Showing posts with label John McVey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John McVey. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 8, 2022

John McVey - Meet Me In Houston

Size: 462 MB
Time: 66:25
File: Flac
Released: 2013
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

1. Bayou Boogie! (4:48)
2. I'm Yours (4:13)
3. Thief (6:31)
4. Wish Me Well (5:09)
5. Blue Guitar (4:04)
6. Through The Tears (4:07)
7. Dealing From The Bottom Of The Deck (6:32)
8. I Don't Shutter (5:11)
9. Meet Me In Houston (8:33)
10. Same Thing (7:04)
11. Freddie King Goes Surfing (4:52)
12. Walking In The Footsteps (5:15)

John McVey is an American folk rock singer-songwriter from Princeton, New Jersey. His style of music is part of the new folk acoustic movement, bringing elements of pop, rock and folk music to modern audiences. Now living in Colorado, local magazine 5280 describes McVey by saying, "McVey's smooth yet lightly smoky voice create a soft rock, adult contemporary sound that draws worthy comparisons to Marc Cohn, Shawn Colvin, and Daryl Hall".

Meet Me In Houston FLAC

Wednesday, April 10, 2019

VA - St. Louis Blues Society Presents: 16 In 16

Size: 152,3 MB
Time: 64:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: St. Louis Blues
Art: Front

01 David Dee - Bit By The Blues (4:06)
02 Marty Spikener's On Call Band - Crawlin' Back (3:23)
03 The Maness Brothers - Drive Me (And My Soul) (4:41)
04 Leroy Pierson - Easy Rider (4:48)
05 The Fab Foehners - Homeless Child (3:27)
06 Skeet Rodgers & The Inner City Blues Band - I Wonder (5:45)
07 Delta Sol Revival - I'd Rather (3:21)
08 Papa Ray - Saint Louis Gunshot Blues (5:01)
09 John McVey Band - She's My Girl Now (3:14)
10 Tommy Halloran - Sleepin' Dog (4:34)
11 Bob Case - Sometimes It Feels (Like The Whole World's Gone Crazy) (4:29)
12 Paul Bonn & The Bluesmen - Stop The Killin' (3:11)
13 Tom Hall - Texas Twister Blues (3:33)
14 Sweetie & The Toothaches - Bigger Fool (4:48)
15 Little Rachel - Time Flies In The Friendly Skies (2:50)
16 Gene Jackson - Ain't No Way (3:30)

The St. Louis Blues Society is dedicated to preserving and perpetuating blues music in and from St. Louis, while fostering its growth and appreciation. The St. Louis Blues Society provides blues artists the opportunity for public performance and individual improvement in their field, all for the educational and artistic benefit of the general public.

St. Louis Blues Society Presents: 16 In 16

Saturday, November 18, 2017

John McVey - Gone To Texas

Year: 2002
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:54
Size: 147,2 MB
Styles: Electric blues, Texas blues
Scans: Full

1. (I Gotta) Mexican Blackbird (5:47)
2. I Don't Stutter (5:01)
3. House On Fire (4:34)
4. Cruisin' For A Bruisin' (4:50)
5. Gone To Texas (8:01)
6. Sweet Little Upsetter (4:51)
7. Shadows In My Room (5:52)
8. Whuppit (4:19)
9. Baby One More Kiss (3:16)
10. Call My Job (4:12)
11. Don't Throw Your Love On Me So Strong (6:26)
12. My Baby's Tired Of Working (6:40)

John McVey is a veteran of Texas Blues, who created his signature tone and earned his aggressive guitar chops as a member of touring bands on the Chitlin’ Circuit. He was mentored by Blues legends Larry Davis and Albert King. With no effects pedals, his 'singing guitar' emotes heart-rending bends and smooth runs as well as bold chording that has led many, including the legendary 'Uncle' John Turner, to call McVey 'the best rhythm guitar player around.'

His musical resume includes world-wide performances with Hook Herrera & the Hitchhikers and Paul Orta & the Kingpins. After a very profitable Miller Genuine Draft Light television spot, John joined the Lavelle White Band in ATX as guitarist and band leader. With Lavelle, he played the major festival circuit for several years on shows with Luther Allison, John Lee Hooker and more.

John's first solo CD, "Gone to Texas," was released in March of 2002. The album was produced by Derek O'Brien and engineered by Stuart Sullivan. It features John on guitar and vocals, Joel Guzman on button accordion, Kim Wilson on harmonica, Larry Fulcher on bass, Barry "Frosty" Smith on drums and percussion, Mike Buck on drums, Derek O'Brien on rhythm guitar where noted, Riley Osbourn on keys and Erin James and Eve Monsees on harmony vocals. 9 of the 12 songs on the album are John's originals.

