Showing posts with label Peter Parcek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Parcek. Show all posts

Friday, September 4, 2020

Peter Parcek - Mississippi Suitcase

Size: 125,9 MB
Time: 54:00
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. The World Is Upside Down (4:20)
02. Everybody Oughta Make A Change (5:32)
03. Beyond Here Lies Nothing (4:23)
04. The Supernatural (3:22)
05. Life's A One Way Ticket (4:14)
06. Mississippi Suitcase (Slight Return) (6:26)
07. Eleanor Rigby (3:47)
08. Until My Love Come Down (8:21)
09. She Like To Boogie Real Low (3:58)
10. Waiting For The Man (5:44)
11. A Head Full Of Ghosts (3:50)

Award-winning blues guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter Peter Parcek demonstrates the rare ability to get inside the souls of his songs and his listeners on his new record Mississippi Suitcase. The album drops September 4th, 2020 on Lightnin’ Records and features Parcek plying his trade alongside heavyweight guests including North Mississippi Allstars’ Luther Dickinson, Muscle Shoals organist Spooner Oldham, and harmonica legend Mickey Raphael (Willie Nelson). Parcek is a virtuoso in the primordial sense and has much more in common with the voodoo blues of Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker than the technical blues/rock of SRV and Joe Bonamassa. The record vibes like a night in a haunted roadhouse instead of a stadium set and Parcek taps into that part of the blues that might actually put your mortal soul in danger.

Parcek uses Mississippi Suitcase to take his fans on a vision quest through the eternal, timeless humanity that all blues music runs on. He’s steeped in the traditions of the genre but is never bound by them. Rather, he uses them as launching pads to create his own take on things that feel deep, emotional, and spiritual. His guitar work is powerfully spare and direct and his vocals drip with the despair of someone waiting at life’s crossroads to make a deal. The record isn’t a typical houserocking experience. It’s more dark and introspective and allows Parcek to carve out his own niche in an already crowded playing field.

From the opening notes of the first cut “The World Is Upside Down,” Parcek is gripping and apocalyptic. The track is a lament for modern times that mourns the days we’re currently living and Parcek wonders out loud “Is this the Second Coming or just some kind of sign?” His voice and guitar express the hellhound-on-my-trail terror that Robert Johnson knew firsthand and he instantly captures your complete attention. The song is heavy and brilliant and Parcek hits it with everything he’s got.

Up next is the graveyard swamp of “Everybody Oughta Make A Change.” Parcek slows things down this time but gets much heavier conceptually. The song has existential and religious overtones that speak to the unfortunate knowledge that the end is on its way. The way he sings “Everybody oughta make a change because, sooner or later, you’re going down in the lonesome ground” is absolutely chilling and hits the same level of fearful acceptance as John Lee Hooker’s take on “Decoration Day.” When people talk about the blues being the Truth, songs like this are the ones they’re talking about.

“Beyond Here Lies Nothin’” is another ghostly blues that showcases Parcek’s soaring, minor key slide guitar playing. He has an excellent touch on it and explores a vocabulary that’s cliche-free. The title track, “Mississippi Suitcase (Slight Return)” is a mid-tempo divorce song of the highest order. Full of snarling lyrics and guitars, it’s one of the album’s most vital moments and delivers the bad news in no uncertain terms. Spooner Oldham’s organ work is especially tasty here and the band grooves beneath him flawlessly.

The album’s most ambitious and unexpected surprise is Parcek’s instrumental version of the Beatle classic “Eleanor Rigby.” It adds a rock guitar element to the record but also connects emotionally to everything else on the record. Parcek is tasteful, melodic, and spellbinding and takes us all to school. Every second of Mississippi Suitcase contains this same level of understated greatness and deserves a chance to be permanently installed in your musical consciousness. Peter Parcek has quietly mastered every nuance of the blues and will touch the innermost part of your being. Listen to this record daily for at least a year. ~Mike O’Cull

Mississippi Suitcase MP3
Mississippi Suitcase FLAC

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

Peter Parcek - Everybody Wants To Go To Heaven

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:06
Size: 98.7 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[3:30] 1. World Keep On Turning
[7:42] 2. See That My Grave Is Kept Clean
[3:46] 3. Pat Hare
[4:10] 4. Ashes To Ashes
[4:12] 5. Every Drop Of Rain
[3:02] 6. Shiver
[3:53] 7. Things Fall Apart
[5:04] 8. Everybody Wants To Go To Heaven
[3:22] 9. Mississippi Suitcase
[4:21] 10. Aunt Caroline Dyer Blues

