Showing posts with label Sonny Landreth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sonny Landreth. Show all posts

Friday, August 11, 2023

Sonny Landreth - Live At The 2023 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival

Size: 123.9 MB
Time: 53:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2023
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Blues Attack (Live) ( 5:15)
02. Walking Blues (Live) ( 4:41)
03. It Hurts Me Too (Live) ( 3:58)
04. Native Stepson (Live) ( 5:35)
05. Brave New Girl (Live) (11:01)
06. Speak Of The Devil (Live) ( 5:00)
07. Wrong Things (Live) ( 4:33)
08. Ussz (Live) ( 5:36)
09. Bayou Teche (Live) ( 7:42)

Acclaimed guitarist’s new album mixes genres and styles across a landscape of lyricism and rootsy grooves.

A percussive burst of acoustic resonator guitar pushes the narrator on a journey “between the life I left and the edge of next” in the title cut of guitarist, songwriter and bandleader Sonny Landreth’s 14th album. As the singer feels the wind at his back, a rising bass line intersects Landreth’s vocalizing to stretch the fingerpicked tune into Far Eastern melodicism.

The south Louisiana artist’s groundbreaking work has long mixed familiarity with experimentation, and his latest 10-song collection stretches from hard-edged electric instrumentals to wistful acoustic ballads. The project’s range is the fruit of a renewed collaboration. Producer RS Field – who helmed Landreth’s trio of breakout albums – joined the six-stringer and co-producer Tony Daigle to finish the record.

“His brilliance and creative energy recharged us,” Landreth said of reuniting with Field. Most of the tracks were recorded live at famed Dockside Studios on the Vermilion River south of Lafayette, La. “We came up with new and better ideas, and that’s what you want,” he added. “It couldn’t have gone better.”

A quartet of instrumentals highlights the expressive power of bassist David Ranson, drummer Brian Brignac and multi-talented keyboardist/songwriter Steve Conn. The sultry, slow zydeco pulse of “Lover Dance With Me” features Landreth trading in his signature glass slide for his guitar’s tremolo arm and a rotating Leslie speaker cabinet. “Mule” follows, with its tailgate rhythm bouncing through a his-and-her tale of unrequited love.

“Groovy Goddess” takes the listener into harder-edged jazz-rock territory, showcasing the slide guitar prowess that has twice landed Landreth on the cover of Guitar Player magazine. “Honestly, I think the purest form of music is improvised,” the bandleader says. “When it flows, it’s exhilarating. It just seems to come out of nowhere and connect your heart and soul to your fingertips.” Blacktop Run comes on the heels of Landreth’s Grammy-nominated double album Recorded Live In Lafayette, which features an acoustic disc and an electric disc. The new record brings both sides together without concern for how the layered tracks might be arranged for the bandstand. “Different approaches can influence one another – and for me, that just makes it more musical, more interesting,” Landreth explains.

The first of two Conn compositions follows with a new arrangement built around a guitar tuning Landreth developed but had not yet used in the studio. “Somebody Gotta Make A Move” also features its composer on Wurlitzer electric piano and Hammond B-3 organ. “I could see this one becoming a blues standard,” Landreth says. “That’s the mark of a great song.”

“Beyond Borders” picks up the pace and features Conn in a role originally envisioned for Carlos Santana. Landreth composed the instrumental for From The Reach, his 2008 release featuring guest artists Eric Clapton, Eric Johnson, Vince Gill and others. “It’s complex,” Landreth says, “and now seems tailor-made for Steve.” “Don’t Ask Me,” the second Conn cut, delves into existential mysteries with humor via an acoustic, back porch Delta feel. Brignac played cajón, Ranson played ukulele bass, and Conn stretches out on accordion.

“The Wilds of Wonder” is a cinematic tribute to the brave folks working on the front lines of our planet’s environmental crises. And the shape-shifting instrumental “Many Worlds” builds on the previous number’s rich textures to bring the record to its final cut, “Something Grand,” the first Landreth recording in years without a guitar solo. That last tune, he says, “is a song of redemption. And though it’s between two people in a relationship, it also speaks to life’s larger challenges.”
After two Grammy nominations, multiple appearances at Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival and wide-ranging acclaim from fellow players and fans worldwide, Landreth is looking forward to playing the new material live. He’ll continue mixing electric and acoustic settings onstage, with Daigle bringing the sounds and concepts of the recording studio to venue mixing consoles.

“It’s all about telling the story,” Landreth says, “and as long as I can find my way up that path, I’m all in.” As the songwriter’s narrator sings in the title number of Blacktop Run, “A new day is dawning and I have never felt so alive.”

Live At The 2023 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival MP3
Live At The 2023 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival FLAC

Thursday, January 14, 2021

VA - (Almost) Everybody Slides

Size: 161.2 MB
Time: 69:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1990
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Full

01 Sonny Landreth - Zydeco Shuffle (3:07)
02 Roy Rogers - Crawfish City (3:46)
03 Anson Funderburgh - Red Hot Mama (3:09)
04 Danny Gatton - Notcho Blues (7:40)
05 Chris Holzhaus - Long Sad Letters (6:24)
06 Duke Robillard - You're The One That I Adore (5:31)
07 Ronnie Earl - Linda (4:53)
08 Lenny Carlson & Ry Cooder - Mood Indigo (4:51)
09 Denny Freeman - Blues Island (4:03)
10 Tinsley Ellis - Cool On It (4:34)
11 Tom Principato - Congo Square (5:53)
12 Joanna Connor - Doctor Feelgood (5:06)
13 Johnny Winter - Going Down Slow (5:58)
14 Michael Bloomfield & Woody Harris - Gonna Need Somebody On My Bond (4:03)

(Almost) Everybody Slides MP3
(Almost) Everybody Slides FLAC

Friday, July 31, 2020

Mel Melton & The Wicked Mojos - Swamp Slinger

Size: 114,8 MB
Time: 49:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1997
Styles: Swamp Blues, Louisiana Blues
Art: Full

01. Cher Catin (3:22)
02. Opelousa's Blues (4:27)
03. French Quarter Rain (6:29)
04. Love Attack (4:39)
05. Devil Moon (6:11)
06. Two Lives (4:56)
07. Catahoula (4:30)
08. Chicago Train (4:51)
09. Backdoor Cajun Man (4:46)
10. Swamp Slinger (4:50)

