Showing posts with label Christine Ohlman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christine Ohlman. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Paul Gabriel - Man Of Many Blues (Feat. Duke Robillard, Christine Ohlman & Sugar Ray Norcia)

Size: 152,8 MB
Time: 65:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. I Feel Good (4:32)
02. Maybe We Can Talk Awhile (4:27)
03. Cold, Cold, Cold (6:06)
04. It Be That Way Sometimes (6:10)
05. No Finance, No Romance (5:08)
06. Blues For Georgia (4:48)
07. Second Story Man (3:54)
08. Man Of Many Blues (5:10)
09. Face Full Of Frown (3:34)
10. On That Train (4:51)
11. Just A Bitterness (6:03)
12. Angel (5:23)
13. Dear John Letter (5:33)

“This is one of the most special recordings I have ever done,” Gabriel says about the new album. “It’s being dedicated to my dear friend, Georgia Louis, the great 1960s Gospel and Blues singer; and it’s also special in that this is my sophomore recording with Duke Robillard producing.”

Man of Many Blues contains 13 all-original songs featuring Gabriel backed by an all-star cast of musicians, including Duke Robillard (acoustic archtop guitar, electric guitar); Scott Spray (a veteran of both Edgar and Johnny Winter bands), long-time Gabriel friend and band member Frank Davis and Paul Opalach (bass); Mark Teixeira (drums); Sugar Ray Norcia (harmonica); Bruce Bears (piano and Hammond organ; Lonnie Gasperini (Hammond organ); Howard Eldridge (vocals); Christine Ohlman (backing vocals); Mark Earley (tenor and baritone sax); and Doug James (baritone sax).

“One of the most interesting things for me while recording this record,” Gabriel remembers, “was using a very special Les Paul Guitar and Fender Super Reverb Amp exclusively that delivers a very inspiring tone, (in my opinion) somewhat reminiscent of the late Michael Bloomfield, my favorite guitarist.”

Both Bruce Bears and Mark Texeira are long-time members of the Duke Robillard Band. “Many other special musical guests appear on the album, as well,” adds Gabriel, “ including vocalist Howard Eldridge, an alumni of Matt 'Guitar' Murphy and The Blues Brothers Band; Mark Earley from Roomful of Blues; and Doug James from Roomful and The Jimmie Vaughan Band. Sugar Ray Norcia supplied magnificent harmonica, and the Beehive Queen, herself, Christine Ohlman delivered soulful backing vocals.

About Paul Gabriel:
Paul Gabriel is a Blues Music Award-nominated guitarist, singer and songwriter. In March, 2018, Gabriel was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Connecticut Blues Society for excellence in guitar playing, singing and songwriting; and in July of that year, he was also inducted into the Connecticut Blues Hall of Fame as a Master Blues Artist.

Over the years, he has shared the stage with B.B. King, Buddy Guy, Albert Collins, Muddy Waters Band, Mick Taylor, James Cotton, Robert Cray, Jaimoe, Gatemouth Brown, Buckwheat Zydeco, Matt Murphy, Johnny Winter, Delbert McClinton, Duke Robillard, Ronnie Earl, Toy Caldwell, Roomful Of Blues, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, The Band, Lonnie Mack, Sugar Ray and The Bluetones, Mark Naftalin, Arthur Neilson, Shemekia Copeland, Bonnie Bramlett, Susan Tedeschi, Christine Ohlman, Sue Foley, Debbie Davies, Candye Kane, Tommy Castro, Joe Bonamassa, James Montgomery, Gov't Mule, Orleans, Tower Of Power, Rick Derringer, Issac Hayes and many more.

He appeared on three Harry Chapin albums, played slide guitar on Rory Block’s Grammy- nominated album, Mama’s Blues, and toured with Michael Bolotin (Bolton). His last release, Paul Gabriel - What’s The Chance, was produced by Duke Robillard for Shining Stone Records and was nominated for a Blues Music Award in 2014. It charted on The Roots Music Report (for 22 week)s, plus the Living Blues, Blues Debut and Cashbox charts, reaching #8 nationally.

