Showing posts with label Ronnie Earl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ronnie Earl. Show all posts

Friday, August 11, 2023

David Maxwell & Friends - Max Attack

Size: 142.4 MB
Time: 60:53
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2003
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. Backseat Of A Greyhound (Feat. Ronnie Earl) (6:40)
02. Thanks For All The Women (Feat. Hubert Sumlin, James Cotton, Ronnie Earl) (6:13)
03. Twisted Tendons (3:44)
04. Long Distance Driver (Feat. Liane Carroll, Ronnie Earl) (4:57)
05. What's The Use (Of A Broken Heart) (Feat. Liane Carroll) (3:53)
06. Sticky Buns (Feat. Kim Wilson) (4:17)
07. Moving Out Of This World (Feat. Duke Robillard, Ronnie Earl) (5:40)
08. Coming Home, Baby (Feat. Hubert Sumlin) (5:24)
09. Hip-House Rock (Feat. Duke Robillard) (4:27)
10. Handyman (Feat. Hubert Sumlin, Ronnie Earl) (6:08)
11. Thank You Pinetop Perkins (Feat. Pinetop Perkins) (5:04)
12. Max Attack (4:21)

David Maxwell has amassed an enormous resume throughout the years playing piano with some of the greatest and well- known musicians in the blues. David plays many styles of blues, jazz and improvised music, but he is best known for his soulful virtuosity and unmatched ability to reach the heart of post-war Chicago Blues. Through his work, he has gained the respect of artists, critics and fans and has established a reputation as one of the finest blues pianists alive. In the last decade , David has received over a half dozen WC Handy and Grammy nominations and a Grammy Award for recorded work, as well as Handy nominations for instrumental performance He has played with many of the greats including tours with Freddie King, Bonnie Raitt, James Cotton, Otis Rush, Buddy Guy, Hubert Sumlin, Jimmy Rodgers, Charley Musselwhite, Johnny Adams and Ronnie Earl; and gigs with Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Levon Helm, Jimmy Witherspoon, Lowell Fulsom, Junior Wells and many others. He has been involved in well over fifty recording sessions and can be found playing keys on many blues albums that have been released over the last 25 years. (Recently, he backed up Keith Richards and Eric Clapton for a Hubert Sumlin project that will be out laterin 2005). David's music was used in the movie 'Fried Green Tomatoes' and in the TV series 'Touched By An Angel'. He has performed on 'Late Night With Conan O' Brien' and is on several videos playing with Freddie King in the early 70's. (Rounder). David's first CD as a leader 'Maximum Blues Piano'(1997, Tonecool) received high critical acclaim. His new album, 'Max Attack' (2005 95North Records), features guests James Cotton, Kim Wilson, Ronnie Earl, Duke Robillard, Hubert Sumlin and Pinetop Perkins . David has performed in major festivals, theaters and clubs in North America, Europe, Scandinavia, Morocco, Israel, and Japan, and keeps busy today playing, recording, and teaching (and nurturing his interests in jazz, ethnic and improvised music). 'I don't think anybody could be tighter playing the blues on the piano than David Maxwell. He plays the blues like it should be played. He plays the low-down, dirty, funky blues.He's got it all together' ---John Lee Hooker 'Dave has always been one of the most amazing piano players I've ever heard. His command of a wide range of blues and jazz styles is remarkable. ~Bonnie Raitt.

Max Attack MP3
Max Attack FLAC

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters - Mercy Me

Album: Mercy Me
Size: 183,7 MB
Time: 79:58
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2022
Styles: Blues
Art: Front, back

1. Blow Wind Blow (6:55)
2. Alabama (5:09)
3. Blues For Ruthie Foster (5:23)
4. Soul Searching (4:36)
5. Blues For Duke Robillard (7:43)
6. Only You And I Know (7:01)
7. A Prayer For Tomorrow (5:59)
8. Dave's Groove (6:51)
9. Please Send Me Someone To Love (10:46)
10. Coal Train Blues (5:02)
11. The Sun Shines Brightly (8:33)
12. (Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher And Higher (5:54)

Mercy Me is guitarist Ronnie Earl's 28th album, and his 14th for Canada's Stony Plain. Earl is a consummate master of tone - he has never used an effects pedal. Many blues guitarists are fine soloists, but Earl is more than that: he's a true stylist and improviser who has perhaps more in common with jazz musicians though he remains willfully bound to his vocation as a bluesman. He is backed by longtime band the Broadcasters - Dave Limina (piano and B-3), Diane Blue (vocals), Forrest Padgett (drums), and Paul Kochanski (electric and upright bass). He enlisted guests for a 12-song set, almost evenly divided between covers and originals. They include pianist Anthony Geraci, saxophonists Mark Earley and Mario Perrett, guitarist Peter Ward, and vocalist Tess Ferraiolo.

