and "Hold Me" (both on 1951) or 1952's barreling "Hollerin' and Screamin'" and "Saturday Night Daddy" and the duet with Little Willie, "Turn the Lamps Down Low," show Esther in fun, fiery form. ~Johnny Loftus

The Chronological Little Esther 1951-1952

The Mighty Blue Kings - Come One, Come All

Year: 1997
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:31
Size: 80,7 MB
Styles: Jump blues, swing
Scans: Front, tray

1. I Can't Stop It (2:55)
2. Baby You Rich (2:16)
3. Go Tell The Preacher (2:55)
4. Little Too Late (2:37)
5. Put Your Hand In Mine (2:50)
6. Looking For My Baby (2:53)
7. What's A Man To Do (2:21)
8. Don't Let Go (3:02)
9. Got The Sun Shining On Me (2:30)
10. Long Distance Lover (3:38)
11. No Blow, No Show (3:40)
12. Green Grass Grows All Around (2:50)

The Mighty Blue Kings turn out retro-swing like the Cherry Poppin' Daddies and Royal Crown Revue, but there's a crucial difference - the group concentrates on jump blues, not swing, unlike so many of their contemporaries. They also tend to be more musically skilled than many of their peers, which gives them more blues credibility. Come One, Come All, the group's second album, still sounds a little stiff compared to classic jump blues, but it's still an entertaining record.

Lead vocalist/songwriter Ross Bon has a fairly good melodic sense, and the group has a lot of fun just playing music. Fortunately, that translates to a good time on record as well, and even if the Mighty Blue Kings aren't quite authentic, they have a good time and make sure their audience does too. And that's about all you need from a retro-swing, retro-jump blues record. /Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AllMusic

Come One, Come All mc
Come One, Come All zippy

Gregor Hilden - In Phase

Year: 2015
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:28
Size: 133,5 MB
Styles: Instrumental jazzy blues
Scans: Front, back

1. Mr. Magic (5:45)
2. In Phase (4:11)
3. On Flow (4:14)
4. Rock-Zabern (5:11)
5. Desert Song (4:44)
6. Springtime (4:33)
7. Blues From The Outer Side (4:50)
8. Chitlins Con Carne (4:44)
9. Naylor's Blues (5:32)
10. Greg's Funk (3:11)
11. '63' (1:37)
12. Fleetwood Mac (4:02)
13. Farewell Blues (4:48)

Blues, soul, elements of rock and groovy jazz are on the program of the guitarist Gregor Hilden. With countless appearances and a total of 12 CDs and a live DVD under his own name, he has been active on the scene for a long time and has now become internationally known. The specialist magazine "Guitar and Bass" has dedicated several features to him, highlighting the influences of Peter Green and Larry Carlton and confirming his playing with predicates such as "economical, flexible and elegant". This characterizes Hilden's music - a blend of blues, jazz and soul - because it is also extremely applicable.

Hildens playing does not depend on attributes such as "better", "faster" or "spectacular", but rather convinces with a soulful style, which is not characterized by a drawer thinking, but has highly individual notes. The musician makes this clear on his last CDs "Blue In Red", "In Phase" (2015) and "First Take" (2018). The electric guitar is the "voice" of the primarily self-written titles, all of which reflect the perfomer's diverse stylistic interests: blues, funk, jazz, soulful pop and R&B. The musical arch that is stretched by Hilden is extensive: springy, singing guitar lines meet crisp funk rhythms, swingy phrasing on atmospheric ballads and rousing grooves.

Personnel: Gregor Hilden (guitar); Martin Engelien (bass); Dieter Steinmann (drums, percussion); Thomas Hufschmidt (keyboards); Horst Bergmeyer (organ).

In Phase mc
In Phase gofile

Fat Bastard Blues Band - Fat Bastard Blues Band

Year: 2016
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:11
Size: 74,4 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Front

1. So Hard To Be True (4:52)
2. The News (3:50)
3. Transportation Blues (4:24)
4. Water My Whiskey (3:33)
5. Physical (You're So) (5:38)
6. Whoop De Doo (3:51)
7. Two Tons Of Trouble (6:00)

Two weeks and three rehearsals after their formation, the Fat Bastard Blues Band played their very first gig, winning the Triangle Blues Society’s 2009 Blues Challenge. Although they had little aspirations of playing past their first trip to the IBC's in Memphis, there was so much positive response there was really no choice but to continue.

The band was conceived in a moment of inspiration, but the individual Bastards have actually enjoyed a long history. Jason Simons (bass) and front man Carl Wetter (vocals, guitar) had been performing together since their college days in upstate New York. Ed Mezynski (drums), Tim Collins (guitar), and David Terrenoire (harmonica) had met at a local blues jam ten years prior and had played together in one band or another ever since.

En masse, the Fat Bastards music jumps up and shakes a room with performances that mark this band as a force of nature, a blue wind that rattles the trees like an oncoming storm, winning the challenge for the Cape Fear Blues Society in 2013 and now again for the Triangle Blues Society in 2015, all while having kept local fans dancing as if the floor was on fire.

