Showing posts with label Hosea Leavy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hosea Leavy. Show all posts

Saturday, April 8, 2023

Pig In A Can - A New Perspective On The Blues

Album: A New Perspective On The Blues
Size: 111,7 MB
Time: 48:17
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Experimental blues
Art: Full

1. Talkin' Tupelo Blues (7:24)
2. Slow Down Train (4:33)
3. Out To California (6:25)
4. Long Long Time (4:21)
5. Bring Me My Shotgun (5:29)
6. Highway 49/Wooden Spoon (4:07)
7. Opium Harvest (2:06)
8. Slow Walkin' Man (5:34)
9. Coal Black Mare (4:39)
10. Lester Parker's Farm (2:43)
11. The Pledge (0:51)

This group moves blues into another universe. It's futuristic-primitivism is in the groove of electronica star Moby & bluesman R.L. Burnside, only hipper, more outrageous, which has a broad appeal that goes way beyond the traditional blues audience. The album morphs cross-cultural music, electronica, jazz, spoken word & blues into something completely original - the savvy trance dance remixes retain the deep blue spirit of the Delta. The project is the brainchild of producers Chris Millar & John Wilson, the latter a former member of Meat Beat Manifesto. /Amazon

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

A New Perspective On The Blues mc
A New Perspective On The Blues zippy

Friday, March 31, 2023

Hosea Leavy - Greasy Greens

Album: Greasy Greens
Size: 100,0 MB
Time: 43:09
File: MP3 @ 320K/s (cassette)
Released: 1993
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Art: Cassette front & inside

1. Peepin' & Hidin' (2:53)
2. Searchin' (4:25)
3. Goin' To The Dogs (4:56)
4. Shake For Me (2:55)
5. Red Rooster (3:47)
6. Chicken Shack (2:44)
7. Goin' Back To The Country (4:16)
8. Black Night (4:13)
9. You Can't Miss What You Never Had (4:06)
10. St. Louis Blues (4:15)
11. When I Was A Little Boy (4:31)

Guitarist-vocalist Hosea Leavy hailed from a small crossroads town called Althermer, Arkansas, located out about 26 miles from Little Rock. One of 15 children, Hosea learned the guitar from his father, also a blues player in the 1920s and '30s, and soon started playing in a combo, performing at house parties and work camps with instruments rented from a local pawnbroker. In 1950 Hosea was drafted into the Army and saw some combat action in Korea. It was in the army's USO clubs that Hosea picked up his bass skills which served him well throughout his musical career. After being discharged from the service in 1954 he formed a blues group featuring his younger brother, Calvin Leavy, who was a notable singer.

In 1968 fame came to the Leavy brothers when Calvin recorded the blues classic "Cummins Prison Farm," based on the notorious prison work camp in Arkansas, and later made into a film called "Brubaker," starring Robert Redford. The song hit at #40 on the Billboard R&B charts in 1970 and stayed there for 5 weeks after Shelby Singleton's Blue Fox label picked it up. The song has had a firm position in the canon of the modern Blues repertoire ever since, and is a favourite of Southern Blues audiences. The group toured extensively through much of the south with the success of the song.

Hosea wrote and recorded one single in 1969 for Soul Beat titled 'It's Too Early in the Morning b/w You Cant Lose What You Never Had' the Muddy Waters original.In 1969 he also made a single for Riceland that was produced by Willie Cobbs titled 'Oo-Wee Baby b/w When I was a Little Boy'. In 1976 the Leavy brothers did some recordings for the Arkansas Bicentennial Blues Project which are archived at the University Of Arkansas in Little Rock. In 1977 the band performed at the Beale Street Music Festival. Soon after they broke up and started their own bands. Hosea moved to California and started a combo with Johnny 'Da-Doo' Wilson on bass and Warren Milton on drums. This trio play a small joint in West Fresno called 'Wagners' every weekend for at least 5 years. The band would start around 10 in the evening and go until 5 in the morning or until the police showed up.

