Showing posts with label Harmonica Hinds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harmonica Hinds. Show all posts

Saturday, December 8, 2018

Harmonica Hinds - If Speed Was Just A Thought

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 42:59
Size: 99,2 MB
Released: 2012
Styles: Acoustic/Electric Folk Blues, Country Blues
Art: Full

1. Calling The Musical Spirits (4:41)
2. I Wonder (2:06)
3. If Speed Was A Thought (3:07)
4. Spices (2:02)
5. Blues Moan (3:20)
6. She (2:30)
7. I Want To Know What Made You So (3:09)
8. Mix Up (3:04)
9. I'm Bombarded (3:05)
10. Pretty Lady (4:01)
11. You Gone Too Long (2:45)
12. Kick It (2:55)
13. Traveling On This Road (2:50)
14. Religion (3:16)

Mervyn “Harmonica” Hinds, a regular on the Chicago blues scene for decades, was once one of the best sidemen that nobody knew. That’s changed more recently, as Hinds has begun issuing albums under his own name in regular intervals. The latest – If Speed Was a Thought, which follows 2008’s Finally and 2010’s Anything If I Could – may be his most complete effort yet.

“Calling the Musical Spirits,” the first of 14 straight originals here from Hinds, begins with a trestle-rattling harp signature and this low levee moan – quickly setting a trance-like sense of portent on If Speed Was a Thought. As the track continues, though, Hinds begins to subtly, then not so subtly, pick up speed – like a freight train moments after topping a country hill. Soon, “Calling the Musical Spirits” has taken on a ferocious propulsion, with Hinds’ twin wails – on the harmonica and then at the mic – turning what was once an easy-going reminiscence into a heart-stopping ride.

“I Wonder” finds Hinds taking his first conventional vocal, and his singing retains that sense of slurred, dirt-path mystery. Hinds’ tandem work on the guitar begins to move to the fore, too, as he fashions an echoing rockabilly groove. The title track weaves all of these threads together, showcasing Hinds’ facility with a darkly intriguing lyric, with a gravy-dripping guitar riff, with a scarifyingly direct vocal and with a lonesome harmonica interlude.

From there, If Speed Was Just a Thought continues to brilliantly alternate between rumbling roadhouse songs (“Spices,” with its serrated rhythm; “She,” a gruff come on; “Mix Up,” which moves from melancholic wonder to a driving-rain beat) and these devastatingly emotional laments (the terrifying chain-gang hollers of “Blues Moan”; the end-of-your-rope cries of “I’m Bombarded”).

Throughout, he plays both the country blues and its urban-bred cousin with equal force and intellect.

As for the latter, “Kick It” perhaps best recalls the tough city blues of the early Chess sides, and that’s fitting since Hinds rose to early fame as a member of the 1970s-era house band at the legendary Theresa’s Lounge in Chicago – where he was joined on stage by mythical blues figures like Junior Wells. He’s worked as a sideman on albums by Koko Taylor, Eddie Taylor Jr., and Mud Morganfield, among others, and has appeared on stage with the likes of Pinetop Perkins, Willie “Big Eyes” Smith, Louisiana Red, Willie Dixon, Magic Slim and Willie Kent.

You hear bits and pieces of those legacies throughout this moving, deeply personal journey of record. When Hinds, as part of a frank remembrance of hard times called “Traveling on This Road,” talks about “so many ups and so many downs,” there’s a bone-deep sense of authenticity.

That song’s clip-clop rhythm signature returns on “I Want to Know What Made You So,” this sharply worded complaint about a hot-and-cold love interest that ends up as one of Hinds’ better explorations of a relationship’s rugged landscape. Meanwhile, “Pretty Lady,” with its string-popping guitar signature, takes a similarly dim view of these matters of the heart, with Hinds recalling how a lover’s beauty couldn’t mask her propensity to stray. By the time he gets to “You Gone Too Long,” though, Hinds’ stance has softened some. Moaning behind a sharply insistent pairing of guitar and harp, he can only beg her to “come on home … please … come on home!”

There’s more to If Speed Was Just a Thought, however, than love gone wrong and love long gone. A strong sense of faith works as a backstory for the project, from its haunting opening cut to the fleet album-closer “Religion” – when Hinds, offering a wordlessly boisterous interpretation of salvation’s soaring gift, brings it all home once again. ~Review by Nick DeRiso

Thanks to Lapiedra52
If Speed Was Just A Thought

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Harmonica Hinds - I'd Give You Anything If I Could

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 54:47
Size: 125.4 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[5:51] 1. Stop Complaining
[3:58] 2. Wake The Spirit
[4:42] 3. Anything If I Could
[3:44] 4. Child Of The Universe
[6:15] 5. Take Your Time
[4:58] 6. Don't You Steal My Money
[3:59] 7. Can't Stay Here Forever
[2:00] 8. Way Down South
[4:57] 9. Imelda
[4:07] 10. Cuddle Inn
[4:10] 11. You're Looking Good
[6:01] 12. Goin Down To The River

Harmonica Hinds is besides Billy Boy Arnold, Billy Branch and James Cotton – one of the last harp players of the old tradition! He played on many record sessions in the last years – on the Mud Morganfield CD – and plays and sings also on the WOLF CD – From The Country To The City. He has a deep voice and a great harp style and plays 100% Originals! On the CD the best of Chicago Blues are sidemen: Eddie Taylor Jr., Kenny Smith and Edward G. Mc Daniel!

First issued in 2010 (entitled "Anything If I Could"), this album was reissued in 2013 with some changes in the tracklist and a different album cover and is now scheduled for re-release in 2014 with minor changes again in the tracklist and an entirely diferent album cover

I'd Give You Anything If I Could

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

VA - Chicago Blues Harmonica Project: More Rare Gems

Size: 119,5 MB
Time: 51:34
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2009
Styles: Harmonica Blues, Chicago Blues
Art: Front

01. Reginald Cooper - Shade Tree Mechanic (3:13)
02. Charlie Love - Ooh Baby, Hold Me (4:43)
03. Harmonica Hinds - Kill That Mouse (4:24)
04. Little Arthur Duncan - Can't Stand It No More (3:23)
05. Russ Green & Jeff Taylor - Gangster Of Love (3:57)
06. Big D - I've Got To Be With You Tonight (5:36)
07. Harmonica Hinds - Sunday Morning Blues (3:59)
08. Reginald Cooper - Give Me Back That Wig (5:08)
09. Jeff Taylor - Honest I Do (3:20)
10. Big D - Well You Know (4:36)
11. Charlie Love - The 12 Year Old Boy (4:10)
12. Little Arthur Duncan - Gone To Main Street (4:59)

In 2005 Severn released The Chicago Blues Harmonica Project, Diamonds in the Rough. The project was intended to show that blues harmonica was alive and well in Chicago contrary to what was written and widely believed. Due to the overwhelming response to the first album, we once again shine the spotlight on six more Chicago harmonica talents deserving wider recognition. The result is More Rare Gems. These are real deal bluesman working night after night in the windy city honing their craft. The frontmen include the late Little Arthur Duncan, Harmonica Hinds, Charlie Love, Reginald Cooper, Jeff Taylor and Russ Green and are backed by the great group The Chicago Bluesmasters.

Thanks to Marc.
Chicago Blues Harmonica Project: More Rare Gems