Showing posts with label Kenny Parker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kenny Parker. Show all posts

Friday, February 15, 2019

Kenny Parker - Hellfire

Size: 139,5 MB
Time: 60:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. I've Got My Eye On You (Feat. Jim Mccarty & Dan Devins) (5:44)
02. Baby Come Back To Me (5:24)
03. Blind And Paralyzed (5:58)
04. Bye Bye Baby (Live) (4:34)
05. Hellfire (5:07)
06. Goin' In Circles (3:59)
07. Dance With Me (4:24)
08. I'm Missing You (5:01)
09. And Then We Danced (5:27)
10. Half Crazy (3:20)
11. Backup Plan (6:59)
12. Hard Times (Live) (4:12)

In the mid-'90s, Detroit blues guitarist and songwriter Kenny Parker released his debut album for the London-based JSP Records, Raise the Dead. Parker's blues education began with the Beatles in the early 1960s, but it wasn't long before he discovered the roots of their music. Parker grew up in Albion, Michigan and began playing in his first band, the Esquires, at 14. He begin listening to Albert King and B.B. King in high school via the local record store, and he took his inspiration from them. He graduated from Eastern Michigan University in 1976 and took a job in a Cadillac factory while looking around for the right opportunities to play blues at night. He began working with a paragon of the Detroit scene, Mr. Bo (Louis Bo Collins), and later joined the Butler Twins.

While Parker toured Europe with the Butler Twins, JSP founder John Stedman heard him and decided to sign him up for his own recording. The Butler Twins accompany Parker on his debut recording, and he's also backed by harp master Darrell Nulisch, best known for his work with Anson Funderburgh and the Rockets. The Butler Twins and Nulisch contribute vocals on Parker's Raise the Dead, and since Parker doesn't consider himself a singer, his guitar playing takes center stage. ~by Richard Skelly

Hellfire

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Kenny Parker - Raise The Dead

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 54:18
Size: 124.3 MB
Styles: Modern electric blues
Year: 1996/2014
Art: Front

[3:43] 1. Too Hot For Me
[3:35] 2. Your Girl's Gone Bad
[4:32] 3. Take It Easy On A Fool
[3:37] 4. She's The One For Me
[6:46] 5. Shake Hands With The Devil
[4:28] 6. Baby Cakes Bop
[5:09] 7. Cryin' For Help
[4:32] 8. You're So Sharp
[5:32] 9. Blues For Mr Bo
[4:08] 10. Crazy 'bout My Baby
[3:57] 11. Brunoise
[4:13] 12. Afterglow

In the mid-'90s, Detroit blues guitarist and songwriter Kenny Parker released his debut album for the London-based JSP Records, Raise the Dead. Parker's blues education began with the Beatles in the early 1960s, but it wasn't long before he discovered the roots of their music. Parker grew up in Albion, Michigan and began playing in his first band, the Esquires, at 14. He begin listening to Albert King and B.B. King in high school via the local record store, and he took his inspiration from them. He graduated from Eastern Michigan University in 1976 and took a job in a Cadillac factory while looking around for the right opportunities to play blues at night. He began working with a paragon of the Detroit scene, Mr. Bo (Louis Bo Collins), and later joined the Butler Twins.

While Parker toured Europe with the Butler Twins, JSP founder John Stedman heard him and decided to sign him up for his own recording. the Butler Twins accompany Parker on his debut recording, and he's also backed by harp master Darrell Nulisch, best known for his work with Anson Funderburgh and the Rockets. the Butler Twins and Nulisch contribute vocals on Parker's Raise the Dead, and since Parker doesn't consider himself a singer, his guitar playing takes center stage. ~bio by Richard Skelly

Raise The Dead mc
Raise The Dead zippy