Showing posts with label Grady Champion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grady Champion. Show all posts

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Grady Champion - Steppin' In: A Tribute To Z.Z. Hill

Size: 103.0 MB
Time: 44:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Soul
Art: Front

01. Down Home Blues (4:26)
02. Shade Tree Mechanic (2:56)
03. Someone Else Is Steppin' In (3:38)
04. Bump And Grind (4:14)
05. I'm A Blues Man (3:39)
06. Open House At My House (4:43)
07. Who You Been Giving It To (2:58)
08. Three Into Two Won't Go (2:53)
09. Cheating In The Next Room (3:36)
10. Right Arm For Your Love (3:31)
11. Everybody Knows About My Good Thing (4:26)
12. When It Rains It Pours (3:33)


Grady Champion wastes no time getting to the heart of the matter by opening his latest release with ‘Down Home Blues,’ a song that has been called the best-known blues song of the 1980s. Champion’s 11th album, “Steppin’ In,” is a loving tribute to fellow Malaco Records’ recording artist, the late great Z.Z. Hill, who is best known for his recordings in the 1970s and early 1980s, including his 1982 album for the label, “Down Home,” which stayed on the Billboard soul album chart for nearly two years. Champion is a torch bearer for the combination of authentic Mississippi blues and contemporary soul styling devised by Z.Z. Hill that helped to restore the blues to modern black consciousness.
The collection of a dozen specially chosen tracks was recorded in Jackson, Mississippi with Champion backed by his veteran road band of guitarist Will Wesley, Frederick Demby Sr. on bass, Sam Brady on keys and Edward Rayshad Smith on drums, for that gritty live in the room feel. Special guests include fellow IBC winner Eddie Cotton, The Jackson Horns and home girls Jewel Bass and Lahlah Devine suppling the backing vocals. The group gives ‘Shade Tree Mechanic,’ from Hill’s 1983 album, “I’m A Blues Man,” the full Wang Dang Doodle treatment by swinging the riff a bit more and, of course, adding Champion’s vaunted blues harp. The Jackson Horns join the party on the classic blues of tough love ‘Someone Else Is Steppin’ In,’ providing melodic flourishes under Champion’s pleading vocal. Cotton brings in his guitar to join Grady’s call for the band slow down on the heavy-duty track ‘Bump And Grind,’ so he can get on the dance floor with the girls like his hero used to do. Grady then steps right into Z.Z. Hill’s shoes for the autobiographic ‘I’m A Blues Man,’ perfectly replicating his every move.

Wesley’s lead guitar shines on the tale of a man done wrong ‘Open House At My House,’ and another soul blues prototype from Hill’s 1982 album, “The Rhythm And The Blues,” ‘Who You Been Giving It To,’ is covered with detailed loving care. The horn fueled ‘Three Into Two Won’t Go,’ is a sweet bit of Memphis Soul, and the collection would not be complete without Hill’s first hit for the Malaco label ‘Cheating In The Next Room.’ The hymn of endless devotion, ‘Right Arm For Your Love,’ is delivered with new energy and Cotton fires off the opening lead line to another signature track from “Down Home,” the fiery blues ’Everybody Knows About My Good Thing.’ Texas blues and soul singer/songwriter Bobby Patterson wrote ‘When It Rains It Pours’ for Hill in 1982 not knowing the world would lose him just two short years later. Champion closes the set delivering this prophetic deep cut with reverence and fortitude.

Champion dedicates the album to Hill’s biggest fan, his own mother Jerry Dean Champion, who schooled him in the artistry of her favorite bluesman by playing the records of Z.Z. Hill on their farm in Canton, Mississippi. The youngest of 28 children, Grady Champion has had many teachers and mentors in his life and with “Steppin’ In” he pays tribute to the two closest to his heart. Rick J Bowen

Steppin' In

Saturday, July 21, 2018

Grady Champion - 2 Days Short Of A Week

Year: 2001
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:49
Size: 96,7 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Wine And Women (4:27)
2. Brother, Brother (3:36)
3. Lady Luck (5:26)
4. Honeybee (3:27)
5. Children Of The Corn (3:45)
6. Policeman Blues (4:32)
7. When A Woman's Fed Up (4:42)
8. Love Is My Middle Name (3:33)
9. Nothing I Can Do (4:37)
10. Stop Chasing Me (3:41)

The dynamic young showman Grady Champion combines rough, raspy vocals, raucous Delta-styled harmonica playing and just the right touch of swagger on 2 Days Short of a Week, his real deal follow up to 1999’s impressive debut, Payin’ for My Sins. A prolific songwriter with his finger firmly on the pulse of everyday life, Champion sings of triumph and pain (“Nothing I Can Do”), romance (“Honeybee”), brotherly love (“Brother, Brother”) and fickle fate (“Lady Luck”).

