Showing posts with label Black Stone Cherry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Stone Cherry. Show all posts

Saturday, November 2, 2019

Black Stone Cherry - Black To Blues Vol. 2

Year: 2019
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 25:44
Size: 59,4 MB
Styles: Blues-rock, rock
Scans: Front, back

1. Big Legged Woman (4:40)
2. Me & The Devil Blues (4:15)
3. All Your Love (I Miss Loving) (3:34)
4. Down In The Bottom (3:20)
5. Early One Morning (4:11)
6. Death Letter Blues (5:42)

The approval rating for Black Stone Cherry’s rootsy covers EP Back to Blues in 2017 was high enough to warrant the Kentucky rockers giving it another try. Like its predecessor, the 25-plus-minute EP contains six reimagined blues standards. Playing these tunes are de rigueur repertoire for blues musicians; so here, the contrast in interpretation is a paramount guideline for evaluation.

The opener is a case in point. Freddie King’s “Big Legged Woman” is delivered with guest Yates McKendree’s upright piano vamps creating a bridge to the past. The rest, however, is rave-up maximalism: Chris Robertson’s snarling, overdriven wail above the electric guitar riffs and snare breaks as the rhythm section fiercely punches up the backdrop. Robert Johnson’s ”Me & the Devil Blues” sounds like it could have been done by Delbert McClinton during the late ’70s. It’s greasy and funky with McKendree’s clavinet driving the band as John Fred Young’s busy drumming gets frontloaded with hard-grooving breaks. Robertson’s delivery is gritty and soulful.

The real highlight, however is the cover of Otis Rush’s “All Your Love (I Miss Love).” Its shuffle and shimmy are informed by Fleetwood Mac’s original version of “Black Magic Woman,” with spiky, swampy, dialoguing lead guitars that break into a I-IV-V stomp midway through. Howlin Wolf’s “Down in the Bottom” is offered in double time and heavily informed by Cream’s version of “Crossroads Blues,” with a burning Hammond B-3 providing a punchy yet snaky vamp. Elmore James’ “Early One Morning” is, in its opening moments, a seemingly faithful read of the original before it breaks down into boogie-fied Southern funk & roll. Young’s popping breaks work in and around the pocket as Wells’ and Robertson’s guitars muscularly slice and dice above Jon Lawhon’s bumping bassline before the swampy, all-out boogie returns after the bridge.

The closer is a provocative reading of Son House’s “Death Letter Blues.” This arrangement, far from the haunted, pathos-laden original with acoustic guitar and vocals, is a grinding rocker led by spiky harmonica and Robertson’s testifying vocal. Its mood is at once defiant and mortified as Wells cranks up his six-string and lets fly with some of the most biting work he’s ever put on a record, with a dropout bridge led by McKendree’s popping boogie woogie piano framing a metallic guitar vamp.

Fans should gravitate toward the material on Back to Blues, Vol. 2 as a stopgap between Black Stone Cherry albums. These tracks are all firmly imprinted with the band’s swaggering sonic signature: It’s delivered raw, loud, proud, and stomping, with precious little dynamic variation. In short, it rocks. /Thom Jurek, AllMusic

Black To Blues Vol. 2 mc
Black To Blues Vol. 2 zippy

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

VA - Rockin' The Blues

Size: 153,3 MB
Time: 65:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front & Back

01 Kenny Wayne Shepherd - Diamonds & Gold (5:15)
02 Quinn Sullivan - Midnight Highway (5:53)
03 Eric Gales - Been So Long (4:45)
04 Walter Trout - We're All In This Together (Feat. Joe Bonamassa) (7:55)
05 Beth Hart - Love Is A Lie (3:12)
06 Gary Hoey - Dust & Bones (4:07)
07 Lance Lopez - Mr Lucky (Previously Unreleased) (4:07)
08 Simo - People Say (3:57)
09 Thomas Wynn And The Believers - Wade Waist Deep (3:33)
10 Supersonic Blues Machine - L.O.V.E. (4:29)
11 Jonny Lang - Stronger Together (3:34)
12 Sonny Landreth - Blues Attack (Live) (5:21)
13 Black Stone Cherry - Champagne & Reefer (3:43)
14 Ronnie Baker Brooks - Times Have Changed (Feat. Al Kapone) (5:17)

Provogue is home to some of the worlds’ finest modern Blues artists and the Label are thrilled to announce their first Rockin’ The Blues 2018 Tour featuring the exceptional talents of Eric Gales, Quinn Sullivan, Gary Hoey and now added to the bill as a special end of show guest is Texan guitar slinger Lance Lopez guitar hero extravaganza. The tour will be calling through Germany, The Netherlands and the UK in March next year.

To celebrate this, Rockin’ The Blues, the album features 14 stellar performances from Eric Gales, Quinn Sullivan, Gary Hoey, Black Stone Cherry, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Beth Hart, Walter Trout, SIMO, Supersonic Blues Machine, Thomas Wynn & The Believers, Jonny Lang, Lance Lopez, Sonny Landreth and Ronnie Baker Brooks.
Guitar whirlwind Eric Gales’ Been So Long is taken from his critically acclaimed new album Middle of the Road which was released early 2017, Eric Gales is a man on form and on fire right now. His fourth album on Provogue/Mascot Label Group (15th album in total) sees him at his most expressive yet, his rebirth in fact; it is a deeply personal and reflective record that echoes where he is in his life right now and he allows himself to open up and really flourish. The who’s who of guitarists are declaring their admiration for him; Dave Navarro (Jane’s Addiction) exclaimed that “How Eric Gales isn’t the hugest name in rock guitar is a total mystery”, modern blues icon Joe Bonamassa said he is “One of the best, if not the best guitar player in the world”, whilst Mark Tremonti (Alter Bridge) said ‘this guy could be the best player on Earth” not to mention an admirer in the shape of Carlos Santana.