Gone To Texas mc
Gone To Texas zippy

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Erin Jaimes With John McVey & The Stumble - You Had To Go

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:19
Size: 112.9 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. You Had to Go
[2:56] 2. Ocean of Tears
[4:24] 3. Walkin' Blues
[3:11] 4. Don't Mess with the Messer
[2:40] 5. Warm & Tender Love
[3:41] 6. Watch Yourself
[4:11] 7. Funny Stuff
[2:10] 8. Never Have a Man Like You
[2:29] 9. High Cost of Love
[4:28] 10. Please Don't Dog Me
[3:05] 11. Drink Muddy Water
[3:02] 12. Checkin' On My Baby
[2:18] 13. Fussin' & Fightin'
[3:19] 14. Blowtop Blues
[4:16] 15. You Had to Go [a Slight Return]

Erin "Icewater" Jaimes came onto the Austin, Texas blues scene in late 1994, young and clueless, with a passion for the music. "If you play the blues, you're gonna end up living them," warned Erin's first serious musical mentor, drummer Jeff "Li'l Calvin" Hodges. Drummer "Uncle" John Turner, another major influence, often stated that "to some, blues is a state of mind. To others, it's a fact of life." (Little did she know how true their words were!) Listening to such artists as Koko Taylor, Dinah Washington, Etta James and Irma Thomas gave her an empowering but sobering look into a woman's survival in the blues - "a man's world." Erin didn't shy away - she embraced the challenge. The music had its hold on her.

Having previously sung "bass" in an award-winning all-women's acapella group at Vassar College and loving the primal power of a solid rhythm section, Erin was drawn to the electric bass. Appa Perry (of Appa's Blues Power and the Alan Haynes band) was the first to tell her "instead of asking me all these questions all the time, why don't you go and get yourself a *#@$%! bass?!" She got her first bass the next day and learned to play over time largely by watching and listening to bassists such as Appa, Larry Fulcher, Danny Galindo, Tommy Shannon, Keith Ferguson, Willie Weeks and Willie Kent. On April Fools Day, 1998, she landed a weekly gig of her own at the legendary Joe's Generic Bar.

Since 1998, getting muddy in the trenches of Austin's highly competitive music scene, Erin feels fortunate to have shared the stage with many remarkable musicians and Texas Blues legends, including Double Trouble, Antones' Blue Monday Band, Pinetop Perkins, Angela Strehli , Willie “Big Eye” Smith, Sue Foley, Hubert Sumlin, "Uncle" John Turner, John McVey, Alan Haynes, Mike and Cory Keller, Gary Clark Jr., Shawn Pittman, George Rarey, Guy Forsythe, Carolyn Wonderland and Barry "Frosty" Smith, to name a few. She's opened up for Gatemouth Brown, Johnny Winter, Jimmie Vaughan, Jimmie Thackery, Chris Duarte, Long John Hunter and Lavelle White, done live radio broadcasts and has made several TV appearances. Jaimes has played the stages of many Austin venues and toured throughout Texas, as well as in Louisiana, Missouri, Massachusetts, Oklahoma and Arkansas. She was featured at the 11th Annual Oklahoma Blues Festival (Tulsa, 5/05) with John McVey & the Stumble and at the Bluebonnet Blues Festival (4/06) with Walter Higgs. Internationally speaking, Erin Jaimes & her band played for a week on Ambergris Caye, Belize in May of 2004 and toured both Israel and Italy in the spring of 2005. Drummer/singer "Uncle" John Turner invited Erin to join him to play in Germany, Sweden and Denmark in May of 2006 and later that summer the US Consul to the Azores brought her with Scott Unzicker and Ian Bailey to play in the Portuguese Azore Islands.

In March of 2003, Erin came out with her first CD, "Erin Jaimes with John McVey & the Stumble - 'You Had to Go'," which has received national and international airplay. In August and September of 2005, Erin was featured in the "My Perfect 10" ad campaign for Net10 Wireless Telephone, singing and appearing in commercials on primetime network & cable television, webcast, radio, and print ads in Rolling Stone, Entertainment Weekly & People Magazines.