While almost always performing with a blues band under his own name, Gabriel has also been a member of several other groups that have made an impact; most notably Blue In The Face, The Mojomatics and HooDoo Band.

Man Of Many Blues

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Christine Ohlman & Rebel Montez - 2 albums: The Deep End / Strip

The heart of Christine Ohlman has belonged to rock n’ roll from just about the moment she could walk and talk. By the time she traveled from Boston to New York on an overnight train to make her first record at the age of 16, writing the “B” side on the way to the studio (that “B” side. “I Don’t Know Why,” was reissued in 2012 in the UK as a part of a Mainstream Records compilation All Kinds Of Highs on the Ace label), she was already a veteran of the local coffeehouse circuit around New Haven, Connecticut. “Bob Shad, the owner of Mainstream, flew down from New York City to hear the band; he signed us the same day,” she says. “We were in the studio practically before we knew what hit us recording a version of Al Kooper’s ‘Wake Me, Shake Me.’ The next thing we knew, we were on the charts and I was in heaven!”

Christine was a founding member of The Scratch Band, legendary throughout the Northeast for their incendiary and eclectic live shows, and her stark, piano-accompanied version of Dusty Springfield’s “I Only Want To Be With You” from their first LP was a turntable hit in the U.K. Beginning in September 1991, a portion of The Scratch Band reunited in the studios of NBC’s Saturday Night Live with Christine joining guitarist/vocalist/musical director G.E. Smith and bassist Paul Ossola, both former Scratch Band members, in the SNL band. Ohlman has now been the featured vocalist with the SNL Band for 23 years, appearing on both the 25th and recent 40th Anniversary SNL telecasts; in addition, SNL40’s post-show concert also featured her star turn onstage with Jimmy Fallon, Elvis Costello and the B-52s. At one show, the 11-member SNL Band, featuring in its repertoire a heavy dose of Christine’s favorite music—southern soul—took the stage (joined by Ry Cooder, Steve Cropper and Maceo Parker) as the house band for The Rhythm & Blues Foundation Pioneer Awards, a performance that was, in Ohlman’s words, “just about the biggest flat-out thrill of my life. We were doing ‘Tell Mama’ and I looked around to catch Steve Cropper’s eye only to spot Clarence Carter, who wrote the song, standing in the wings waiting to come on. I thought—well, it just doesn’t get much better than this” (although she admits that the 2012 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction in Cleveland, where she was part of the house band, 2003 Central Park Summerstage Tribute To Janis Joplin, where she fronted both Big Brother & The Holding Company and the Kozmic Blues Band, and the Bob Dylan 30th Anniversary Tribute Concert, where she sang with George Harrison, among others, edge out everything for sheer historical vibe).

Album: The Deep End
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:10
Size: 128.6 MB
Styles: Jam band, Electric blues
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[4:00] 1. There Ain't No Cure
[4:07] 2. The Deep End
[4:54] 3. Like Honey
[4:19] 4. Love Make You Do Stupid Things
[3:51] 5. Love You Right
[3:28] 6. Cry Baby Cry
[5:48] 7. What's The Matter With You Baby
[3:05] 8. The Cradle Did Rock
[4:52] 9. Born To Be Together
[2:46] 10. Girl Growing Up
[3:09] 11. The Gone Of You
[5:23] 12. Everybody Got A Heartache
[2:40] 13. Walkin' Down The Street Called Love [live On-Air At The Rock, 106.9 Wcc
[3:43] 14. The Gone Of You (After Hours)

The Deep End mc
The Deep End zippy

Album: Strip
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:21
Size: 124.4 MB
Styles: Jam band, Electric blues
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:01] 1. The Storm
[5:56] 2. Empty
[3:44] 3. Highway 61
[3:21] 4. Strip
[4:41] 5. Another Country
[4:38] 6. Daddy Rollin' (In Your Arms)
[3:39] 7. Bound
[4:56] 8. A Mighty, Mighty Man
[3:36] 9. I Can Only Give You Everything
[3:59] 10. Love And Tenderness
[4:37] 11. Jungle Twist
[3:36] 12. I Am Bound For The Promised Land
[3:31] 13. Tough And Tender

Strip mc
Strip zippy