Earl pays a fingerpopping tribute to Muddy Waters in covering his "Blow Wind Blow." Using B-3 and piano as driving engines, he flies across his Stratocaster strings in full treble tone. Blue swings hard on the lyric. (She is one of the finest blues singers in the game.) He offers a surprise in reading John Coltrane's modal classic "Alabama" with assistance from his sax players. The arrangement is inventive, different, but equally profound. Earl reaches for each note solemnly; his arrangement directly equates the saxophonist's memorial for 1963's 16th Street Baptist Church bombing with the ongoing struggle against virulent, often violent racism. He picks up an acoustic to duet with Ward on "Blues for Ruthie Foster," playing lines that reflect the Delta influence of Robert Johnson and Robert Jr. Lockwood.

He reprises the title cut from 1988's "Soul Searching" with horns added to his sparse, tasty, soloing atop Limina's gorgeous B-3. Earl and company deliver a fine version of Dave Mason's "Only You Know and I Know" in tribute to the inimitable Bonnie Bramlett. Blue's throaty contralto is perfectly suited to this R&B gem. "A Prayer for Tomorrow" is a soulful blues that simmers and flows with inventive soloing from Earl and Geraci. The guitarist's nearly 11-minute reading of Percy Mayfield's soul-blues classic "Please Send Me Someone to Love" is a set highlight. He offers the first verse and chorus instrumentally before Blue enters passionately, understating the lyric. "Coal Train Blues" is a straightforward rocking blues with wonderful exchanges between Earl, the piano, and B-3. "The Sun Shines Brightly," co-written by Blue, is a deep, sultry, Delta-inspired gospel blues. She wails and moans atop and around droning, sharp-edged guitar lines as piano and B-3 simmer underneath.

The closing cover of Jackie Wilson's "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher" offers a gorgeous lead vocal from Ferraiolo, leaving listeners with a joyful expression of romantic and spiritual love. As a guitarist, Earl's technical facility is well documented. That said, his taste, generosity, and vision as a bandleader and interpreter of classic material is equal to his masterful playing. Mercy Me is both perfectly balanced and intensely honest; it underscores and expands on his stature as one of the world's greatest living bluesmen. /Thom Jurek, AllMusic

Mercy Me mc
Mercy Me zippy

Friday, January 21, 2022

Jimmy Rogers - With Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters

Album: With Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters
Size: 154,4 MB
Time: 66:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1991/1994
Styles: Blues, Chicago blues
Art: Full

1. Okie Dokie Stomp (2:28)
2. Blues In D-Natural (6:28)
3. Same Old Blues (5:33)
4. Rock This House (6:45)
5. Gold Tailed Bird (7:18)
6. Why Did You Do It (7:13)
7. Can't Sleep For Worrying (4:55)
8. Walking By Myself (4:15)
9. Left Me With A Broken Heart (5:53)
10. Got My Mojo Working (6:03)
11. Shake Your Money Maker (6:03)
12. You're Sweet (3:51)

Jimmy Rogers is one of the most important and influential figures in the history of Chicago blues. The last remaining link to such classic figures as Sonny Boy Williamson, Little Walter and Otis Spann, Jimmy helped pioneer and develop the archetypal Chicago Blues sound with his bandmate Muddy Waters from 1947 to 1954. Today he's still a leader in a vital and satisfying tradition. "All my career I've wanted to make a Chicago blues album. When I heard the tapes of this concert, I knew I had ... I will always be grateful to Jimmy Rogers." (Ronnie Earl)

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

With Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters mc
With Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters zippy

Monday, April 12, 2021

Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters - They Call Me Mr. Earl / Deep Blues

Album: They Call Me Mr. Earl
Source: Vinyl
Size: 92.6 MB
Time: 39:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1985
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front & Back

01. You Give Me Nothing But The Blues (2:38)
02. Follow Your Heart (3:41)
03. Why Should I Feel So Bad? (5:26)
04. You‘ve Got Me Wrong (3:09)
05. Narcolepsy (Mr. Earl Wakes Up Late!) (3:52)
06. Some Day, Some Way (3:25)
07. Drinking And Thinking (7:41)
08. Let Me Love You Baby (3:32)
09. No More Chances (3:15)
10. Waitin‘ For My Chance (2:41)

Guitarist Ronnie Earl was featured from late '79 through the mid-'80s with Roomful of Blues, and commenced recording solo albums while still with Roomful. His second Black Top album, released in 1985, is another horse-doctor's dose of masterful, biting blues guitar and impassioned, no-nonsense performances, with Sugar Ray on vocals.