This fine disc cooks and simmers with the flavors of the Louisiana swamps. Mel Melton has a slight rasp in his voice that adds that extra bit of spice that brings out the true flavors of this music. His voice isn't exceptional, but it is very well suited to the songs on the disc. The Wicked Mojos are a tight group that back him quite well, moving effortlessly from the slow blues of a song like "French Quarter Rain" through some real dust-ups like "Backdoor Cajun Man," making stops to go back to some Chicago blues and some fine zydeco raves. Melton's harmonica playing blends itself to fit the needs of the song, and the Wicked Mojos are given ample chances to display their licks. Used to seriously push the music to another level are slide guitar whiz Sonny Landreth and zydeco accordionist C.J. Chenier, both of whom Melton had once played with in a band called Bayou Rhythm. The multi-talented Melton has written eight of the 11 songs here, reflecting the variety of his musical influences. Two of the other songs are traditional, and the remaining song is the wonderful "Devil Moon," written by Randy Friel, who contributed production and some welcome organ, accordion, and clavinet playing. This is a disc to bring back (if you've been there) or to introduce you to the rhythms of the swamps of Louisiana. ~Bob Gottlieb

Swamp Slinger MP3
Swamp Slinger FLAC

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Dion - Blues With Friends

Size: 396 MB
Time: 60:53
File: FLAC
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front & Back

01. Blues Comin’ On (Feat. Joe Bonamassa) (4:48)
02. Kickin’ Child (Feat. Joe Menza) (4:00)
03. Uptown Number 7 (Feat. Brian Setzer) (3:56)
04. Can’t Start Over Again (Feat. Jeff Beck) (4:26)
05. My Baby Loves To Boogie (Feat. John Hammond) (5:19)
06. I Got Nothin’ (Feat. Van Morrison & Joe Louis Walker) (5:05)
07. Stumbling Blues (Feat. Jimmy Vivino & Jerry Vivino) (3:00)
08. Bam Bang Boom (Feat. Billy Gibbons) (3:57)
09. I Got The Cure (Feat. Sonny Landreth) (4:07)
10. Song For Sam Cooke (Here In America) (Feat. Paul Simon) (4:24)
11. What If I Told You (Feat. Samantha Fish) (4:44)
12. Told You Once In August (Feat. Rory Block) (5:34)
13. Way Down (I Won’t Cry No More) (Feat. Stevie Van Zandt) (2:58)
14. Hymn To Him (Feat. Patti Scialfa & Bruce Springsteen) (4:30)

As one of the very few first-generation rock ‘n’ rollers still seriously pursing new avenues of expression, Dion’s Bronx soul is very much in evidence on this new album, a full-tilt blues offering. The blues songs therein are not “covers” nor Dion’s versions of blues standards. These compositions are in fact original blues masterpieces which are destined to become classics. He came up with the music and words for twelve of them and finished those with co-writer Mike Aquilina. The two exceptions are “Hymn To Him” which Dion wrote with Bill Tuohy and “Kickin’ Child,” written with Buddy Lucas.

To tell those stories, Dion recruited help from a few notable friends and admirers. He thought, “I needed to round up the best guitarists and musicians alive and pick them from every generation, every variation of blues.” And that’s just what he did, surrounding himself with those who feel the blues spirit as he does.

The album’s guests include the cream of the contemporary scene’s blues-rooted slingers including Jeff Beck, Billy Gibbons, Joe Bonamassa, Brian Setzer, Sonny Landreth, Samantha Fish, John Hammond Jr., Joe Louis Walker, Rory Block , Jimmy and Jerry Vivino, vintage guitar guru Joe Menza as well as icons Stevie Van Zandt, Patti Scialfa, Bruce Springsteen, Van Morrison and Paul Simon. Yes, that’s a whole lot of star power but each participated not because of his or her marquee appeal but because of what each could add musically. The result is one reflective of nuanced devotion to the blues rather than a gratuitous display of individual virtuosity. It’s very much Dion’s album and those bold face names participating are most convincingly there for him.

Blues With Friends MP3
Blues With Friends FLAC

Monday, May 18, 2020

Lucas Spinosa - Friends & Legends Of Louisiana

Size: 102,2 MB
Time: 43:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Louisiana Blues, Blues Rock, Blues Soul
Art: Front

01. Beale Street Blues (Feat. Jason Parfait) (4:14)
02. While You're Still Mine (Feat. Parker James) (4:43)
03. Belly Of The Beast (Feat. Sonny Landreth & Wayne Toups) (4:07)
04. Want It To Be (Feat. Don Rich) (4:26)
05. I Believe (Feat. Bob Henderson) (4:56)
06. Southern Side Of Life (Feat. Kenny Neal) (4:35)
07. Red Tail Lights On A Blues Highway (Feat. Chris Leblanc) (4:13)
08. The Two Of Us (Feat. Gregg Martinez) (4:38)
09. Living In A Fantasy (Feat. Ryan Foret) (3:12)
10. Memories (Feat. Bryan Romano) (4:22)

Songwriter and keyboardist Lucas Spinosa assembled an impressive cast of south Louisiana all-stars for “Friends and Legends of Louisiana.” Spinosa — who was the leader of the Baton Rouge-area band Southern Star in the 1990s — produced the album, did most of the songwriting and played keyboards for this one-of-a kind project.

Every “Friends and Legends of Louisiana” song stars a different, well-known singer from Louisiana. The project also contains a variety of musical flavors, encompassing swamp pop, blues, rock ’n’ roll, swing, gospel and even smooth jazz.

The guest vocalist list includes bluesman Kenny Neal, zydecajun artist Wayne Toups, blues-rocker Chris LeBlanc and swamp pop singers Don Rich, Gregg Martinez and Ryan Foret. It surely is a soulful, smoky collection of Louisiana voices.

Spinosa does a fine job of matching singers to the songs he and Billy E. Henderson have written. Rich, the popular swamp-pop artist from Pierre Part, sings “Want It to Be,” a ballad that sounds custom-made for him. Horns — that requisite element for so much south Louisiana music — and keyboard triplets complement Rich’s characteristically from-the-heart vocals.

Spinosa casts Baton Rouge blues artist Neal in the churning, bluesy-country song, “Southern Side of Life.” Neal blows swamp-blues harmonica for the track and poignantly sings in his unmistakably deep and grainy voice.

“Belly of the Beast,” featuring Toups’ vocals, Lafayette slide guitar master Sonny Landreth, horns and B-3 Hammond organ, takes a rousing gospel-meets-rhythm-and-blues hybrid direction. While "Belly of the Beast" is a fine performance and production, it leans too heavily on some famous songs, namely Crosby, Stills, & Nash’s “Love the One You’re With,” John Boutté’s “Treme Song” and, a standard from southwest Louisiana, Little Bob’s “I Got Loaded.”

