Showing posts with label Aaron Moore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aaron Moore. Show all posts

Friday, September 27, 2019

Michael Coleman & The Delmark All-Stars - Blues Brunch At The Mart

Year: 2006
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:16
Size: 160,1 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Little Arthur Duncan - Knockin' On Your Door (4:34)
2. Michael Coleman - The Sky Is Crying (6:48)
3. Lurrie Bell - I Need You So Bad (4:20)
4. Lurrie Bell - Reconsider Baby (6:51)
5. Willie Kent - Something New (4:35)
6. Bonnie Lee - Sad & Evil Woman (6:06)
7. Steve Freund - My Little Playhouse (4:31)
8. Zora Young - Toxic (6:50)
9. Steve Behr - Memories Of Albert Ammons (4:53)
10. Shirley Johnson - As The Years Go Passing By (6:23)
11. Tail Dragger - Be Careful (5:22)
12. Aaron Moore - Wading In Deep Water (3:34)
13. Michael Coleman - You're Going To Miss Me (4:22)

More than 50-years-old and still going strong, Delmark records is Chicago's oldest jazz and blues label and arguably the most important one still operating. They've released stone-cold classics in both genres over the years and currently maintain one of the best rosters of Chicago talent in the field. You can thank Bob Koester for that; a nominee for "Patron Saint of Chicago Jazz and Blues" if ever there was one. He also heads up the world's largest blues and jazz retail store: Chicago's Jazz Record Mart. Every year during the Chicago Blues Festival, Jazz Record Mart hosts the blues brunch, where members of the Delmark blues family put on a free show (and brunch!) inside the store.

In 2005, Michael Coleman & the Backbreakers acted as house band, backing a variety of other Delmark artists in a great informal setting, and Blues Brunch at the Mart was recorded for posterity. Aside from the two solo piano numbers (Steve Behr and Aaron Moore), the Backbreakers back all performers giving the album a unified sound, even as the lead performers come and go. But don't think this all sounds the same.

You go from an updated version of "The Sky Is Crying" by Michael Coleman to the gritty blues of Lurrie Bell to the gospel-informed sounds of Shirley Johnson to the growling, extroverted Tail Dragger. The late, great Willie Kent takes a final bow as well. From the between-song patter, one gets the sense that this isn't just a group of musicians united by their label; this is the Delmark blues family, and the patriarch is Bob Koester (who turns in a couple of priceless introductions). Part label roster sampler and part historical souvenir, Blues Brunch at the Mart is a fine snapshot of Delmark blues circa 2005. /Sean Westergaard, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Blues Brunch At The Mart mc
Blues Brunch At The Mart zippy

Friday, November 29, 2013

Aaron Moore - Hello World / Boot 'em Up!

Album: Hello World
Size: 161,2 MB
Time: 68:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1996
Styles: Piano Blues, Chicago Blues
Art: Front & Back

01. Hello World (3:48)
02. What Did You Do To Me (3:23)
03. I Just Called (3:38)
04. You Got Good Business (5:44)
05. Keep Lovin' Me (4:37)
06. I Feel Alright Again (3:19)
07. Why You So Mean To Me (5:55)
08. So Long (4:50)
09. Security (5:54)
10. Searching For Love (3:53)
11. I Once Was Lost (5:34)
12. Castle Rock Boogie (3:07)
13. Lonely Blues (5:28)
14. True Love Is Like That (4:37)
15. It's All Over (4:57)

Rowdy barrelhouse pianist Aaron Moore is carrying on in the effervescent style of such pioneering piano pounders as Roosevelt Sykes and Memphis Slim. On his debut as a leader, Hello World, the longtime sideman to such Chicago blues heavyweights as Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter and Hound Dog Taylor offers up infectious shuffles, slow blues and boogie woogies in a straightforward, no-frills manner. Guitarist James Wheeler provides some crisp, tasty accompaniment throughout and is backed by the bare-bones rhythm section of drummer Robert 'Huckleberry Hound' Wright and bassist Willie Black. There's a sameness to the program here but blues fans who appreciate authentic Chicago-by-way-of-Mississippi piano playing would be well advised to pick up on this rootsy disc.

Thanks to Marc.
Hello World

Album: Boot 'em Up!
Size: 156,1 MB
Time: 66:31
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1999
Styles: Piano Blues
Art: Full

01. I Want My Baby Back (5:15)
02. You Look So Good To Me (2:42)
03. Boot 'em Up! (3:27)
04. I Thought Your Love Was True (4:24)
05. Bedroom Invitation (3:18)
06. Just Let Me Love You (3:54)
07. My Love Is Out Of Control (3:55)
08. I Can't Stand To Be Alone (2:39)
09. Hind Part Boogie (3:14)
10. Made A Change In Your Love (4:24)
11. Real Throw Down (3:18)
12. Wading In Deep Water (4:43)
13. You Came To Me In A Dream (4:13)
14. Lonely Mood (5:10)
15. Waiting On Your Love (4:14)
16. Confusing World (4:16)
17. Faithful Love (3:16)