They Call Me Mr. Earl (Feat. Sugar Ray) MP3
They Call Me Mr. Earl (Feat. Sugar Ray) FLAC

Album: Deep Blues
Size: 156.0 MB
Time: 66:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1988/2009
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Full

01. Ronnie Johnnie (2:57)
02. I Smell Trouble (4:23)
03. She Winked Her Eye (3:54)
04. Baby Doll Blues (6:05)
05. Ridin' In The Moonlight (4:06)
06. My Home Is A Prison (5:15)
07. Sick And Tired (2:30)
08. I'll Take Care (5:16)
09. San Ho Zay (Smokin') (3:34)
10. You Give Me Nothing But The Blues (2:39)
11. Follow Your Heart (3:42)
12. Why Should I Feel So Bad (5:28)
13. You've Got Me Wrong (3:11)
14. Narcolepsy (Mr. Earl Wakes Up Late) (3:55)
15. Some Day. Some Way (3:27)
16. No More Chances (3:16)
17. Waitin' For My Chance (2:43)

This 1988 album actually compiled Ronnie's first two solo albums, 'Smokin' and 'They Call Me Mr. Earl', which were recorded in 1982 and 1984 with a bang-up cast including Roomful of Blues vocalist/harpist 'Sugar Ray' Norcia and Fabulous Thunderbirds vocalist/harpist Kim Wilson! 17 tracks of early Earl!

One of the finest blues guitarists to emerge during the '80s, the award-winning Ronnie Earl often straddled the line between blues and jazz, throwing in touches of soul and rock as well. His versatility made him one of the few blues guitarists capable of leading an almost entirely instrumental outfit, and his backing band the Broadcasters became one of the more respected working units in contemporary blues over the course of the '90s. Earl's instrumental acumen and versatility resulted in a host of celebrated recordings, including one from his Broadcasters' quartet, 1993's Still River. The Broadcasters released Language of the Soul in 1994 and The Colour of Love in 1997 (which featured a single guest vocal appearance from Gregg Allman), and concluded in 2000 with Healing Time. Earl's albums have been influenced by spiritual themes ever since. He signed to Stony Plain in 2004 and has remained with the powerhouse Canadian independent, delivering four charting dates on the Blues Albums charts, with 2009's Healing Time and 2017's The Luckiest Man among them.

Ronnie Earl was born Ronald Horvath in Queens, New York on March 10, 1953. He didn't start playing guitar until after he entered college at Boston University in the early '70s and became fascinated with the local blues scene. Developing his craft quickly, he landed a job as a member of the house band at the Speakeasy Club in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and changed his last name to the bluesier-sounding Earl, in tribute to Earl Hooker, one of his greatest influences. Prior to the name switch, he'd made some recordings for the small Baron label under his original moniker beginning in 1977, first backing Guitar Johnny & the Rhythm Rockers, then as a founding member of Sugar Ray & the Bluetones with harmonica player/singer Sugar Ray Norcia. In 1979, Earl was invited to replace Duke Robillard in the prominent Rhode Island band Roomful of Blues, whose swinging jump blues revivalist sound demanded a jazz sensibility as well as ample blues feeling. Earl spent the next eight years with Roomful of Blues and watched their national profile grow steadily larger.

Meanwhile, Earl also made a few recordings on his own for Black Top Records, forming the first versions of the Broadcasters in the early '80s. He released his first solo album, Smokin', in 1983 and followed it with They Call Me Mr. Earl in 1984 (both of those albums were later compiled on the CD Deep Blues). Still, they were a sidelight to his main gig with Roomful of Blues -- that is, until he left the band in 1987 to make a go of it as a solo artist and bandleader in his own right. A new version of the Broadcasters debuted in 1988 on Soul Searchin', which featured vocalist Darrell Nulisch, harmonica player Jerry Portnoy (ex-Muddy Waters), bassist Steve Gomes, and drummer Per Hanson. Peace of Mind followed in 1990, as did I Like It When It Rains, a live album on Antone's that actually dated from 1986. Released in 1991, Surrounded by Love reunited Earl with Sugar Ray Norcia and also proved the last in his long string of Black Top releases.

By the early '90s, Earl had addressed and overcome his problems with alcohol and cocaine and began to rethink his approach. He formed a new version of the Broadcasters featuring organist Bruce Katz, bassist Rod Carey, and longtime drummer Per Hanson, and boldly elected to go without a vocalist. Earl debuted his new instrumental direction -- which was more informed by jazz than ever before -- on 1993's Still River (released by AudioQuest) and embarked on a tour of Europe. He signed with the Bullseye Blues label and issued a string of acclaimed albums including 1994's Language of the Soul, 1995's Blues Guitar Virtuoso Live in Europe (from his 1993 tour and originally titled Blues and Forgiveness), and 1996's Grateful Heart: Blues and Ballads (which featured David "Fathead" Newman). The latter two were particular critical favorites, with Live in Europe winning Pulse magazine's year-end poll as Best Blues Album and Grateful Heart doing likewise in Down Beat.