There’s more musical variety in “Red Tail Lights on a Blues Highway.” Spinosa once again matches the right singer to the right song, placing Baton Rouge’s LeBlanc in the spotlight for a blues-rocking tale about a haunted highway. And blue-eyed soul singer Parker James takes the mic for “While You’re Still Mine,” a love song in a smooth-jazz vein. But lasting nearly five minutes, the song runs long. Some of the album’s other four-minute-plus selections could also use trimming.

Despite some long tracks and the mentioned instance of derivativeness, “Friends and Legends of Louisiana” is an ambitious opus worthy of praise and popularity. ~John Wirt

Friends & Legends Of Louisiana MP3
Friends & Legends Of Louisiana FLAC

Thursday, February 20, 2020

Sonny Landreth - Blacktop Run

Size: 82,2 MB
Time: 35:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front & Back

01. Blacktop Run (3:38)
02. Lover Dance With Me (2:48)
03. Mule (2:58)
04. Groovy Goddess (3:47)
05. Somebody Gotta Make A Move (3:54)
06. Beyond Borders (4:09)
07. Don't Ask Me (4:13)
08. The Wilds Of Wonder (3:06)
09. Many Worlds (3:01)
10. Something Grand (3:58)

Sonny Landreth’s new album "Blacktop Run" mixes genres and styles across a landscape of lyricism and rootsy grooves. His 3rd album for blues connaisseur label Provogue, and his 14th overall, will be released on February 21, 2020. A percussive burst of acoustic resonator guitar pushes the narrator on a journey “between the life I left and the edge of next” in the title cut of guitarist, songwriter and bandleader Sonny Landreth’s 14th album. As the singer feels the wind at his back, a rising bass line intersects Landreth's vocalizing to stretch the fingerpicked tune into Far Eastern melodicism. The south Louisiana artist's groundbreaking work has long mixed familiarity with experimentation, and his latest ten-song collection stretches from hard-edged electric instrumentals to wistful acoustic ballads. The project's range is the fruit of a renewed collaboration. Producer RS Field – who helmed Landreth's trio of breakout albums – joined the six-stringer and co-producer Tony Daigle to finish the record.

Blacktop Run

Friday, November 1, 2019

Mike Zito - A Tribute To Chuck Berry

Size: 161,2 MB
Time: 67:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Blues Rock, Rock & Roll
Art: Full

01. St.Louis Blues (Feat. Charlie Berry III) (3:20)
02. Rock And Roll Music (Feat. Joanna Connor) (3:08)
03. Johnny B Goode (Feat. Walter Trout) (3:49)
04. Wee Wee Hours (Feat. Joe Bonamassa) (5:25)
05. Memphis (Feat. Anders Osborne) (3:05)
06. I Want To Be Your Driver (Feat. Ryan Perry) (2:55)
07. You Never Can Tell (Feat. Robben Ford) (4:00)
08. Back In The USA (Feat. Eric Gales) (3:02)
09. No Particular Place To Go (Feat. Jeremiah Johnson) (2:50)
10. Too Much Monkey Business (Feat. Luther Dickinson) (3:13)
11. Havana Moon (Feat. Sonny Landreth) (4:21)
12. Promised Land (Feat. Tinsley Ellis) (3:29)
13. Down Bound Train (Feat. Alex Skolnick) (4:04)
14. Maybellene (Feat. Richard Fortus) (2:55)
15. School Days (Feat. Ally Venable) (3:02)
16. Brown Eyed Handsome Man (Feat. Kirk Fletcher & Josh Smith) (2:16)
17. Reelin' And Rockin' (Feat. Tommy Castro) (4:01)
18. Let It Rock (Feat. Jimmy Vivino) (2:27)
19. Thirty Days (Feat. Albert Castiglia) (2:56)
20. My Ding A Ling (Feat. Kid Andersen) (3:16)

Chuck Berry, the artist, was a genius. We owe just about everything great about rock and roll to Berry (and his pianist/collaborator, Johnnie Johnson). Singer/guitarist Mike Zito pays tribute to the artist on Rock ‘n’ Roll – A Tribute to Chuck Berry.

Berry, the man, was more complicated. He was an African American who perfected a largely white artform. His career stalled due to a Mann Act conviction, which many believe to be a racist statue. People have maintained that after his 20-month jail sentence, Berry came out a changed, meaner person. In the 1980s and 1990s, there were all kinds of allegations against Berry: assaulting women, video cameras in bathrooms, and videotapes of minors. He is both survivor and a perpetrator, easy to sympathize with but hard to root for.

There’s a fantastic scene at the end of Hail! Hail! Rock ‘n’ Roll, the documentary about the Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards efforts to organize a tribute show for Berry. Berry tortures Richards for most of the film, treating Richards more like a court-appointed dentist than as a huge rock star trying to honor Berry’s legacy. At the end of the show, Richards, who has seen some things, looks completely desiccated, totally broken by Berry. Altamont and Hells Angels were one thing. But Berry was next-level pain.

But people like Richards and Zito pay their respect because Berry’s music is just that good. Blasting this album over a weekend, my one-year-old daughter would consistently bop to Zito’s takes on these classic, instantly-recognizable songs. It says something when music resonates that powerfully with a person so young.

Zito says the album originated from his time living in St. Louis, Berry’s hometown, where he got to know Berry’s drummer and son. I suspect Zito also hoped to introduce Berry’s music to younger fans, who might not be familiar with many of these classic songs. Similarly, Zito features an impressive array of guests across the album, using this as an opportunity to promote lower-profile artists (although there are also big names, like Joe Bonamassa and Luther Dickinson, who finds time to appear on what seems to be thousands of albums a year).

There are also some cool surprises. “Downbound Train” is trippier than Berry’s original, featuring guitar right out of Led Zeppelin’s “Dazed and Confused.” The guitar comes courtesy of Alex Skolnick, best known for this work with the thrash-metal band Testament (but also an accomplished jazz guitarist). “Rock and Roll Music” is re-imagined with slide guitar and backing vocals from the amazing Joanna Connor. And “Too Much Monkey Business” features a laid-back Dickinson co-vocal that gives the song a different complexion than Berry’s higher-energy original.