In 1993 Hosea recorded a cassette titled 'Greasy Greens' for the debut of Fedora Records. The tape was noticed by 'Blues and Rhythm' who in turn published an article by Mike Rainsford which got Hosea some good festival work in Europe and elsewhere. Chris Millar produced sessions with Hosea that led to his only CDs, You Gotta Move, in 1997 and a collaboration with Harmonica Slim called Cold Tacos and Warm Beer on the Fedora record label. Hosea loved to hunt and fish when he wasn't gigging or hanging out at 'The Barrel' in West Fresno. Hosea was father to 26 children, 4 of whom are named Hosea Leavy,Jr. Hosea was a fine performer and a strict band leader. He was respected by the local musicians and he mentored many of the area's best Blues musicians.

His last major gig was the 2007 San Francisco Blues Festival. Hosea was still performing at very high level only weeks before he drove his old Chrysler to the V.A. and checked himself in. In his last days at the hospice Hosea was very lucid and enjoyed visits with his friends and family. Hosea Leavy the self-proclaimed "Grand Daddy of the Blues" died on August 12, 2008 at the U.S. Veterans Hospital in Fresno, California after a short bout with liver cancer. He was 80 years old.

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Greasy Greens mc
Greasy Greens zippy

Thursday, March 30, 2023

Hosea Leavy - You Gotta Move

Album: You Gotta Move
Size: 112,7 MB
Time: 48:35
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1998
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Art: Full

1. You Gotta Move (4:08)
2. Hey Boss! (4:17)
3. Fannie Mae (3:47)
4. Tryin' To Get Ahead (3:39)
5. Goin' Back To The Country (4:05)
6. Tore Down (3:17)
7. If You Love Me Like You Say (5:15)
8. Born In Missouri (4:10)
9. Going Blind (5:06)
10. Reconsider Baby (3:08)
11. When You Get Old (3:39)
12. Crazy Mary (3:59)

Another great one is gone. Fresno, California blues singer and guitarist Hosea Leavy died on Monday, August 12, 2008 of liver cancer. He was 80 years old. Born in Altheimer, Arkansas, just outside of Little Rock, he learned blues guitar from his father, and played throughout Arkansas before venturing out west during the 1960s. In 1968, Hosea's younger brother Calvin Leavy would record the hit record “Cummings Prison Farm” for Soul Beat Records, featuring Hosea's combo as the backing band. This led to a string of subsequent singles for both Calvin and Hosea.

In 1977, Hosea settled permanently in Fresno, where he became a major part of that town's blues scene. In the 1990s, drummer Chris Millar produced sessions with Hosea that led to his only CDs, You Gotta Move, and a collaboration with Harmonica Slim called Cold Tacos and Warm Beer on the Fedora record label. A few additional cuts appear on the now out of print CD West Fresno Blues Masters, also on Fedora. A stirring vocalist and down home guitarist, Hosea had toured Europe and recently made a well-received appearance at the San Francisco Blues Festival.

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

You Gotta Move mc
You Gotta Move zippy

Sunday, March 26, 2023

Harmonica Slim & Hosea Leavy - Cold Tacos And Warm Beer

Album: Cold Tacos And Warm Beer
Size: 115,2 MB
Time: 49:41
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2000
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Art: Full

1. Catfish Blues (4:27)
2. K.C. Douglas Was A Fine Man (4:50)
3. Cold Tacos And Warm Beer (4:03)
4. Cummins Prison Farm (8:37)
5. She Wants To Boogie (3:07)
6. Back Door Man (5:30)
7. The 'Frisco Railroad (2:39)
8. Hey Boss (5:29)
9. Hosea's Boogie (3:03)
10. All Alone Now (4:31)
11. God Didn't Make Honk Tonk Angels (2:27)
12. Don't Want No Woman (0:53)

Cold Tacos and Warm Beer is the first recorded collaboration from blues veterans Harmonica Slim and guitarist Hosea Levy. This duo has consistently played for a number of years together, mainly in their hometown of Fresno, California, at open air rent parties featuring friends and family. The spark from these impromptu sessions combined with their natural passion to play is what makes this Fedora release what Slim describes as "blues real and true to life." /Al Campbell, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Cold Tacos And Warm Beer mc
Cold Tacos And Warm Beer zippy