You Had To Go mc
You Had To Go zippy

Saturday, September 27, 2014

John McVey - 2 albums: Road House Stomp / Jigsaw

Album: Road House Stomp
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 54:18
Size: 124.3 MB
Styles: Texas blues
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[ 4:28] 1. I Gotta Mexican Black Bird
[ 4:46] 2. Call My Job
[ 7:28] 3. Gone To Texas
[ 6:50] 4. 44 Boogie
[ 5:19] 5. Stumble In
[ 4:16] 6. Sweet Little Upsetter
[10:22] 7. Help Me
[ 5:57] 8. Looking For A Woman
[ 4:48] 9. Freddie King Goes Surfing

John McVey is a veteran of Texas Blues, who created his signature tone and earned his aggressive guitar chops as a member of touring bands on the Chitlin’ Circuit. He was mentored by Blues legends Larry Davis and Albert King. With no effects pedals, his 'singing guitar' emotes heart-rending bends and smooth runs as well as bold chording that has led many, including the legendary 'Uncle' John Turner, to call McVey 'the best rhythm guitar player around.'

His musical resume includes world-wide performances with Hook Herrera & the Hitchhikers and Paul Orta & the Kingpins. After a very profitable Miller Genuine Draft Light television spot, John joined the Lavelle White Band in ATX as guitarist and band leader. With Lavelle, he played the major festival circuit for several years on shows with Luther Allison, John Lee Hooker and more.

John’s second CD, Road House Stomp, was recorded at Dan Electro's in Houston and released in 2009.

Road House Stomp

Album: Jigsaw
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 39:15
Size: 89.9 MB
Styles: Texas blues
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[3:29] 1. Good Luck
[4:17] 2. Already Broken
[4:00] 3. Fall For You
[4:12] 4. Distracted
[3:28] 5. Incognito
[4:12] 6. Seventh Night
[4:26] 7. Shadow Of A Doubt
[3:55] 8. What He Means
[3:48] 9. When She Runs
[3:24] 10. Simple

John McVey isn't going anywhere, so you might as well latch onto his introspective sound now before he grows more popular and less willing to illuminate his inner self. Here is a comforting set out of Utah Valley, an outtake from the expanding Rocky Mountain acoustic scene and a step toward the national contemporary folk plane. McVey is a formidable singer/songwriter who plainly acknowledges the world's tendency not to resemble fairy tales. Several tracks are an outward characterization of the poet's personality. "Distracted" appeared on a religious compilation album in 1999 but broadly tackles any dream and the obstacles that cloud your vision en route to finding it. While listening to the winning ballad "Fall for You," you may have to pop the CD out and check the label to be sure you aren't listening to Their Greatest Hits by the Eagles. "Incognito" rides with the guts of a biker gang member scanning the avenue for where he wants to make trouble next. "Already Broken" takes an up-tempo turn from the rest of the album, driving a Wallflowers-esque melody right to your brain. With an ethereal hook in the chorus, "Simple" fades the record into the starlight that seems to have inspired McVey's continual pleas. One question, John: Why would you banish your cover of "Tell Me Something Good" as a hidden track, other than the fact that it's a little too bluesy to fit the rest of Jigsaw? Answer? Perhaps because it's like finding a $20 bill in your pocket; like the rest of the record, it's a pleasant surprise. ~Jared Johnson

Jigsaw

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

John McVey - Meet Me In Houston

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 66:01
Size: 151.1 MB
Styles: Electric Texas blues
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:47] 1. Bayou Boogie
[4:12] 2. I'm Yours
[6:29] 3. Thief
[5:08] 4. Wish Me Well
[4:03] 5. Blue Guitar
[4:04] 6. Through The Tears
[6:30] 7. Dealin' From The Bottom Of The Deck
[5:09] 8. I Don't Stutter
[8:32] 9. Meet Me In Houston
[7:02] 10. Same Thing
[4:47] 11. Freddie King Goes Surfing
[5:13] 12. Walking In The Footsteps

John’s style has evolved over the years. Each iteration has its own distinctive place. But, when you hear John McVey, you KNOW it’s John McVey. There are a lot of wannabe bluesmen that try to shortcut the process. However, to be a great bluesman, you have to have lived it…and understand the blues tradition. John IS one of those rare individuals. This only comes with time. When John was a skinny 20-something year old kid, Larry Davis saw something special in John and invited him to join his band (doing 2 shows his first night with Larry – one for 2,000 people and a second at 2:00am at a club 100 miles away for 10 people, 5 which were the band, on the Chitin Circuit). That was his start...and John has never did anything else except playing the blues for a living.

If you want to hear real Texas blues, without the glitter and turd polishing of modern recording, with the big balls attitude needed for the Lone Star state, put on John McVey. ~Andrew Reed

John McVey has been called "the toughest guitar player in Texas" ~ Real Blues Magazine. As a skinny 20-something year old kid, Larry Davis saw something special in John and invited him to join his band on the Chitin Circuit. This is real blues...

Meet Me In Houston