Despite the stunning number of guests, Zito is never lost. His vocals and guitar are present on every track, gracefully allowing his collaborators to shine, but also not deferring to anyone. Zito never lets the songs stray too far from the Berry originals, but provides space for different takes on material that is canonically seared into the minds of many. For instance, “Brown Eyed Handsome Man,” one of my all-time favorite Berry tunes, here features singer/guitarists Kirk Fletcher and Josh Smith, but doesn’t deviate too far from Berry’s original. They throw in some slightly flashier guitar licks and put a little mustard on the vocals, but otherwise the performers know better than to mess with perfection.

The perfection of Berry’s music is the challenge of an album like this. Back to the Future, which wasn’t a documentary, features a scene where Michael J. Fox, having traveled back in time to the 1950s, performs Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode” at a high school dance, using all of Berry’s moves, both of the guitar and duckwalk variety. Berry’s cousin runs to call him, holding the phone up so Berry can hear the new sound he’s supposedly been looking for. It’s a goofy joke, but there’s a larger message: that Berry’s music is historically significant. The world would be a sadder place without the music of Cream or the Allman Brothers, but would things be that different? Now think about where we would be without Berry. What music wouldn’t have been written without his (and Johnson’s) coming first? Would we have a Beatles or a Stones without him?

And that’s what works about this album. It’s timeless music respectfully presented by talented artists. Zito uses his visibility not just to honor Berry, but to also re-introduce him to a generation (or two) of fans who might not be familiar with his work, which still stands up remarkably well, all those decades later. Adding on to the good deed, Zito also uses this as an opportunity to showcase contemporary artists who might not be as well-known as they should be (and many of whom have been produced by Zito, like the criminally good Albert Castiglia, who performs Berry’s “30 Days”). Great music and great intentions makes for a beautiful tribute. The Review: 9/10 ~Steven Ovadia

A Tribute To Chuck Berry

Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Billy Pierce - Take Me Back To The Delta

Size: 115,4 MB
Time: 49:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Blues Rock, Zydeco
Art: Front

01. Happy Home (4:29)
02. Take Me Back To The Delta (Feat. Sonny Landreth & Charlie Wooton) (5:05)
03. Song For Sonny (Feat. Waylon Thibodeaux) (3:27)
04. Key To The Highway (Feat. Mark Mullins, Craig Klein, Greg Hicks & Johnny Neel) (4:43)
05. Cajun Boy Blues (2:19)
06. Jambalaya (Feat. Waylon Thibodeaux) (2:48)
07. Tojo (5:48)
08. Give Me A Dollar (Feat. Mark Mullins, Craig Klein & Greg Hicks) (4:15)
09. Rooster (Feat. Jimmy Carpenter) (7:11)
10. Zydecoldsmobile (Feat. Waylon Thibodeaux & Johnny Neel) (5:30)
11. Big Joe (Feat. Charlie Wooton, Henry Ramato & James Crawford) (3:49)

There is no single type of “blues guitar”. Fans may listen to electric, acoustic, or other varieties – including slide. Fabulous practitioners of this last kind include Bonnie Raitt on the rock-and-roll side and Sonny Landreth on the blues side. Landreth has been praised by Eric Clapton as being his (Clapton’s) favorite slide guitarist. This is quite an honor considering that an iconic piece of graffiti during the 1960’s stated “Clapton is God”. If so, then Sonny was one of his most admired apostles. Those who share the stage with him receive a taste of his magic, as in the case of Wilmington, Delaware’s Billy Pierce. According to his website, “Pierce has received a number of accolades; a recent one includes the Saint Georges Session acoustic recording of his song ‘Take Me Back to the Delta’, which won the Big City Rhythm and Blues Magazine’s first round CD sampler contest in 2013.” His debut album of the same name features above-average slide guitar from both Billy and Sonny. Paired with serviceable singing, it may or may not be reference quality, but at least it spares no effort to impress blues fans. As an added plus, seven of the eleven songs on “Delta” are originals (the others include Hank Williams’ “Jambalaya” and Segar and Broonzy’s “Key to the Highway”). Sonny Landreth wrote track ten, “Zydecoldsmobile”.

The Billy Pierce Band consists of himself on slide guitar and vocals, Chris Miller on bass, and Billy Meyers on drums. His numerous “Friends” include Sonny Landreth on slide guitar during the title track, bassist Charlie Wooton, Waylon Thibodeaux on fiddle for three songs, saxophone player Jimmy Carpenter, the Bonerama Horns (Craig Klein, Mark Mullins, and Greg Hicks), Johnny Neel on piano, Johnny Digiovanni on drums and kenjira-framed drum, Jimmy Crawford on dejembe, Steve Ruth and Henry Ramato on accordion, and Garry Cogdell on background vocals. Horn charts were written by Craig Klein, and they provide pep to the Zydeco numbers.

Anyone can play the blues, and that’s what’s so fantastic about this magazine’s favorite musical genre. Unlike classical musicians in a symphony, who require years of training from their earliest childhood in order to play at top levels, the blues is open to everyone who’s ever had that “low-down old aching chill (Son House)”. All it takes is mojo and a guitar, in most cases, to start living the dream of being a blues guru. With that said, it also takes excellent persuasion and recruitment skills as well as talent. Lining up co-performers of Sonny Landreth’s caliber on stage while another one takes the lead is no easy feat, and so hats off to Billy Pierce and his Friends.

Got an itch for some zesty Cajun blues? “Take Me Back to the Delta” will scratch it, especially “Song for Sonny”, “Zydecoldsmobile” and “Big Joe”. Billy Pierce definitely ‘Got Slide’! ~Rainey Wetnight

Take Me Back To The Delta

Thursday, June 6, 2019

Peter Frampton Band - All Blues

Source: Digital Lossless Copy
Size: 111.6 MB
Time: 48:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. I Just Want To Make Love To You (Feat. Kim Wilson) (4:07)
02. She Caught The Katy (4:45)
03. Georgia On My Mind (4:10)
04. You Can't Judge A Book By The Cover (4:25)
05. Me And My Guitar (4:23)
06. All Blues (Feat. Larry Carlton) (6:57)
07. The Thrill Is Gone (Feat. Sonny Landreth) (5:51)
08. Going Down Slow (Feat. Steve Morse) (5:12)
09. I'm A King Bee (3:58)
10. Same Old Blues (4:34)

All Blues, the forthcoming covers album from the Peter Frampton Band, is set for release on June 7 via UMe. The album is a collection of Frampton's favorite blues classics and was recorded with his longtime touring band, made up of Adam Lester (guitar/vocals), Rob Arthur (keyboards/guitar/vocals) and Dan Wojciechowski (drums). All Blues was recorded at Frampton's home studio in Nashville, Studio Phenix, and was co-produced by Chuck Ainlay and Peter Frampton.