Thanks to all the positive attention, Earl signed a major-label deal with Verve. His label debut, The Colour of Love, was issued in 1997 and sold more than 65,000 copies, making it one of the biggest hits of Earl's career; he also won a W.C. Handy Award as Best Blues Instrumentalist the same year. However, feeling that he was under too much pressure to move more units, Earl soured on the deal, and around the same time suffered a bout with manic depression. He wound up not only leaving Verve, but taking a break from bandleading and live performance; he disbanded the Broadcasters and signed with the smaller Telarc label as a solo act.
His Telarc debut, 2000's Healing Time, teamed him with legendary soul-jazz organist Jimmy McGriff. The follow-up, 2001's Ronnie Earl and Friends, was a loose, jam session-type affair featuring a number of special guests, including the Fabulous Thunderbirds' Kim Wilson, Irma Thomas, Luther "Guitar Junior" Johnson, and the Band's Levon Helm. In 2003, Earl returned with an album of mainly instrumental material, I Feel Like Goin' On, on the Canadian-based label Stony Plain. A second album from Stony Plain, Now My Soul, appeared in 2004, while a third, The Duke Meets the Earl, which paired Earl with fellow ex-Roomful of Blues guitarist Duke Robillard, was released in 2005. Earl's third album for Stony Plain, 2009's Living in the Light, found him reunited with the Broadcasters. Earl and his longtime backing band returned for 2010's Spread the Love, an instrumental tribute to mentors, friends, and family.

After a long period of global touring, Earl and band took some well-deserved time off. Just for Today was issued in 2013, and featured guest spots from vocalist Diane Blue (who joined the group, becoming its first female member) and Detroit guitarist Nicholas Tabarias. Earl & the Broadcasters returned to the studio late in the year. They emerged with Good News, a collection of originals and covers that included Blue and Tabarias in the line-up on selected cuts, along with guitarist Zach Zunis. It was issued for release in June of 2014. In 2015, Earl and his latest edition of the Broadcasters -- Jim Mouradian on bass, Dave Limina on keyboards, and Lorne Entress on drums -- teamed up with vocalist Blue and a horn section for the album Father's Day, a set of songs recorded in tribute to Earl's dad, Akos Horvath. The following year he issued Maxwell Street, a tribute to former Broadcasters' bandmate and blues piano legend David Maxwell. In 2017, Earl & the Broadcasters delivered The Luckiest Man, which peaked at number two on the Blues Album Charts and in the top spot at streaming, netting Earl a Blues Music Award (his fifth) as Best Blues Guitarist at the industry's annual event in Memphis. Summer 2019 saw the release of Beyond the Blue Door, a jazz-blues outing that included a host of old friends joining the Broadcasters, including David Bromberg, Greg Piccolo, and Kim Wilson.

In early 2020, while recuperating from back surgery to alleviate a stubborn case of sciatica, Earl held whirlwind recording sessions in the living room of his suburban Boston home just before the COVID-19 pandemic dictated quarantines. With a quintet, Earl tracked several topical originals including the instrumental "Blues for George Floyd," a talking blues entitled "Black Lives Matter," and "Navajo Blues" for the indigenous tribe disproportionately affected by Coronavirus. Earl and his band also covered Bob Dylan's "Lord Protect My Child." In addition to the living-room session material, Earl included several tracks from his appearance on Daryl Hall's Daryl’s House Club cable show. 2020's Rise Up was released by Stony Plain in September. ~Steve Huey

Deep Blues MP3
Deep Blues FLAC

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters - Rise Up

Size: 183,0 MB
Time: 78:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. I Shall Not Be Moved ( 2:20)
02. Higher Love ( 5:53)
03. Blues For George Floyd ( 3:40)
04. You Don't Know What Love Is ( 4:31)
05. Blues For Lucky Peterson (10:19)
06. Big Town Playboy ( 4:03)
07. Albert's Stomp ( 4:42)
08. In The Dark ( 6:11)
09. All Your Love ( 8:12)
10. Lord Protect My Child ( 6:11)
11. Mess Around ( 3:42)
12. Talking To Mr.Bromberg ( 3:28)
13. Black Lives Matter ( 6:22)
14. Blues For J ( 6:00)
15. Navajo Blues ( 3:12)

People tasked with having to describe Ronnie Earl invariably note his passion. It's worth repeating because it's true. For his 40-year career as a blues musician, Ronnie has transfixed audiences with his distinct brand of emotion-laden blues. Still today, each time he performs he gives his audiences his all and shoots for the moon. Ronnie Earl is a four-time Blues Music Award winner as ''Guitar Player of the Year,'' and a world-renowned composer and musician. Most of his 26 albums have included chart-toppers and best-sellers and he continues to be a crowd favorite at music festivals to this day.

