Showing posts with label David Bromberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Bromberg. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Joe Louis Walker - Blues Comin' On

Size: 145,6 MB
Time: 62:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Feed The Poor (Feat. Jorma Kaukonen) (4:13)
02. Blues Comin' On (Feat. Eric Gales & Dion) (5:55)
03. Someday, Someway (Feat. Carla Cooke & Lee Oskar) (5:32)
04. The Thang (Feat. Jesse Johnson) (6:38)
05. Old Time Used To Be (Feat. Keb' Mo') (5:17)
06. Come Back Home (Feat. Mitch Ryder) (4:31)
07. Bowlegged Woman, Knock-Kneed Man (Feat. Waddy Wachtel) (4:55)
08. Awake Me Shake Me (Feat. Carla Cooke) (6:50)
09. Lonely Weekends (Feat. David Bromberg) (4:24)
10. Seven More Steps (Feat. Albert Lee) (5:24)
11. Uptown To Harlem (Feat. Jellybean Johnson) (4:23)
12. 7 & 7 Is (Feat. Charlie Harper) (4:04)

Soulful blues phenom, and Blues Hall Of Fame inductee, Joe Louis Walker is joined by a host of talented friends and peers on this superb studio album. Features guest performances by fellow blues icons Keb' Mo', Eric Gales, and Albert Lee plus Detroit soul singer Mitch Ryder, harmonica virtuoso Lee Oskar, Hot Tuna's Jorma Kaukonen, punk rock vocalist Charlie Harper, legendary session player Waddy Wachtel, and many others. This album explodes with the passionate playing and souful melodies that have made Walker a favorite among true blues aficionados including The Rolling Stones!

Blues Comin' On MP3
Blues Comin' On FLAC

Friday, April 17, 2020

David Bromberg - Big Road

Size: 136,5 MB
Time: 58:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Blues, Country, Folk, Americana
Art: Front

01. Big Road ( 4:24)
02. Lovin' Of The Game ( 3:36)
03. Just Because You Didn't Answer ( 5:28)
04. George, Merle & Conway ( 4:47)
05. Mary Jane ( 2:16)
06. Standing In The Need Of Prayer ( 1:51)
07. The Hills Of Isle Au Haut ( 4:27)
08. Medley: Maiden's Prayer - Blackberry Blossom - Katy Hill ( 5:50)
09. Diamond Lil (10:43)
10. Who Will The Next Fool Be? ( 4:31)
11. Take This Hammer ( 4:11)
12. Roll On John ( 6:14)

One would think an album with the implicit theme about being a road band would be a live release. However, Big Road isn't despite it being recorded by David Bromberg and his touring group. That's not exactly true as Big Road is more than just a single record. It's a self-proclaimed project that not only includes 12 new tracks, but also five high-definition performance videos and a mini-documentary detailing the album's creation. Big Road will be issued in three formats: traditional CD, a gatefold vinyl album, and a deluxe CD/DVD combo pack. This review focuses on the single CD release.

Bromberg's Americana music is steeped in the nostalgia for a simpler past with an awareness that some topics like heartbreak, prayer, and having a good time, are timeless. The album does a good job of mixing things up stylistically while maintaining a consistent vibe. The songs run together without ever sounding repetitive. So even when Bromberg and company go from twangily praising past country music greats ("George, Merle & Conway") to joyfully celebrating marijuana ("Mary Jane") to offering a capella gospel tributes to the Lord ("Standing in the Need of Prayer"), the transitions are smooth.

Much of this is due, no doubt, to Bromberg's talented band members. The core group consists of multi-instrumentalist and lead singer Bromberg, Mark Cosgrove (guitar, mandolin, vocals), Nate Grower (fiddle, mandolin, guitar, vocals), Josh Kanusky (drums, vocals), and Suavek Zaniesienko (bass, vocals). They are joined on this album by Dan Walker (piano, organ, and accordion), Birch Johnson (trombone), Jon-Erik Kellso (trumpet), Matt Koza (tenor sax) and Bob Stewart (tuba,) and Larry Campbell (mandolin and pedal steel). It's a big ensemble, but the individual songs come off as intimate productions because the whole group rarely play all at the same time but usually play solos and duets as needed.

Take the 10-plus-minute centerpiece, the self-penned "Diamond Lil". Bromberg's vocals are at the forefront. He sings in a slow, drawn-out drawl, repeating, "A man should never gamble / more than he can lose" as if it was a Buddhist mantra. The individual players emerge and disappear from the proceedings like the ghosts of bad hands that haunt the gambler. Who knows what the next number will be until the dice are thrown? The song captures that feeling of patiently waiting for more than anticipation. Fate can be a cruel mistress or a lucky lady.