All Blues

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Peter Frampton Band - The Thrill Is Gone/I Just Want To Make Love To You EP

Source: Digital Lossless Copy
Size: 90 MB
Time: 9:58
File: FLAC
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. The Thrill Is Gone (Feat. Sonny Landreth) (5:51)
02. I Just Want To Make Love To You (Feat. Kim Wilson) (4:07)

From Peter Frampton upcoming album feat. Kim Wilson and Sonny Landreth.

The Thrill Is Gone/I Just Want To Make Love To You

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Sonny Landreth - South Of I-10 (Japan)

Size: 120,8 MB
Time: 51:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1995/2017
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. Shooting For The Moon (3:33)
02. Creole Angel (4:15)
03. Native Stepson (3:36)
04. Orphans Of The Motherland (3:37)
05. Congo Square (6:24)
06. Turning Wheel (4:35)
07. South Of I-10 (3:38)
08. Cajun Waltz (3:41)
09. Mojo Boogie (4:32)
10. C'est Chaud (3:19)
11. Great Gulf Wind (5:07)
12. Great Gulf Wind Reprise (1:44)
13. Blues Attack (3:19)

Sonny Landreth's screaming slide guitar plows right into you and carries you along on its feral journey. This CD opens going for your guts and never quits, though at times its touch is more caressing than careening, as in "Cajun Waltz." This CD got a lot of airplay yet never got tiresome, the true test of good music. A wide variety of slide guitar styles, backed by an extremely tight rhythm section and various other New Orleans musicians adds to the pleasure of the album. This music combines the best of zydeco, New Orleans R&B, Cajun, and rock & roll into one mood-elevating experience. Listen to "Mojo Boogie" next to "C'est Chaud," then go on to "Shootin' for the Moon"; there is no letdown, but there is great variety. A must-buy. ~ by Bob Gottlieb

South Of I-10 MP3
South Of I-10 FLAC

Friday, June 22, 2018

Tom Hambridge - The NOLA Sessions

Size: 123,4 MB
Time: 52:31
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: New Orleans Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. Blues Been Mighty Good To Me (4:09)
02. Bluz Crazy (3:59)
03. This End Of The Road (5:47)
04. I Love Everything (2:54)
05. What You Leave Behind (3:06)
06. Little Things (3:16)
07. Whiskey Ghost (4:38)
08. Save Me (4:15)
09. A Couple Drops (3:53)
10. Masterpiece (5:14)
11. Me And Charlie (5:11)
12. Trying To Find It (3:40)
13. Faith (2:22)

Tom Hambridge is a two time Grammy Award winning producer, songwriter, and drummer. He also has six Blues Music Award nominations and shares his 2011 BMA for “Song of The Year” with Buddy Guy. Hambridge has produced Guy’s last four albums including 2015’s “Born To Play Guitar”. Guy’s newest album “Blues Is Alive & Well” also produced by Hambridge should be released any day now. Other recent Hambridge productions include albums for Kenny Neal and Mike Zito.

This new album is inspired by New Orleans and the creative depth of its local legends including the late Allen Toussaint, guitarist Sonny Landreth and organist Ivan Neville. All of the songs are written or co-written by Hambridge. Also guesting are the McCrary Sisters and The Naughty Horns.

On “Blues Been Mighty Good To Me”, written with Richard Fleming, Hambridge plays drums and shares the vocal with the iconic pianist Toussaint on one of the last recordings made before his passing in 2015. This is a great song that should receive considerable attention.

Slydeco guitar wizard Landreth enables the rockin’ side of vocalist Hambridge on four tunes; “This End of The Road”, “Little Things”, “Whiskey Ghost” co-written with Gary Nicholson, and “Me and Charlie” (dedicated to Buddy Guy’s bus driver Charlie McPherson). These are performed as just a trio with Hambridge on drums and bassist Tommy MacDonald. These are so good one has to wonder whether Hambridge might produce a future project for Landreth.

“What You Leave Behind”, written by Hambridge for his old friend John Flynn, features the B-3 mastery of Ivan Neville; guitarist Shane Theriot; bassist Calvin Turner Jr. and The Naughty Horns. On “Save Me”, co-written with Bobby Whitlock, McKendree is added on organ; David Torkanowsky on piano; and background vocalists The McCrary Sisters. On “I Love Everything” Hambridge’s daughters, Sarah and Rachel, replace the McCrary Sisters. “Masterpiece” is a fabulous song about a father reflecting on the beauty of his son. Neville plays again on “A Couple Drops”.

New Orleans guitarist John Fohl, formerly of Dr. John’s Lower 911 joins Hambridge and MacDonald on “Blue Crazy” with Kevin McKendree on piano; on the contemporary country ballad “Trying To Find It” with McKendree, and guitarist Rob McNelley; and on the closer “Faith” with Nathaniel Smith, cello.

Hambridge usually keeps busy by making others sound better. This is a fabulous album by him that should garner airplay in several different radio markets including Blues and Americana. ~Richard Ludmerer

The NOLA Sessions MP3
The NOLA Sessions FLAC

Wednesday, January 3, 2018

The Atlanta Cafe Band - American Spirit

Size: 105,1 MB
Time: 45:41
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Blues Rock, Southern Rock
Art: Front

01. Jeopardy (5:51)
02. Playing To Live (Feat. Sonny Landreth) (4:31)
03. Baby Said She'd Call (7:47)
04. 212 Degrees (3:49)
05. Midnight Train (4:52)
06. The Road (5:14)
07. Memphis (3:52)
08. Taxi (9:42)

Atlanta Cafe consists of of 4 well traveled vets of the blues/southern/country rock scene who have been together for the past decade playing hundreds and hundreds of shows while at the same time receiving very respectable airplay and sales of their CD "Waiting all night." Their own compositions of blues/southern rock styled tunes along with a different take on selected covers has garnered them a dedicated following in the New York tri state area. Over the years the members have been in bands with players from .or in concert/festivals with many many national acts including: Blackfoot/Skynryd, Vanilla Fudge, George Porter, Jon Cleary, Tab Benoit, Marcia Ball, Anthony Gomes, The Good Rats, Mickey Gilley, Hank Williams Jr, Buck Owens, Willie Nile, Garland Jefferies, Tedeshi Trucks, Brewer and Shipley, From Good Homes and many, many others. They have appeared at the Black Potatoe Fest, The Highlands Fest at Waterloo, WNTI Stage Music Fest, Big Brew Fest , NJ Food and Music Fest, and Michael Arnones Craw Fish Festival where they conducted a masters session and shared the stage with Grammy award winners George Porter, Marcia Ball and Jon Cleary. They also have worked with Homegrown Radio NJ and WNTI at various events and benefits for the stations. Come on out to hear them as their music will put a smile on your face, a stomp in your feet and a boogie in your pocket!

