Showing posts with label April Mae. Show all posts
Showing posts with label April Mae. Show all posts

Monday, October 21, 2019

April Mae & The June Bugs - Boogie Boo!

Year: 2019
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:57
Size: 133,5 MB
Styles: Roots, R&B
Scans: Front

1. Syncopated Boogie Boo (3:55)
2. Hoodoo Moon (4:15)
3. Hoodoo Rocket (5:56)
4. The Boogie Man (Tam Lin) (4:25)
5. It's Halloween (6:01)
6. The Headless Horseman (3:48)
7. Marie Laveaux (4:18)
8. I Put A Spell On You (5:32)
9. Devil With The Devil (2:36)
10. Who Dat Up Dere? (3:44)
11. Killin' Jive (2:39)
12. The Ghost Of All (5:25)
13. Nightmare (3:26)
14. Nightmare Reprise (1:50)

April Mae, was born into a family of musicians. Her father, Phil Iorio, played in a local band, The Three Holidays. Becoming The Renegades When her mother, local beauty pageant queen MaryAlice daSilva joined as lead singer. From an early age she was captivated by the spirit she found in singing. "It lifts the spirits; it's healing," she said. Founded in 2010, April Mae and the June Bugs the trio entertains crowds at festivals and clubs in North Carolina, Louisiana, West Virginia, Tennessee, Alabama and wherever else they can plunge into the American roots music they love.

Traveling to shows in a vintage school bus they refurbished and renamed, that's been converted to run on vegetable oil. The Boogie Bus sleeps three and has room for their many instruments and the supply of filtered vegetable oil, which they use as an alternate fuel. "Our aim is to be as green as possible," said Mae. On their travels they’ve performed with many musicians including Pete Seeger, J.M. Van Eaton, Eric Frey of the Red Stick Ramblers, and New Orleans’ Washboard Chaz. Supporting line ups with Wanda Jackson, Imelda May, Theresa Anderson, Cyril Neville, Rick Estrin & The Night Cats, Luke Winslow King, Gina Sicilia, Justin Johnson and Ben Prestage, among others.

Boogie Boo! mc
Boogie Boo! zippy

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

April Mae & The June Bugs - Sun Kissed! The Sun Studio Sessions

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:09
Size: 82.8 MB
Styles: Rockabilly, Electric blues
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[3:17] 1. I Don't Care If The Sun Don't Shine
[2:15] 2. Hard Headed Woman
[3:20] 3. It'll Be Me
[3:56] 4. Sun
[2:55] 5. Memphis Bound
[1:39] 6. My Boy Elvis
[5:14] 7. Straight & Narrow
[4:11] 8. It's All About The Boogie
[3:12] 9. Race With The Devil
[2:08] 10. Grease It Up & Go
[3:57] 11. Blue Moon

Recorded live at the legendary Sun Studios in Memphis with Rockabilly Hall of Famer J.M. Van Eaton (Sun Records / Jerry Lee Lewis ace drummer), Eric Frey (five time Grammy nominated upright bassist) and Matt Ross-Spang (Grammy winning engineer). "Sun Kissed: The Sun Studio Sessions" is creatively nourished by the inspiration of that exciting flux of genres that gave birth to rock n’ roll. Recording sessions occurred during multiple southern tours, during a time that emerged as a profound professional, musical and personal journey, the culmination of a dream come true for April Mae.

Recorded at that legendary studio where the tiles still vibrate with the reverberations of Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Johnny Cash just to name a few; Sun Studios in Memphis. Recording completely live, these session stay true to the recording techniques used by Sun Studio's founder and producer Sam Phillips in the early 1950s, utilizing vintage microphones and sonically warm analog tape. Inspiring a CD chock 'fulla lots of revved up Rockabilly n' Roots. Original ditties and heartfelt tributes to some of Mae’s muses, like Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Wanda Jackson (dubbed “America’s first female rock and roll singer” who Mae met as the supporting artist for Jackson’s Sellersville Theater show.)