Fat Bastard Blues Band mc
Fat Bastard Blues Band zippy

Thursday, June 25, 2020

Duke Robillard's Jumpin' Blues Review - Stomp! The Blues Tonight

Size: 156,3 MB
Time: 66:31
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2009
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Jazz
Art: Full

01. Stomp The Blues Tonight (3:25)
02. Do Me Right (3:34)
03. Three Hours Past Midnight (4:41)
04. Baby You Don't Know (2:56)
05. I Wanna Hug You, Kiss You, Squeeze You (5:02)
06. Frankie And Johnny (3:15)
07. Look But Don't Touch (3:51)
08. Playful Baby (3:36)
09. Million Dollar Secret (7:50)
10. Jumpin' The Bone (5:39)
11. Hands Off! (4:20)
12. Money's Gettin' Cheaper (3:52)
13. For You My Love (2:21)
14. Tore Up (4:02)
15. Ain't Nobody's Business (3:26)
16. Early In The Morning (4:36)

Since joining the Stony Plain roster in 1993, Duke Robillard has released an average of one album per year with the Canadian roots and blues label, and his sixteenth is a little bit of a departure: where his previous efforts have focused mainly on jazz and blues, this one is a celebration of the jump blues and R&B of the '40s and '50s, and Robillard sounds just as natural and is clearly having just as good a time with this repertoire as he always has on his previous projects. Highlights include a wonderful jump blues instrumental arrangement of the traditional song "Frankie and Johnny," an equally great vocal duet between Robillard and Sunny Crownover on "I Wanna Hug You, Kiss You, Squeeze You" and an absolutely brilliant rendition of the Ike Turner R&B classic "Tore Up." Slightly less essential is a rather mannered take on the old Wynonie Harris song "Playful Baby," on which Robillard sounds like he's trying to channel Harris rather than interpret the song on his own, but everything else here is really top-notch -- and part of what makes it great is that Robillard (an excellent guitarist but only a good singer) has the good sense to step aside several times to make room for the much more exciting vocals of Sunny Crownover. And on several of the album's best tracks, no one is singing at all. ~Rick Anderson

Stomp! The Blues Tonight MP3
Stomp! The Blues Tonight FLAC

Sahra Da Silva - #Blueswoman

Size: 82,2 MB
Time: 35:17
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. What Is On The Line (3:52)
02. My Babe (2:57)
03. I Wanna Love You (4:06)
04. Blues Man (3:23)
05. I Can't Be Your Lover (4:23)
06. You're Too Young And I'm Too Wise (3:49)
07. Honey, Please! (3:52)
08. Fever (3:38)
09. Bridge Over Troubled Water (5:12)

Copenhagen Sahra da Silva has been an established part of the Danish blues scene for more than a decade.

She has performed with many Danish soul and blues artists, including Mike Andersen, Thorbjørn Risager and the Blues Brothers Souvenir Show and has warmed up for the English soul singer Joss Stone and others.

Sahra has created a name that blends in with blues and soul and is up to date on June 25, 2020 with the album #blueswoman, which contains 6 of her own compositions, as well as 3 selected covers. #blueswoman is recorded in session with guitarist Alain Apaloo, pianist Lars Emil Riis, bassist Matthias Petri and drummer Andreas Svendsen and is mixed and produced by Noah Rosanes.

In addition to the regular team of musicians, trumpet player Hendrik Jørgensen, saxophonists Søren Høst and Søren Siegumfeldt, as well as GiRLS CLUB colleagues Sara Broberg and Louise Høegh also feature the album.

Not only in her own name can you see Sahra on the slack line, she is also a diligent feature singer, most recently with "The Cornbread Project" on the neo-blues album "Catawampus" which was released in April 2019 and was nominated for a DMA Blues. Here Sahra is in the international company with Danish Troels Jensen and Big Creek Slim, Irish Richard Farrell, American Mud Morganfield and James Harman, English Big Joe Louis and not least the brains behind the cornbread project; producer and bassist Laust “Krudtmejer” Nielsen and record label boss and entrepreneur Peter Nande.

The Cornbread Project has since been put into a compressed live version, with Sahra, Richard Farrell and Peter Nande on the vocal front and has just been nominated for yet another DMA Blues - and this time it is this year's Live Award.

Previously, Sahra released an EP and an album with the band “Sahra da Silva & the Jagged Soul” and in 2010 they appeared together in the TV program “Talent 2010” on DR1.

In addition to writing and singing her own music, Sahra also happily embraces jazz and the blues tradition of improvisation, both musically and in the form of mixed constellations, and works with a diverse range of musicians and projects.

Other side projects include: Søren Siegumfeldt String Swing, Simon Spang-Hanssen's Café Central, Alain Apaloo's Api Pipo, GiRLS CLUB and The Funky Fellas - a team of jazz budding stars, among others. Jacob Artved and Felix Moseholm.

#Blueswoman MP3
#Blueswoman FLAC