18 year old guitar prodigy and Buddy Guy protégé Quinn Sullivan has been a music professional for more than 75 percent of his life. He’s shared the stage with Buddy Guy aged eight, Eric Clapton, Los Lobos, The Roots, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi and Joe Bonamassa, and he opened for B.B. King, who later invited him to play his treasured “Lucille” guitar. He’s also appeared on national TV, with guest appearances on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Oprah, Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, Conan with Jeff Bridges and twice on The Ellen DeGeneres show aged six and fourteen. Sullivan has packed some extraordinary experience into his decade-long career, Midnight Highway is taken from the his new album of the same name which was produced by multi GRAMMY® winner Tom Hambridge (Buddy Guy, Susan Tedeschi, Johnny Winter).

It’s just so right-with-the-universe that Gary Hoey’s 20th album, Dust & Bones is an exuberant fusion of blues and rock. After all, this accomplished and diverse guitarist has explored several styles in his career—hard rock, rock, surf, and prog, to name a few. The title track is a bonafide Hoey classic. In 1987, the Boston-born guitarist caught the ear of Ozzy Osbourne—no slouch at picking great guitar players—and almost ended up in his band (The gig ultimately went to Zakk Wylde.) Hoey scored a major-label record deal where his version of Focus’ “Hocus Pocus” brought him huge success.

There’s no doubt about it, the state of Texas is well known worldwide for its fiery blues guitar players, and Lance Lopez (also singer/guitarist for Supersonic Blues Machine) perfectly encapsulates that fire on Mr Lucky with some furious piece of fretboard mastery.

The album is awash with some of the finest blues artists in modern times; powerhouse Beth Hart is unstoppable on Love is A Lie, the Grammy-nominated singer/songwriter is riding a creative tidal wave, firing out acclaimed albums, hooking up with the biggest names in music and rocking the house each night with that celebrated burnt-honey voice. Arena rockers Black Stone Cherry returned to their roots in September releasing a blues cover record Black to Blues, here they explode in BSC style on Muddy Waters, Champagne & Reefer. Louisiana’s Kenny Wayne Shepherd prowls on Diamonds & Gold saying; Diamonds & Gold is a wink-wink kinda thing about how materialistic our society has become. It’s like, we should be living for bigger things than how much we can accumulate. If you look at the mainstream and what young people are led to believe they should work towards – it’s all just stuff. And stuff doesn’t have much substance. So that song is just to kinda inspire people to look for more in life.”

Nashville trio SIMO get funky on People Say, slide guitar maestro Sonny Landreth demonstrates his chops on this live version of Blues Attack taken from Recorded Live In Lafayette. Blues warrior Walter Trout shows why he is at the peak of his career with the formidable We’re All In This Together ft. Joe Bonamasssa. Jonny Lang returned with his first new album, Signs in 4 years in 2017 and Stronger Together is a soul crossover highlight. Chicago blues man Ronnie Baker Brooks, son of the late great Lonnie Brooks, delivers some fine blues, soul and funk with Times Have Changed ft. Al Kapone. Orlando’s favourite band Thomas Wynn & The Believers deliver an exquisite performance on Wade Waist Deep whilst Supersonic Blues Machine go from strength to strength and reach for the sky on the festival favourite, the hypnotic L.O.V.E.

Rockin' The Blues

Sunday, October 15, 2017

Black Stone Cherry - Black To Blues EP

Size: 48,5 MB
Time: 20:46
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Built For Comfort (4:24)
02. Champagne & Reefer (3:44)
03. Palace Of The King (2:58)
04. Hoochie Coochie Man (4:14)
05. Born Under A Bad Sign (3:14)
06. I Want To Be Loved (2:11)

The tradition of artists reinventing blues classics is almost as old as the genre itself. The Kentucky-based rockers Black Stone Cherry are the latest musicians to point their instruments at the blues with their new EP Black To Blues, released last week. The six-track EP features some of our favorite songs from four blues giants: Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Albert King and Freddie King all get nods from Black Stone Cherry as the band puts its own hard rock spin on each track.

Black To Blues is best embraced as one band’s interpretation of the blues. Black Stone Cherry doesn’t bring anything revolutionary to these blues standards–admittedly, at this point in history, it’d be surprising to hear a cover of “Born Under a Bad Sign” that gave Albert King’s original a run for its money. But for listeners that have dual appreciation for Black Stone Cherry’s hard-edged, full-bodied sound and Muddy Waters’ sultry, swaying style, this EP will be an exciting addition to their music library. “Champagne & Reefer” is one of the standout tracks, starting with a steady march before welcoming Chris Robertson’s lead vocals. Robertson’s wide vocal range is of great use to the EP: he delivers swagger on “Born Under a Bad Sign” and brings a gruff edge to “Hoochie Coochie Man” that recalls the deep tone of Waters’ original. The biggest change on a song like “Hoochie Coochie Man” is the expanded sound in Black Stone Cherry’s version; in addition to introducing a horn section, they also incorporate metal-styled bass riffs to build upon a deeper, darker rhythm section.

Black To Blues is for anyone who wants to hear a modern take on blues hits of old. The hard rock style updates the blues standards, proving that the stories and sentiments expressed in the originals are just as representative of the human experience now as they were when they were new. For those that are fans of Black Stone Cherry and those that are simply interested in fresh interpretations of songs snuggled deep within the blues cannon, this is an EP worth checking out. The Review: 7.5/10 ~by Meghan Roos

Black To Blues