Sun Kissed! The Sun Studio Sessions

Saturday, September 12, 2015

April Mae & The June Bugs - Grease It Up & Go! (Feat. Mike Mettalia)

Size: 127,7 MB
Time: 54:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jump Blues, Rockabilly
Art: Front

01. Memphis Bound (3:13)
02. Some Iz Good (4:47)
03. Grease It Up & Go (2:26)
04. The L & N (3:24)
05. Down From The Mountain (4:00)
06. Good Morning Judge (3:17)
07. Miss Celie’s Blues (2:38)
08. Brooklyn City (3:38)
09. Mistaken Identity Blues (4:53)
10. A Good Man Is Hard To Find (2:51)
11. Midnight Sun (4:00)
12. Quiet Whiskey (2:58)
13. Drown In My Own Tears (4:14)
14. Spoonful (7:59)

Apparently, after pulling an all-nighter, a few of the June Bugs ran into some of the guys from The Midnight Shift. Obviously, they hit it off pretty well. I can't recall if it was April Mae or Mike Mettalia who used it, but that pick up line of "I think we should grease it up and go" really worked. The result turned out to be a very good collaboration between the bands on the appropriately titled CD - "Grease It Up & Go" - by April Mae & The June Bugs with Mike Mettalia. Now I'm not absolutely sure that it happened exactly like that, but that's my story and I'm sticking to it.

The band consists of: April Mae on lead & background vocals, washboard and kazoo; Mike Mettalia on lead & background vocals and harmonica; Dave "Catfish" Fecca on Telecaster, Stratocaster & cigar box guitars, and background vocals; Christopher Horner on upright bass; and Tim Smith on drums. And simply because he's a maestro, Dave Gross deserves mentioning for his mixing and mastering expertise. Inside information also has it that on one of the tracks Dave jumped around the studio with a rattle on his ankle - thus the liner note credit for "multifarious rattle mojo". Of the disc's fourteen tracks, nine are originals and five are covers. Now let's go listen to some of this crazy stuff.

Since I always get excited when I'm "Memphis Bound", from it's name alone I just knew I was going to love this track. As it turns out, the band seems excited as well, 'cause this original is a no holds barred, roof raiser. April's all over the vocals, guitars are rippin', harps are wailin' and the rhythm is rockin' and rollin', and it's all fueled by some fancy percussion work with Tim pounding the hell out of the snare drum....and it's rim. This right here is what the term "making a good first impression" translates to. BTW, this coming January, the band will actually be "Memphis Bound" as 2016 IBC participants. If I were to offer any advice it would simply be "PLAY THIS ONE".

The title track, "Grease It Up & Go", is another track that totally rips, and quite honestly, you should get used to hearing that - or similar words - to describe these songs. The word relent isn't part of anyone in this bands vocabulary. This is one of those tracks where everyone is peaking and yet somehow they manage to take each other even higher. Since I need much more than two and a half minutes of this incredibility, I may just listen to this one about a dozen more times.

So with the opening line of 'here comes the "L&N" rolling on down the track' I'm pretty sure this one's about a train. I'm also pretty sure it's going to smoke like one of those old steam engines as well. However, since it's rhythm that's fueling this freighter, instead of manning the coal shovels, Christopher and Tim are frantically working the bass and drums and Mike's got that whistle blowin' like that of a runaway train. With all that going on, Catfish didn't get lost in the smoke. As a matter of fact, with his fierce guitar licks he's creating some of his own. And vocally, with somewhat inverse styles, April and Mike sound like a match made in harmony heaven. Another outstanding performance on another outstanding original song.

Uttering the words "Good Morning Judge" doesn't sound like a fun way of starting off the day. Yet, after a raucous night out on the town for April and a bit of tax fraud by Mike, that's exactly what they found themselves doing. What is fun is listening to them try to talk.....make that sing their way out of it - first April, then Mike, then in tandem. I'm not sure about Mike, but I'm betting with all that sass she's tossing at him, the judge just may cut April some slack. Another fast paced, frolicking number with great harp and guitar leads and more intense rhythm led by Christopher punishing that big ol' standup bass.

"Miss Celie's Blues" could have also been called Miss April's Blues, because this one is all her. If April's voice was a calendar it would probably be one from the early 1940's. Her unique sound, unique style and unique sassitude definitely comes from old school influences.

I'd be disowned back in the hood if I didn't have something to say about a track called "Brooklyn City", so here ya go. This one's loaded with more of what's basically typical for this talented bunch: phenomenal lead and harmony background vocals, extremely hard driving rhythm and gutsy guitar leads. Since it's another original, I'm thinking they just might include this one on their IBC set list. I'm also thinking this is the kind of stuff that will take them to the next round.

With everyone behind her in a subtle, yet somehow commanding groove, April absolutely shines on this slow sultry number called "Midnight Sun". If they haven't yet submitted this track to the movie industry I strongly suggest Mike and April do just that. This has being the score for a mystery movie written all over it.

Other tracks on "Grease It Up & Go" include: "Some Iz Good", "Down From The Mountain", "Mistaken Identity Blues", "A Good Man Is Hard To Find", "Quiet Whiskey", "Drown In My Own Tears", and "Spoonful". ~Peter "Blewzzman" Lauro

Grease It Up & Go!