Following the immensely successful Beyond the Blue Door album released in 2019, Ronnie continues to perform with his outstanding band The Broadcasters on his latest release: Rise Up. Rise Up contains songs written and recorded just as the COVID19 quarantine was winding up. The majority of the album, recorded in The Living Room Sessions in Ronnie's home, are filled with songs that remind us of the comfort brought by family and community. Ronnie Earl has always believed in the power of music to heal the mind and spirit, and the 15 tracks on this new disc demonstrate that implicitly.

Rise Up confirms Earl's status as one of the most soulful blues/soul/jazz guitarists working today and as Gregg Grella reminds us, ''Ronnie Earl continues to play elegant guitar.''

Rise Up MP3
Rise Up FLAC

Sunday, August 16, 2020

VA - Blues Singles Collection Vol. 10

Size: 259,9 MB
Time: 111:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Acoustic/Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01 Sugaray Rayford - Homemade Disaster (3:14)
02 Robert Wilkins - O Lord I Want You To Help Me (3:24)
03 Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters - Albert's Stomp (4:42)
04 Roosevelt Sykes - The Honey Dripper (2:56)
05 Rusty Young & Janiva Magness - Harmony (4:47)
06 Sebastian Lane - Live For The Day (Feat. Brooke Beucler) (5:36)
07 Taylor Scott Band - Hair Of Indigo (Live) (9:59)
08 The Allman Betts Band - Pale Horse Rider (4:43)
09 The Cold Stares - Third World War (3:22)
10 The Pretty Things - Bright As Blood (4:44)
11 William Shatner & Canned Heat - Let's Work Together (2:45)
12 Robert Pete Williams - Rolling Stone (Chicago Version) (4:49)
13 North Mississippi Allstars - Catfish (Feat. Cedric Burnside) (3:51)
14 Johnny Winter - Gangster Of Love (2:28)
15 Craig Erickson - Catman (4:17)
16 The Cold Stares - Just Beyond The Dawn (3:10)
17 Bettye Lavette - Blues For The Weepers (3:46)
18 Mike Ross - The Loser (4:36)
19 Griffin Holtby - Feel My Heart (2:55)
20 Balkun Brothers - Fonk Schwee (3:04)
21 Funkwrench Blues - You Move Like Funk (Feat. Eric McFadden) (2:13)
22 Eric Johanson - Nowhere To Go (2:36)
23 Beaux Gris Gris & The Apocalypse - Bungalow Paradise (3:37)
24 Chris Kramer & Beatbox 'n' Blues - Can't Bring Me Down (Live) (2:55)
25 Jeff Chaz - Come With Me (9:07)
26 ElectroBluesSociety - Killing Floor (Feat. Boo Boo Davis) (4:14)
27 The Blind Boys Of Alabama - Singing Brings Us Closer (3:42)

A collection of blues singles released in Aug 2020 compiled by myself.

Blues Singles Collection Vol. 10

Thursday, April 16, 2020

Tyler Morris - Living In The Shadows

Size: 115,2 MB
Time: 49:21
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Movin' On (3:31)
02. Everybody Wants To Go To Heaven (4:17)
03. Polk Salad Annie (Feat. Joe Louis Walker & Mike Zito) (4:59)
04. Living In The Shadows (5:12)
05. Temptation (4:47)
06. Better Than You (Feat. Amanda Fish) (4:50)
07. Why Is Love So Blue (4:24)
08. Nine To Five (4:30)
09. Young Man's Blues (Feat. Ronnie Earl) (4:14)
10. Taken From Me (4:28)
11. I'm On To You (4:03)

LIVING IN THE SHADOWS is powerhouse guitarist Tyler Morris' second VizzTone release in the Blues/Rock genre, and his fourth release in total. LIVING IN THE SHADOWS was produced by Mike Zito, who says, 'Tyler will help bring back the glory of Electric Guitar to the masses.' Guests on this album include Blues legends Ronnie Earl, Joe Louis Walker and Mike Zito, as well as acclaimed vocalist Amanda Fish, who featured Tyler on her Blues Music Award-winning 2018 album. This release marks Morris' debut as lead singer on the majority of the songs. Joe Louis Walker guested on Morris' previous release, NEXT IN LINE, which charted at #8 on Billboard's National Blues Charts. The single, 'Willie the Wimp' with Walker on vocals, was in the top 10 on Sirius XM for multiple consecutive weeks. On this release, Morris channels his evolving list of influences into his own unique songwriting style and pays homage to some of his heroes through collaborations with his guest artists.