At 71, blues pianist/singer Moore is only up to his second CD, but it's a very good one. He's definitely reminiscent of his main influence, Roosevelt Sykes, just not as bawdy. Traces of Jay McShann also creep in here and there. Moore wrote all 17 of these tracks, but you've heard them all under the guise of more familiar blues standards. The backup band is solid: guitarist James Wheeler is an expert at economical, sweet, tasty solos and fills, Bob Stroger knows the right basslines to lay down, and drummer Wilie "Big Eyes" Smith is a legend. When Moore gets on a roll, he stays there, as the majority of his tunes are easy shuffles with New Orleans flourishes. "I Want My Baby Back" is a lighter boogie with sexual overtones, "Hind Part Boogie" is much heavier and Sykes-like, "You Look so Good to Me" is in more of a Jimmy Reed style, while the title track is a jump-n-shout fire breather and "Faithful Love," with just Moore playing and singing, is similar to "Sunny Side of the Street." Not much soloing here, but there are traces of the influence of Count Basie, Teddy Wilson, and Earl Hines that come across in a compact approach that has no need for grandstanding. Slower ballads and shuffles such as the 12-bar "My Love Is Out of Control" and "Made a Change in Your Love" show Moore's tender side, but then he cranks it back up with "Real Throw Down," a down-home blues perfect for your next party. Moore's style is getting to be a lost art, and while a bit more diversity could make this fine pianist a true blues star, there's absolutely nothing wrong with what he's doing here. Recommended. ~Review by Michael G. Nastos

Boot 'em Up!

Saturday, October 26, 2013

VA - It Ain't Over!: Del... Celebrates 55 Years Of Blues

Size: 147,1 MB
Time: 63:46
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2009
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front

01. Zora Young - Til The Fat Lady Sings (7:38)
02. Jimmy Johnson - Cold, Cold Feeling (5:37)
03. Jimmy Johnson - You Don't Know What Love Is (6:49)
04. Aaron Moore - Wading In Deep Water (3:43)
05. Little Arthur Duncan - Pretty Girls Everywhere (5:38)
06. Lurrie Bell - Don't You Lie To Me (5:17)
07. Shirley Johnson - As The Years Go Passing By (5:45)
08. Eddie Shaw - For You My Love (5:00)
09. Eddie Shaw - Sun Is Shining (5:43)
10. Tail Dragger - Tend To Your Business (5:29)
11. Tail Dragger - My Woman Is Gone (7:02)

In 1953 a 21-year old jazz fan in St. Louis started a label, naming it after his street address - Delmar. Five years later, Bob Koester moved to Chicago, opened a record shop and revived his label (with a 'k' added). The blues catalogue he initiated with old-timers such as Big Joe Williams and Sleepy John Estes would accrue Magic Sam, Junior Wells, Luther Allison and many other up-and-coming names in Chicago blues of the '60s and '70s. Those greats are gone but Delmark lived on, to be celebrated in a 2008 gig featuring stalwarts of the label: Lurrie Bell, Zora Young, Eddie Shaw, Shriley Johnson, Aaron Moore, Tail Dragger, Little Arthur Duncan (who died soon afterwards) and the underrated Jimmy Johnson, heart piercing in Cold, Cold Feeling and You Don't Know What Love Is. Such time-honored songs symbolize Koester's role as a solid supporter of Chicago Blues - a blues rock impervious to blues-rock. --Mojo, March 2010

Delm...'s 55th anniversary blues bash at Buddy Guy's Legends on March 7, 2008 featured most of Delm...'s local blues roster, a Delmark Day proclamation from Mayor Daley and a Grammy Hall Of Fame Award for the groundbreaking Hoodoo Man Blues album. Live performances by Lurrie Bell, Tail Dragger, Zora Young, Jimmy Johnson with Dave Specter, Aaron Moore, Little Arthur Duncan, Eddie Shaw and Shirley Johnson.

It Ain't Over!

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Chris James & Patrick Rynn - Barrelhouse Stomp

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 52:59
Size: 121.3 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:26] 1. Goodbye, Later For You
[3:51] 2. Just Another Kick In The Teeth
[3:44] 3. I Feel So Good
[5:08] 4. Messin' With White Lightnin'
[4:24] 5. Before It's Too Late
[4:08] 6. A Fact Is A Fact
[3:15] 7. It Always Can Be Worse
[5:10] 8. I'm Gonna Stop Fooling Myself
[5:30] 9. Vicksburg Blues
[4:46] 10. Bobby's Rock
[3:44] 11. Take It Easy (A Tribute To Pinetop Perkins)
[4:48] 12. Last Call Woogie

Barrelhouse Stomp, Chris James and Patrick Rynn’s third album for the Earwig label, is firmly rooted in traditional Chicago Blues, yet the San Diego-based duo continues to evolve and take chances in the studio, as this collection attests in eloquent fashion. This is tough, real-deal electric Blues to party to, to dance to, to sit down and savor.

Chris and Patrick have recruited three of the finest Blues pianists on the planet, Henry Gray, Aaron Moore, and David Maxwell to take part in this project, along with a pair of Chicago legends, guitarist Jody Williams and saxist Eddie Shaw. That’s some heavy guest talent, and each of those Blues greats makes their mighty presence strongly felt on the set.

Even though their high-energy attack reflects their love for postwar electric Blues, Chris James and Patrick Rynn are decidedly of this moment and Barrelhouse Stomp lives up to its title and then some.

Barrelhouse Stomp