One of Boston’s hidden secrets, Peter Parcek, has enlisted the assistance of a number of top shelf talent for this CD, as well as traveled to various musical heavens to make this disc such a special project that it literally leaps out of the packaging for you. First off his playing here is just the best that he has put on record yet, whether it is because of his musical growth, or the musical stalwarts he and Producer Marco Giovino (drums and percussion) have enlisted for this project; among them Luther Dickinson (guitars), The McCrary Sisters (vocals), Mickey Raphael (harmonica), and the legendary Keyboardist Spooner Oldham, who was visited and recorded at the Legendary Muscle Shoals Studio in Alabama. This is the disc his previous recordings have hinted at and his live performances have strongly referred to.

For this disc there are 10 songs 4 covers of well known blues songs and 6 songs Mr. Parcek wrote. The disc leads off with Peter Green’s “World Keep On Turning,” which sets the disc off with power packed riffs reminiscent of Jimi Hendrix. But this is a tribute to such a big force it also allows Peter to step out and display some of the shades and moody differences that he carries in him that set him apart. There is also on here the familiar Blind Lemon Jefferson classic “See That My Grave Is Kept Clean,” the Don Nix classic that gives the disc its name, “Everybody Wants To Go To Heaven,’ and the closing number which totally rearranges Jennie Mae Clayton’s “Aunt Caroline Dyer Blues.” Then we have the 6 songs that Peter Parcek wrote 3 of which are instrumentals which allow him to display his instrumental prowess. Peter made his reputation as a Blues guitarist and that is where he shines, if you have any doubt listen to his songs. He shows a deep understanding of the whole scope of blues from touches of jazz to deep Chicago Blues to strains of Gypsy Blues.

Everybody Wants To Go To Heaven

Thursday, June 1, 2017

Peter Parcek - 2 albums: Pledging My Time / The Mathematics Of Love

Peter Parcek’s daring, incendiary and soulful style is a distinctive hybrid. He weaves rock, gypsy-jazz, country, folk, and blues-- especially blues-- into a tapestry of melody, harmony and daredevil solos that push those styles to their limits without sacrificing the warmth of his own personality. Peter calls his approach "soul guitar," an appellation that alludes to his playing’s depth of feeling and character, as well as its deepest roots in classic American music. But Peter’s sensibilities are equally attuned to the future.

Peter’s journey as a musician began when the Vietnam War erupted and he graduated high school. With the blessings of his mother and the help of a family friend, he relocated to London, England, and found himself in the thick of the British blues explosion. "I got real lucky," he recounts. "Whenever I could afford it or sneak in, I could see Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Peter Green in clubs, as well as many other great guitarists who were on the scene, but never made it big. Daunted by the six-string virtuosity on display all around him, Peter put down his guitar to sing and blow harmonica and joined a band, playing rooms like the famed Marquee Club — one night on a bill with the Pink Floyd. But fate intervened. He was returned to the States for lack of a British work permit.

Once back in Middletown, CT, Peter began witnessing great American blues artists in concert: Skip James, Muddy Waters, Albert King, Jimi Hendrix, B.B. King, Albert Collins, Buddy Guy. "I would sit as close as possible so I could see exactly what they were doing on the guitar," he says. "It was an amazing education."

Decades later, he would receive a superlative from Guy. "I met some people who knew Buddy and took me to his dressing room after a show," Peter says. "I felt a little out of place, because I didn’t really know anybody. So out of nervousness, I guess, I just absent mindedly picked up one of Buddy’s guitars, unplugged, and started playing. After a while I realized the room was quiet and I looked up, and Buddy was watching me with his finger pressed to his lips for silence. "You’re as bad as Eric Clapton," Guy remarked. "And I know Eric Clapton."

Album: Pledging My Time
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 17:30
Size: 40.1 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[4:02] 1. She Belongs To Me
[4:17] 2. Leopard Skin Pill Box Hat
[4:32] 3. Beyond Here Lies Nothing
[4:37] 4. It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry

Pledging My Time

Album: Peter Parcek 3 - The Mathematics Of Love
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:34
Size: 106.6 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[5:41] 1. Showbiz Blues
[3:17] 2. The Mathematics Of Love
[3:12] 3. Rollin' With Zah
[6:23] 4. Lord Help The Poor And Needy
[3:28] 5. Get Right With God
[4:02] 6. Tears Like Diamonds
[4:04] 7. Kokomo Me Baby
[5:45] 8. New Year's Eve
[7:49] 9. Busted
[2:49] 10. Evolution

The Mathematics Of Love