American Spirit

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

VA - Rockin' The Blues

Size: 153,3 MB
Time: 65:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front & Back

01 Kenny Wayne Shepherd - Diamonds & Gold (5:15)
02 Quinn Sullivan - Midnight Highway (5:53)
03 Eric Gales - Been So Long (4:45)
04 Walter Trout - We're All In This Together (Feat. Joe Bonamassa) (7:55)
05 Beth Hart - Love Is A Lie (3:12)
06 Gary Hoey - Dust & Bones (4:07)
07 Lance Lopez - Mr Lucky (Previously Unreleased) (4:07)
08 Simo - People Say (3:57)
09 Thomas Wynn And The Believers - Wade Waist Deep (3:33)
10 Supersonic Blues Machine - L.O.V.E. (4:29)
11 Jonny Lang - Stronger Together (3:34)
12 Sonny Landreth - Blues Attack (Live) (5:21)
13 Black Stone Cherry - Champagne & Reefer (3:43)
14 Ronnie Baker Brooks - Times Have Changed (Feat. Al Kapone) (5:17)

Provogue is home to some of the worlds’ finest modern Blues artists and the Label are thrilled to announce their first Rockin’ The Blues 2018 Tour featuring the exceptional talents of Eric Gales, Quinn Sullivan, Gary Hoey and now added to the bill as a special end of show guest is Texan guitar slinger Lance Lopez guitar hero extravaganza. The tour will be calling through Germany, The Netherlands and the UK in March next year.

To celebrate this, Rockin’ The Blues, the album features 14 stellar performances from Eric Gales, Quinn Sullivan, Gary Hoey, Black Stone Cherry, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Beth Hart, Walter Trout, SIMO, Supersonic Blues Machine, Thomas Wynn & The Believers, Jonny Lang, Lance Lopez, Sonny Landreth and Ronnie Baker Brooks.
Guitar whirlwind Eric Gales’ Been So Long is taken from his critically acclaimed new album Middle of the Road which was released early 2017, Eric Gales is a man on form and on fire right now. His fourth album on Provogue/Mascot Label Group (15th album in total) sees him at his most expressive yet, his rebirth in fact; it is a deeply personal and reflective record that echoes where he is in his life right now and he allows himself to open up and really flourish. The who’s who of guitarists are declaring their admiration for him; Dave Navarro (Jane’s Addiction) exclaimed that “How Eric Gales isn’t the hugest name in rock guitar is a total mystery”, modern blues icon Joe Bonamassa said he is “One of the best, if not the best guitar player in the world”, whilst Mark Tremonti (Alter Bridge) said ‘this guy could be the best player on Earth” not to mention an admirer in the shape of Carlos Santana.

18 year old guitar prodigy and Buddy Guy protégé Quinn Sullivan has been a music professional for more than 75 percent of his life. He’s shared the stage with Buddy Guy aged eight, Eric Clapton, Los Lobos, The Roots, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi and Joe Bonamassa, and he opened for B.B. King, who later invited him to play his treasured “Lucille” guitar. He’s also appeared on national TV, with guest appearances on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Oprah, Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, Conan with Jeff Bridges and twice on The Ellen DeGeneres show aged six and fourteen. Sullivan has packed some extraordinary experience into his decade-long career, Midnight Highway is taken from the his new album of the same name which was produced by multi GRAMMY® winner Tom Hambridge (Buddy Guy, Susan Tedeschi, Johnny Winter).

It’s just so right-with-the-universe that Gary Hoey’s 20th album, Dust & Bones is an exuberant fusion of blues and rock. After all, this accomplished and diverse guitarist has explored several styles in his career—hard rock, rock, surf, and prog, to name a few. The title track is a bonafide Hoey classic. In 1987, the Boston-born guitarist caught the ear of Ozzy Osbourne—no slouch at picking great guitar players—and almost ended up in his band (The gig ultimately went to Zakk Wylde.) Hoey scored a major-label record deal where his version of Focus’ “Hocus Pocus” brought him huge success.

There’s no doubt about it, the state of Texas is well known worldwide for its fiery blues guitar players, and Lance Lopez (also singer/guitarist for Supersonic Blues Machine) perfectly encapsulates that fire on Mr Lucky with some furious piece of fretboard mastery.

The album is awash with some of the finest blues artists in modern times; powerhouse Beth Hart is unstoppable on Love is A Lie, the Grammy-nominated singer/songwriter is riding a creative tidal wave, firing out acclaimed albums, hooking up with the biggest names in music and rocking the house each night with that celebrated burnt-honey voice. Arena rockers Black Stone Cherry returned to their roots in September releasing a blues cover record Black to Blues, here they explode in BSC style on Muddy Waters, Champagne & Reefer. Louisiana’s Kenny Wayne Shepherd prowls on Diamonds & Gold saying; Diamonds & Gold is a wink-wink kinda thing about how materialistic our society has become. It’s like, we should be living for bigger things than how much we can accumulate. If you look at the mainstream and what young people are led to believe they should work towards – it’s all just stuff. And stuff doesn’t have much substance. So that song is just to kinda inspire people to look for more in life.”

Nashville trio SIMO get funky on People Say, slide guitar maestro Sonny Landreth demonstrates his chops on this live version of Blues Attack taken from Recorded Live In Lafayette. Blues warrior Walter Trout shows why he is at the peak of his career with the formidable We’re All In This Together ft. Joe Bonamasssa. Jonny Lang returned with his first new album, Signs in 4 years in 2017 and Stronger Together is a soul crossover highlight. Chicago blues man Ronnie Baker Brooks, son of the late great Lonnie Brooks, delivers some fine blues, soul and funk with Times Have Changed ft. Al Kapone. Orlando’s favourite band Thomas Wynn & The Believers deliver an exquisite performance on Wade Waist Deep whilst Supersonic Blues Machine go from strength to strength and reach for the sky on the festival favourite, the hypnotic L.O.V.E.