Living In The Shadows

Friday, November 22, 2019

Ronnie Earl & Duke Robillard - The Duke Meets The Earl

Size: 167,0 MB
Time: 72:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2005
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Full

01. West Side Shuffle ( 7:46)
02. Two Bones & A Pick ( 8:08)
03. My Tears (15:58)
04. Lookin For Trouble ( 4:29)
05. What Have I Done Wrong ( 6:45)
06. Zeb's Thing ( 7:32)
07. I Need You So Bad ( 8:16)
08. A Soul That's Been Abused (13:08)

The Duke Meets the Earl seems like an obvious album, pairing two of New England's finest contemporary blues guitarists, Duke Robillard and Ronnie Earl, who both share the same sort of hard, clear tone in their playing (Earl actually replaced Robillard in Roomful of Blues when the latter left the group for a solo career). For Earl, who has been working in a kind of jazz blues hybrid style in recent years, it marks a return to straight blues, and with guests like Jimmy McGriff and Mighty Sam McClain aboard on select tracks, The Duke Meets the Earl has the feel of a super session. Throughout, Earl's guitar is featured in the left channel and Robillard's in the right, leading to some wonderful guitar dialogues, particularly on an epic, nearly 16-minute-long version of Walter Price's "My Tears." Another extended workout occurs on "A Soul That's Been Abused," an Earl original, which features McClain on vocals and stretches out to just over 13 minutes. McGriff brings his Hammond B-3 magic to two cuts, Eddie Taylor's "Lookin' for Trouble" and B.B. King's "I Need You So Bad," while the B-3 part on "A Soul That's Been Abused" is handled by Dave Limina. Other highlights include covers of T-Bone Walker's "Two Bones and a Pick," Magic Sam's "What Have I Done Wrong," and Earl's smooth, clear slide style on another original, "Zeb's Thing." With only eight tracks, but clocking in at over 70 minutes, The Duke Meets the Earl gives these two fine guitarists plenty of room to talk to each other, and the result is a classy set of no-frills contemporary blues, with just the slightest hint of jazz to keep it all smooth. ~Steve Leggett.

The Duke Meets The Earl

Sunday, September 1, 2019

Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters - Beyond The Blue Door

Size: 174.2 MB
Time: 72:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Blues/Rock
Art: Front

1. Brand New Me [4:31]
2. Baby How Long [4:41]
3. Drown In My Own Tears [4:01]
4. Alexis' Song [1:38]
5. The Sweetest Man [5:47]
6. It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry [6:28]
7. A Soul That’s Been Abused [9:56]
8. Why Can't We Live Together [4:23]
9. Blues With A Feeling [5:22]
10. TBone Stomp [3:06]
11. Wolf Song [4:56]
12. Peace Of Mind [5:03]
13. Drowning In A Sea Of Love [4:47]
14. Bringing Light (To A Dark Time) [4:26]
15. Blues For Charlottesville [3:33]

Ronnie Earl and The Broadcasters return with Ronnie's 26th album!

The master blues guitarist brings out the best in the Broadcasters and various guests making a sizzling set that used to come along with blasé regularity but is now a treat to behold. With a lot of genre busting elements that make this much more than a white boy with the blues acting out, Earl really drills down here to make this a first class ass kicker. Varying the set card for maximum impact rather than maximum publishing royalties, this is an undisputable tour de force. Top shelf all the way.

Beyond The Blue Door

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Peter Ward - Train To Key Biscayne

Source: Lossless Digital Copy
Size: 101,8 MB
Time: 43:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. The Luther Johnson Thing (Feat. Luther Johnson, Sugar Ray Norcia & Anthony Geraci) (4:18)
02. A Westerly Sunday Night (Feat. Sugar Ray Norcia) (3:44)
03. When You Are Mine (Feat. Sugar Ray Norcia) (4:53)
04. Train To Key Biscayne (Feat. Johnny Nicholas) (2:41)
05. I Saw Your Home (Feat. Michelle Willson) (4:55)
06. Blues Elixir (Ronnie's Here) (Feat. Ronnie Earl & Sugar Ray Norcia) (4:06)
07. Supposedly (2:58)
08. Change (Ain't Never For The Good) (Feat. Johnny Nicholas, Sugar Ray Norcia & Anthony Geraci) (3:28)
09. As Long As I Have A Chance (Feat. Sugar Ray Norcia & Anthony Geraci) (2:59)
10. Coffee Song (Feat. Michelle Willson) (3:29)
11. Something Always Slows Me Down (Feat. Sugar Ray Norcia & Anthony Geraci) (4:29)
12. Anthony's Son (1:07)