And, like his last one, Grady also mixes in a couple of hard-hitting socio-political messages on the album like “Children of the Corn,” which focuses on the epidemic of children killing children, and “Policeman Blues,” which is a firsthand account of his own experience with racial profiling. On a lighter note, he reveals a playful side on the rollicking down-home party number “Wine and Women.” /Bill Milkowski, JazzTimes

2 Days Short Of A Week mc
2 Days Short Of A Week gofile

Friday, February 9, 2018

Various - Mississippi's Music

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:22
Size: 154.2 MB
Styles: Delta blues, Gospel blues, Electric blues
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[5:16] 1. Z.Z. Hill - Down Home Blues
[3:00] 2. King Floyd - Groove Me
[5:14] 3. The Sensational Nightingales - Saints Hold On
[4:07] 4. Bobby Blue Bland - Members Only
[3:40] 5. Dorothy Moore - Misty Blue
[4:32] 6. Grady Champion - White Boy With The Blues
[3:41] 7. Keri Leigh - Here's Your Mop Mr. Johnson
[4:10] 8. The Canton Spirituals - All Of My Burdens
[4:14] 9. Little Milton - The Blues Is Alright
[4:26] 10. Bobby Rush - Scootchin
[5:28] 11. Mississippi Mass Choir - Your Grace And Mercy
[3:37] 12. Mckinley Mitchell - The End Of The Rainbow
[3:39] 13. The Jackson Southernaires - I Need You To Hold My Hand
[4:38] 14. Johnnie Taylor - I Found A Love
[4:38] 15. Denise Lasalle - Your Husband Is Cheating On Us
[2:56] 16. The Beat Daddys - Mississippi

The blues and Mississippi are synonymous to music lovers. The repertoire of any blues or rock band is full of songs, guitar licks, and vocal inflections borrowed from Mississippi bluesmen – from Robert Johnson, Charley Patton, Tommy Johnson, and Son House to Skip James, Mississippi John Hurt, Mississippi Fred McDowell, Sonny Boy Williamson, Big Joe Williams, Bukka White, and Furry Lewis – just to mention some.

As far as historians can tell, the blues were born in the Mississippi Delta, an elaboration on work chants, “sorrow” slave songs, and the lyrical and haunting “field hollers.” As early as the American Civil War, white soldiers noted a different music created by black soldiers – songs about marching and other toils of war in which they “extemporized a half-dissonant middle part.” These songs were direct precursors to the blues, if not the real thing already.

Mississippi's Music mc
Mississippi's Music zippy

Monday, September 19, 2016

Grady Champion - One Of A Kind

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:56
Size: 118.9 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[4:14] 1. Bump And Grind
[3:31] 2. Heels And Hips
[4:17] 3. House Party
[5:17] 4. Life Support
[3:48] 5. Leave Here Running
[3:43] 6. Move Something
[4:42] 7. One Of A Kind
[3:25] 8. Stone In My Path
[4:16] 9. Thin Line
[5:27] 10. What A Woman
[4:01] 11. When I'm Gone
[5:10] 12. Gc Boogie

Some guys have that knack, that rare bang to take it, shake it and make you sit up and take notice. With One of a Kind, Mississippi’s Grady Champion sure shows his right to stake a claim in the top tier of international bluesmen with a hard-edged thump of his own.

Grammy winner Champion shows himself to be a writer of subtlety and strength, while his fretwork is fiery, sure-footed and compelling. This is a guy who can play the blues without hesitation or fear, always pushing the edges, with riffs, licks and runs that rip along at real pace without ever loosing the all-important need for feeling and get-down-there groove. Sure there are hints and whispers of Buddy Guy, Hendrix and the usual blues gangsters in the mix, but Champion succeeds in crafting his own soulful sound with this, his tenth album release. This is hard, kick-ass, rocking-blues played by a real impassioned performer, who knows how to boogie and thrash in a full-on, ballsy way.

I personally was a bit disappointed with Champion’s previous offering Bootleg Whiskey, an album I had expected would, should and could have been better. With this release One of a Kind, he has ripped ahead of the myriad others plying the blues trade and produced the album that could and surely should secure his place at the top table. ~Iain Patience

One Of A Kind mc
One Of A Kind zippy

Sunday, August 21, 2016

Grady Champion - Payin' For My Sins

Year: 1999
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:08
Size: 124,3 MB
Styles: Harmonica blues, soul-blues
Scans: Full

1. I'm Smilin' Again (4:09)
2. You Got Some Explaining To Do (4:15)
3. Good As New (4:06)
4. She's Some Kind Of Wonderful (3:27)
5. My Rooster Is King (3:39)
6. Goin' Down Slow (6:13)
7. Payin' For My Sins (3:41)
8. Troubled Mind (4:42)
9. Let Me Be (3:58)
10. Roberta (4:05)
11. Don't Start Me To Talkin' (3:56)
12. Ain't No Love In The Heart Of The City (4:14)
13. Dreamin' (3:37)

Though it starts off slow, the second album from singer and harmonica player Grady Champion packs a powerful punch once it gets going. Solid songwriting and a steady backing band add strength to "My Rooster Is King", "Troubled Mind" (which features some great drums-and-harp interplay), and "Let Me Be". Champion also does right by his choice of cover material, adapting and updating "Goin' Down Slow" and infusing plenty of energy into "She's Some Kind of Wonderful".