Rockin' The Blues

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Chris Daniels & The Kings - Blues With Horns, Vol. 1 (Feat. Freddi Gowdy)

Size: 104,1 MB
Time: 41:44
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Funky Blues
Art: Front

01. Sweet Memphis (3:46)
02. Fried Food - Hard Liquor (5:01)
03. Get Up Off The Funk (4:19)
04. Soothe Me Baby (3:45)
05. Wouldn't Treat A Dog (The Way You Treated Me) (4:06)
06. Baby's In Love With The Radio (3:42)
07. Can't Even Do Wrong Right (3:39)
08. You Can Stay But That Noise Must Go (4:29)
09. Them Changes (3:44)
10. Rain Check (5:07)

Personnel:
Chris Daniels – vocals, guitar, slide guitar and synth guitar
Freddi Gowdi – vocals
The Kings:
Randy Amen – drums and vocals
Kevin Lege – bass and vocals
Colin “Bones” Jones – lead guitar
Jim Waddell – alto and tenor sax and vocals
Darryl Abrahamson – trumpet and vocals

Guests:
Sonny Landreth – slide guitar
John Magnie - keyboards (Subdudes)
Doug Krause – keyboards
Clay Kirkland - harmonica
Hazel Miller and Coco Brown – backing vocals
Bob Rebhoz – tenor sax and horn arrangements
Darren Kramer – trombone and horn arrangements

This is Chris Daniels & The Kings 15 album, and our second with Freddi Gowdy. As we’ve toured blues festivals over the US and Europe I’ve noticed that the old tradition of horns is disappearing. At a blues & brews in Greeley I met one young blues-fan who’d been standing and staring at us. He came up after our set and asked me why I called our music ‘funky blues’ – a name festivals and European fans use to describe our music. He was a traditionalist and thought blues was 12-bars, guitar and maybe harp, but not sax, trumpet and horns. I gave him my email and suggested he listen to Bobby Blue Bland, Johnny Taylor, Albert King, Walter Wolf Man Washington, Gatemouth Brown and a host of incredible artists who’s use of horns is as essential to their music as a guitar is to Sonny Landreth. I also suggested he check the life and history of W.C. Handy. He wrote me back about a month later and said, “I had no idea. I got into blues because of Gary Clark Jr. and the then discovered Stevie Ray Vaughn and then Eric Clapton and Robert Cray and I never knew about this horn thing. Thanks for taking the time to talk to me. My favorite right now is Johnny Guitar Watson. Have you heard his old stuff from the 50s and 60s?” I had to laugh. And I thought, I wonder how many other blues fans don’t know about the New Orleans, Memphis horn tradition in blues that goes back 100 + years. That’s the seed that started this album. The reason that this is called “Volume I” is simple. We only scratched the surface of all the incredible blues with horns. More to come!

Blues comes from countless inspirations, lust, lost love, oppression, health, booze, self-destruction – you name it. And by playing it, singing it and dancing to it –blues liberates – even if only for a moment. There are a lot of very simple lyrics in blues that say a great deal more than the basic text. But there are also really great (and funny) lyrics in blues. T Rex, Bobby Blue Bland, Walter Wolfman Washington all bring that sense of empowerment to their lyrics. What’s important is not that you lay your head on some lonesome railroad track. What’s important is that you ‘snatch their damn head back.’ I grew up listening to Koerner, Ray and Glover and like their songs these lyrics were really fun to sing. With love and thanks to Freddi, The Kings, Jacob, John, Mark, Hazel, Coco, Doug, Sonny, Magnie, Clay Kirkland and Greg for making this the best Kings album so far. Big hugs, Chris Daniels

Blues With Horns, Vol. 1

Friday, June 30, 2017

Sonny Landreth - Recorded Live In Lafayette (2-Disc Set)

Whenever an artist plays a hometown show, there’s a little more juice in the air. Sonny Landreth’s Recorded Live in Lafayette was tracked at the Acadiana Center for the Arts, not far from the bars and clubs where the pioneering slide guitarist cut his teeth, and you can feel the crowd’s energy reflected in the music. Recorded over the course of three nights, the double live album features Landreth’s working trio of bassist David Ranson and drummer Brian Brignac, as well as keyboardist Steve Conn and guitarist Sam Broussard.

“I’ve been thinking about doing this for a while,” says Landreth, “but honestly I was having trouble deciding what type of live album to do. Each night we kept adding songs, so we thought one acoustic disc and one electric disc would be the way to go.” For most of the acoustic set, Landreth played the striking guitar that appears on the album cover. “It’s a Larry Pogreba ‘hubcap’ resonator,” he explains. The guitar was a gift from Mark Knopfler, who played a similar model on “Creole Angel” from Landreth’s South of I-10 album. “For these songs, it appealed to me because it was bright and had some air to the sound, and it compressed in a way I really like.”

Landreth has been releasing albums for more than 30 years, so he has a huge body of material to cull from. Recorded Live in Lafayette offers a definitive overview of both his amazing slide guitar and his inspired songwriting. Here—in his own words—are the stories behind the songs on this epic double album.

Album: Recorded Live In Lafayette (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:18
Size: 108.3 MB
Styles: Louisiana blues
Year: 2017

[5:20] 1. Blues Attack
[5:59] 2. Hell At Home
[6:46] 3. Key To The Hi
[5:37] 4. Creole Angel
[7:34] 5. A World Away
[5:24] 6. The High Side
[4:19] 7. Bound By The Blues
[6:15] 8. The U.S.S. Zydecoldsmobile

Recorded Live In Lafayette (Disc 1)

Album: Recorded Live In Lafayette (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:05
Size: 100.9 MB
Styles: Louisiana blues
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[7:21] 1. Back To Bayou Teche
[5:49] 2. True Blue
[4:27] 3. The Milky Way Home
[5:24] 4. Brave New Girl
[3:11] 5. Überesso
[4:32] 6. Soul Salvation
[6:10] 7. Walkin' Blues
[7:08] 8. The One And Only Truth

Recorded Live In Lafayette (Disc 2)