TRAIN TO KEY BISCAYNE is an exciting followup to Peter Ward's debut release, BLUES ON MY SHOULDERS which garnered rave reviews upon its release in 2017.
Ward, former guitarist for the Legendary Blues Band (Pinetop Perkins, Willie Big Eyes Smith, Calvin Jones and Jerry Portnoy) wrote 12 new blues, ballads and retro-style rock n roll — all with a fresh sound and '50s flavor.
Before they brought Peter into the band, the Legendary Blues Band were the guys who backed the great Muddy Waters. Hitting the road with those cats was like Blues 101 as the band crisscrossed the country in a van, traveling hundreds of miles each day to perform to delighted audiences at night. Peter learned then how to play a brand of unhurried unadulterated blues. Prior to that, Peter backed Jimmy Rogers, Junior Wells, Joe Beard, Buddy Guy, Otis Rush, Lowell Fulson, Louisiana Red and Sunnyland Slim. His blues philosophy is in finding an original way to play blues within a traditional framework.
TRAIN TO KEY BISCAYNE opens with a tribute Peter wrote to his hero, Luther "Guitar Junior" Johnson, the former Muddy Waters guitarist. It's a song about Luther's own life. The album features Peter's friends, the renowned Ronnie Earl on guitar, Michelle "Evil Gal" Willson, Johnny Nicholas and Sugar Ray Norcia, all on vocals, and Peter's brother Mudcat on bass. Also appearing are Neil Gouvin on drums, Anthony Geraci on piano and the aforementioned Norcia on harp — all of the legendary Sugar Ray & the Bluetones — former John Copnlee keyboardist Hank Walther on piano, George Dellomo on drums, Bob Berry on bass, Aaron Gratzmiller on saxophone, Jiri Nedoma on piano and Keith Asack on bass and guitar.
The songs reflect joy, sadness, humor and everything in-between.
"Coffee Song," sung by Willson, is about serving piping hot coffee and pancakes in bed to the person you care about without worrying who does how much for whom. There's a story about road rage "Something Always Slows Me Down," persistence and love "When You Are Mine" and the journey we dare take to revive a friendship "Train to Key Biscayne."
Ronnie Earl called the record inspiring and Peter thinks his fans will like this album! He hopes to reach a wider audience with this new release.

Train To Key Biscayne

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Paul Rishell - Swear To Tell The Truth

Size: 121,8 MB
Time: 52:08
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1993
Styles: Acoustic/Electric Blues
Art: Full

01. Shake 'Em On Down (3:20)
02. I'm Gonna Jump & Shout (2:49)
03. Depot Blues (3:34)
04. It'll Be Me (3:40)
05. Somebody In My Home (4:33)
06. Every Night About This Time (4:04)
07. Canned Heat Blues (4:10)
08. 32-20 Blues (2:29)
09. Mamie (2:54)
10. Drinkin' Water From A Hollow Log (3:01)
11. Michigan Water (2:39)
12. Some Of These Days (3:41)
13. Lou Ella (3:21)
14. Do You Swear To Tell The Truth (3:30)
15. Devil Got My Woman (4:18)

Feat. Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters and Annie Raines.

The tendency to be snide and cynical whenever encountering contemporary versions of vintage country blues is great, mainly because there is no way anyone singing Skip James or Son House tunes in the 1990s could possibly best the originals. Paul Rishell's versions of their songs are neither faceless covers nor spectacular reworkings; they are merely Rishell's earnest attempt to communicate the music he loves. Sometimes it works and other times it doesn't, but it is never pretentious or solemn. The better tracks are the jumping version of Earl Hooker's "Do You Swear To Tell The Truth," with guitar by Ronnie Earl, and Rishell's own "I'm Gonna Jump and Shout." This is not Hall of Fame stuff, but it also should not be curtly dismissed or unfairly ridiculed. ~Ron Wynn

Swear To Tell The Truth

Friday, September 21, 2018

Anthony Geraci - Why Did You Have To Go

Size: 140,7 MB
Time: 60:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Piano Blues, Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. Why Did You Have To Go (Feat. Sugar Ray Norcia & Monster Mike Welch) (3:37)
02. Don't The Grass Look Greener (Feat. Sugaray Rayford, Kid Ramos & Monster Mike Welch) (3:12)
03. Fly On The Wall (Feat. Willie J. Laws, Jimi Bott, Willie J. Campbell & Kid Ramos) (3:54)
04. Angelina, Angelina (Feat. Sugaray Rayford, Monster Mike Welch, Willie J. Campbell & Jimi Bott) (6:25)
05. Long Way Home (Feat. Sugaray Rayford, Kid Ramos, Willie J. Campbell & Jimi Bott) (3:10)
06. Two Steps Away From The Blues (Feat. Michelle 'Evil Gal' Willson & Monster Mike Welch) (3:31)
07. Time's Running Out (Feat. Sugar Ray Norcia, Ronnie Earl & Monster Mike Welch) (5:17)
08. Baptized In The River Yazoo (Feat. Willie J. Laws) (5:16)
09. Too Many Bad Decisions (Feat. Dennis Brennan & Monster Mike Welch) (4:06)
10. What About Me (Feat. Michelle 'Evil Gal' Willson, Brian Templeton & Monster Mike Welch) (3:47)
11. Hand You Your Walking Shoes (Feat. Dennis Brennan & Monster Mike Welch) (3:41)
12. My Last Good-Bye (Feat. Sugar Ray Norcia, Ronnie Earl & Monster Mike Welch) (9:16)
13. A Minor, Affair (Feat. Kid Ramos, Willie J. Campbell & Jimi Bott) (5:09)