Far from restricting himself to a single style, Champion handles traditional stylings ("Roberta") and soul-inflected grooves ("Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City") with equal ease. In a time when there's a dearth of young harmonica players to follow in the footsteps of the great Sonny Boy Williamson and Little Walter, Payin' For My Sins shows great promise. /Genevieve Williams, Amazon

Payin' For My Sins mc
Payin' For My Sins gofile

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Grady Champion - 2 albums: Bootleg Whiskey / Tough Times Don't Last

Album: Bootleg Whiskey
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 45:40
Size: 104.6 MB
Styles: Mississippi blues
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. Beg, Borrow, Steal
[3:44] 2. Bootleg Whiskey
[4:32] 3. Don't Waste My Time
[4:29] 4. Home Alone
[4:38] 5. Ten Dollars
[4:45] 6. South Side
[4:24] 7. Who Dat
[3:15] 8. Here We Go Y'all
[3:59] 9. I Tripped And Fell In Love
[3:22] 10. Mr. Right
[5:26] 11. White Boy With The Blues

Canton, Mississippi native Grady Champion burst on to the blues scene in a big way when his band won the 26th Annual International Blues Challenge in Memphis, Tennessee back in 2010. Since that time, the singer, guitarist and Sonny Boy Williamson-influenced harmonica player has been releasing albums and touring the blues circuit.

His latest offering, Bootleg Whiskey, on the Malaco label is a return to the rhythm & blues and soul that seductively permeated the airwaves decades ago and it is a welcome return indeed. Malaco founder and producer of Bootleg Whiskey, Tommy Couch, Jr. has pulled out all the stops, bringing in songs written by his stable of legendary songwriters. Larry Grisham, Darrell Luster, Ernie Johnson, Jerry Strickland and the legendary, late George Jackson all contributed and Champion, himself, wrote or co-wrote five of the tracks. ~JD Nash

Bootleg Whiskey mc
Bootleg Whiskey zippy

Album: Tough Times Don't Last
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 49:03
Size: 112.3 MB
Styles: Soul blues
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[3:25] 1. My Time Baby
[3:45] 2. Missing You
[3:18] 3. Mississippi Pride
[4:32] 4. Trust Yourself
[4:11] 5. Broken Down Cadillac
[4:02] 6. Glory Train
[4:30] 7. Things Ain't What They Used To Be
[4:26] 8. Tough Times Don't Last
[3:52] 9. On The Road
[4:17] 10. Ghetto
[4:15] 11. Cookie Jar
[4:26] 12. What Would Christmas Be Without You

The only way to describe Tough Times Don’t Last seems paradoxical: a hard-hitting, soulful and uplifting blues album, yet this is exactly what vocalist/harpist Grady Champion has added to his already impressive career with his seventh release.

Champion does a superb job of juxtaposing tales of hard times so often told in classic blues tunes with the more hopeful tales of gospel and R&B. Perhaps the epitome of this juxtaposition lies in “Glory Train,” a 12 bar classic blues shuffle with soulful piano and harp, yet with lyrics that tell the listener that the conductor will always “welcome him onboard,” regardless of his past sin. Champion pays homage to his Mississippi Roots with “Mississippi Pride,” a soulful pop ballad about cornbread, catfish and magnolia blossoms dripping with all the nostalgia of a true southerner outside of his natural habitat. Champion includes a little funk on the album with “Things Ain’t What They Used to Be,” but this is an original tune, not a rendition of the Duke Ellington standard by the same name, which was slightly disappointing for this jazzhead. “Tough Times Don’t Last” is a really nice gospel-inspired tune with a very enjoyable clarinet solo by Amy Lott. “Cookie Jar” and “My Time Baby” are the best examples of pure blues on the album and are played quite well. The album closes out with “What Would Christmas Be Without You,” another nice pop tune.

Champion has a nice voice; it is very clean, soulful and jam-packed with emotion, reminiscent of Sam Cooke and Marvin Gaye. His harp playing is good, but not great. The other highlight of the album is the keyboards, played by Larry Addison, Kevin Culver and Steve Wilkerson. Champion’s songwriting is hit or miss. Some tunes like “Mississippi Pride” have very clever lyrics, but others, such as “On the Road,” leave something to be desired.

Tough Times Don’t Last is a nice album, dripping with soul, gospel, R&B and emotion. That being said, this is not really a blues album. It’s a pop album with heavy gospel and R&B influence, meaning lots of passing diminished chords, plagal cadences and some 12 bar tunes. Nevertheless, it’s an enjoyable album and is a good addition to any collection of Memphis Soul, Gospel and R&B. ~Nik Rodeward

Tough Times Don't Last mc
Tough Times Don't Last zippy