Wednesday, June 14, 2017

VA - Alligator Blues Guitar

Size: 172,5 MB
Time: 73:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01 Michael Burks - Hit The Ground Running (3:26)
02 Joe Louis Walker - Too Drunk To Drive Drunk (3:54)
03 Hound Dog Taylor - Take Five (2:42)
04 Sonny Landreth - Taylor's Rock (3:57)
05 Albert Collins, Robert Cray & Johnny Copeland - Albert's Alley (4:06)
06 Guitar Shorty - I've Been Working (4:32)
07 Johnny Winter - See See Baby (3:09)
08 Eddy The Chief Clearwater - Too Old To Get Married (3:53)
09 Coco Montoya - It Takes Time (4:49)
10 Luther Allison - Give Me Back My Wig (4:45)
11 Fenton Robinson - West Side Baby (5:03)
12 Roy Buchanan - You Can't Judge A Book By The Cover (3:21)
13 Long John Hunter - Ice Cold (4:21)
14 Elvin Bishop - The Skin They're In (4:02)
15 Tinsley Ellis - Amanda (4:19)
16 Left Hand Frank - One Room Country Shack (4:28)
17 Son Seals - Frank And Johnnie (4:26)
18 Lonnie Brooks - I Want All My Money Back (4:33)

Alligator Blues Guitar

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Sonny Landreth - Grant Street

Size: 148,0 MB
Time: 64:12
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2005
Styles: Louisiana Blues, Modern Electric Blues
Art: Full

01. Native Stepson ( 5:05)
02. Broken Hearted Road ( 7:42)
03. Gone Pecan ( 3:58)
04. Port Of Calling ( 5:32)
05. Blues Attack ( 5:14)
06. Z. Rider ( 4:15)
07. U.S.S. Zydecoldsmobile ( 5:09)
08. Wind In Denver ( 5:12)
09. All About You ( 4:21)
10. Pedal To Metal ( 7:00)
11. Congo Square (10:39)

Just as Muhammad Ali once boasted that he could "float like a butterfly, sting like a bee," Louisiana's Sonny Landreth can make his slide guitar roar like a rocket ship and dance like a ballerina. As this live set recorded on his home turf attests, few guitarists combine such power with such precision. Landreth’s veteran rhythm section of bassist David Ranson and drummer Kenneth Blevins provides whipcrack support on a set of supercharged instrumentals ("Native Stepson," "Z. Rider," "Pedal to Metal") and original blues ("Broken-Hearted Road," "Wind in Denver"), building to a climax with the guitarist’s signature tune, "Congo Square." Though Landreth established himself as an ace sideman from his apprenticeship with zydeco kingpin Clifton Chenier through his extended stint with John Hiatt, he really cuts loose with his own trio, generating a dynamic propulsion that threatens to levitate this Lafayette dancehall. --Don McLeese

Recorded Live at Grant Street Dancehall, Lafayette, LA, April 23 & 24, 2004, Grant Street is a searing live set featuring songs from Sonny Landreth's first, out-of-print 1981 solo release all the way up to his last release, 2003's Best Contemporary Blues Grammy-nominated The Road We're On. This time, the studio sheen is absent ... & the electricity is omnipresent!

Grant Street

Friday, May 20, 2016

Carl Verheyen - The Grand Design

Size: 116,2 MB
Time: 50:04
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Blues Rock
Label: Cranktone
Art: Front

01. The Times They Are A-Changin' (Feat. Stuart Hamm) (5:03)
02. Closing Time Blues (4:27)
03. Distracted Girl (Feat. Sonny Landreth) (6:02)
04. Beyond My Reach (5:36)
05. Angels (6:03)
06. Warrior (3:58)
07. Live My Days (5:00)
08. Adeline (3:34)
09. Intangibles Collide (4:56)
10. Candy Fame (Feat. Chester Thompson) (5:21)

The Grand Design is the new album featuring Dave Marotta, John Mader, Jim Cox, Sonny Landreth, Stuart Hamm and Chester Thompson. It was recorded entirely at Sweetwater Studios in Ft Wayne, Indiana.

Carl Verheyen is probably best known as guitarist for Supertramp, and has also performed with Richard Elliott and Joe Jackson, among many others. An active studio musician, Verheyen has done work for television shows and commercials as well. His first album as a bandleader, 1988's aptly titled No Borders, demonstrated his skills in a wide variety of styles from jazz fusion to rock to country, and included an appearance by celebrated axeman Allan Holdsworth on one track. Verheyen has continued to explore a considerable stylistic range on his albums issued during subsequent years; his releases of the 21st century have included Solo Guitar Improvisations (2001), Six (2003), Rumor Mill (2005), Take One Step (2006), and Trading 8s (2009). ~ by Paul Kohler

The Grand Design

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Various Artists - Letter From Memphis

Year: 1998
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:01
Size: 177,6 MB
Styles: Modern electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Donnie Fritts - Hello Memphis (3:50)
2. Don Nix - Goin' Down The Road To Memphis (3:52)
3. Bill Wharton & The Ingredients - Havana Moon (3:34)
4. Mark Hodgson - Big Foot Woman (3:08)
5. Dr. Hector & The Groove Injectors - Doing All The Wrong Things Right (5:07)
6. Ace Moreland - No, No, Henrietta (4:49)
7. Bruce Channel - Hootchie Chile (3:23)
8. Microwave Dave & The Nukes - Road Runner (4:51)
9. Lee Baker & The Agitators - (Air Mobile) You Can't Catch Me (3:34)
10. Don McMinn - Where's The Love (2:48)
11. Gary B.B. Coleman - That's Enough (5:02)
12. Tony Sarno & The Screamin' Blue Demons - Money On The Side (3:07)
13. Sonny Landreth - Creole Angel (4:16)
14. Cold Blue Steel - Shufflin Little Lady (3:22)
15. The Bluebirds - Run For The Levee (4:01)
16. The Radio Kings - Love Comes Easy (Love Comes Hard) (3:15)
17. Mark May & The Agitators - Short & Stout (3:09)
18. Chicago Bob Nelson - It's A Shame (3:00)
19. Smokehouse - Mr So And So (2:45)
20. Eric Culberson & The Erok Band - Wrapped Up In Love Again (4:59)

Today, blues and R&B music are no longer the preserve of working class African Americans and, although the city of Memphis itself has changed, the influence of its legendary performers can be heard in the recordings on this cd. The selections here, taken from the current generation of blues and R&B artists, represent the best of the new era of Memphis Music.

Although they are continuing the traditions of artists such as B.B. King, Howlin' Wolf and Sonny Boy Williamson, these artists sing new songs with new voices; however, the intertwined threads of anguish and joy, agony and celebration are still present, as they in the primitive blues that W.C. Handy heard down on Beale Street all those years ago. /Excerpt from the liner notes

Letter From Memphis mc
Letter From Memphis gofile