Big Road contains elements of old-time country, folk, bluegrass, gospel, blues and more. The title track is an old Tommy Johnson Delta blues number that allows Bromberg to utilize his vocal range. He has an especially soulful growl in his voice that can zip into a high pitched "ah" as if he can't control his emotions. He successfully twists lines like "The blues ain't nothing but an achin' heart" into a soliloquy of love and pain.

Bromberg's singing is infectiously good, but it's his (and his bandmates) playing that makes the disc such a pleasure to hear. The instrumental trilogy "Maiden's Prayer / Blackberry Blossom / Katy Hill" serves as a great example of simple but elegant playing. The trilogy begins with a beautiful lilting melody and ends with a three-mandolin breakdown. The fingers may be flying, but the track comes off as quietly gentle as natural as a babbling brook. That is true even of the story songs. Bromberg lets the instruments speak as much as his singing. He's a captivating presence, whether he's vocalizing, playing, or leading his bandmates forward.

The Big Road of the title song refers to the journey of life. For Bromberg, music represents the experience of living. His latest album reveals how intertwined the two are. ~Steve Horowitz

Big Road

Sunday, October 14, 2018

David Bromberg - Try Me One More Time

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 47:57
Size: 110.9 MB
Styles: Roots, Acoustic blues
Released: 2007
Art: Front

1. Try Me One More Time (3:16)
2. Kind Hearted Woman (3:48)
3. Big Road (2:53)
4. It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry (4:30)
5. Buck Dancer's Choice (1:54)
6. I Belong To The Band (3:35)
7. Moonshiner (1:33)
8. Shake Sugaree (3:10)
9. Hey Bub (1:37)
10. Love Changing Blues (3:10)
11. When First Unto This Country (3:03)
12. Levee Camp Moan (2:17)
13. Trying To Get Home (4:01)
14. East Virginia (3:47)
15. Windin' Boy (3:18)
16. Lonesome Roving Wolves (1:56)

On his first solo album in nearly two decades, folk guitarist David Bromberg picks up just exactly where he left off. TRY ME ONE MORE TIME is an all-acoustic set of 16 songs, nearly all of them traditional folk and blues tunes, such as the ballad "East Virginia" and the sprightly instrumental showcase "Buck Dancer's Choice." Along with these, Bromberg essays a pair of tunes by Robert Johnson and one each by Blind Willie McTell, Reverend Gary Davis, and Elizabeth Cotton. It's proof of Bromberg's mastery that in this setting, Bob Dylan's "It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry" sounds like a beloved old folk standard.

Try Me One More Time

Friday, October 14, 2016

David Bromberg - The Blues, The Whole Blues And Nothing But The Blues

Size: 134,5 MB
Time: 57:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Acoustic/Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. Walkin' Blues (5:38)
02. How Come My Dog Don't Bark When You Come 'round (4:24)
03. Kentucky Blues (2:28)
04. Why Are People Like That (3:59)
05. A Fool For You (4:55)
06. Eyesight To The Blind (3:29)
07. 900 Miles (4:53)
08. Yield Not To Temptation (2:43)
09. You've Been A Good Ole Wagon (5:49)
10. Delia (6:37)
11. The Blues, The Whole Blues And Nothing But The Blues (3:23)
12. This Month (5:51)
13. You Don't Have To Go (3:16)

Among his many attributes, David Bromberg is a generous bandleader, and so the first guitar solo on his latest album is performed by sideman Mark Cosgrove. It's a doozy fittingly punctuated by a "Woo!" from Bromberg.

There's plenty of room for the frontman to shine, too, on "The Blues, the Whole Blues and Nothing But the Blues." Bromberg has never sung better, his wise, warm warble enhanced by masterful timing and droll wit. His guitar still gets its licks in, too, whether it's an electric slide on the Chicago-style original "You Don't Have to Go," or an acoustic on Ray Charles' "A Fool for You."

Maybe Bromberg is just trying to keep up with the rest of the cast. The album was recorded with his terrific band and produced by Larry Campbell, who plays acoustic slide guitar on a wonderful duet rendition of "Delia."

Arrangements are tight and the mood is loose as the group covers material by Robert Johnson, Bessie Smith and Sonny Boy Williamson, among others. The liner notes include useful cut-by-cut commentary from Bromberg, who explains what Johnson meant referring to an ex-mate's "Elgin movements" in "Walkin' Blues."

Don't worry, it's PG-rated " this is the blues, not politics.

The Blues, The Whole Blues And Nothing But The Blues