It’s been said often that one’s reputation is determined by the people one picks as friends and collaborators. If true, then count Anthony Geraci as one well respected musician. Geraci has spent most of the last four decades climbing into the rarified air of the blues. In the nascent days of the 1970s Boston blues scene, Geraci learned from keyboard mentors like David Maxwell, Ron Levy, and Al Copley who thrived in the New England blues scene back in the early 1970s. Next, Geraci was the first to play keys with Ronnie Earl’s Broadcasters and Sugar Ray Norcia’s Bluetones. Throughout the decades, Geraci’s dedication to mastering the intricacies of the blues piano burned in his soul, which led to Geraci searching out elders in the genre like Pinetop Perkins and Henry Gray to assimilate the traditions into modern outlooks.
The most important lesson Geraci absorbed is surrendering the individual to the will of the music. In all his previous recordings, especially his 2015 critically acclaimed Fifty Shades Of Blue (Delta Groove,) Geraci understands the artistic power of sharing the spotlight with an all-star cast of backing musicians.
"Why Did You Have To Go" follows that same blues print. Each song features Geraci enlisting an outstanding cast of artists to paint his musical landscapes. Geraci’s West meets East blues features past members of the Mannish Boys – Kid Ramos (guitar), Willie J. Campbell (bass), Jimi Bott (drums), Sugaray Rayford (vocals)– on five tunes while the Bluetones – Monster Mike Welch (guitar), Troy Gonyea (guitar), Sugar Ray Norcia (vocals), Michael Mudcat Ward (bass), and Neil Gouvin (drums) – blend with New Englanders Ronnie Earl (guitar), Michelle “Evil Gal” Willson (vocals), Brian Templeton (vocals), Dennis Brennen (vocals), Marty Richards (drums), Sax Gordon (sax), Doug Wolverton (trumpet) on six tunes. Including Geraci, count how many Blues Music Awards and nominations this talented roster has amassed. The real fun comes when Geraci shuffles the players from each coast to ignite the session.
Most exciting is the reunion of the original Sugar Ray and the Bluetones on Geraci’s “My Last Goodbye.” At nearly ten minutes of unhurried, emotional blues, the song spotlights Earl’s sharp phrasing combining with Geraci’s tight, Chicago blues keyboard lines that crest to stirring crescendos that ebb and flow into fresh musical vistas. The Bluetones also reunite on the up-tempo “Time’s Running Out.”
The unexpected surprise is the after hours testifyin’ on “Baptized In The River Yazoo,” an intimate duet featuring Texan blues force Willie J. Laws bearin’ witness to Southern folk lore as Geraci’s lonely piano floats out of cotton field churches.
In his performance of various piano styles, Geraci presents listeners with a concise history of the piano in American roots music. From New Orleans-styled R&B – “Long Way Home” – to stylish West coast – “Angelina, Angelina” – to Texas organ trio – “Don’t The Grass Look Greener” – to Chicago blues – “My Last Goodbye” – to the more modern Blue Note inspired “A Minor, Affair” – Anthony Geraci is right in step with his blues. ~Art Tipaldi – Editor, Blues Music Magazine

Why Did You Have To Go MP3
Why Did You Have To Go FLAC

Friday, April 13, 2018

Various Artists - Blues Harmonica Spotlight

Blues Harmonica Spotlight focuses on New Orleans label's generous array of blues-harp talent. /AllMusic

Album: Blues Harmonica Spotlight
Year: 1992
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:04
Size: 120,2 MB
Styles: Harmonica blues
Scans: Front

1. The James Harman Band - Wake Up Call (2:37)
2. Darrell Nulisch & Texas Heat - Love And War (3:34)
3. Sam Myers & Anson Funderburgh - My Love Is Here To Stay (3:33)
4. Rod Piazza & The Mighty Flyers - 4811 Wadworth (5:37)
5. Mike Morgan & The Crawl Feat. Lee McBee - I Don't Want You Hanging Around (2:09)
6. Sam Myers w. Snooks Eaglin & Anson Funderburgh - Bombastic (4:05)
7. Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters Feat. Sugar Ray - My Home Is A Prison (5:16)
8. The James Harman Band - Mad About Somethin' (4:40)
9. Mike Morgan & The Crawl Feat. Lee McBee - Big D Shuffle (2:31)
10. Rod Piazza & The Mighty Flyers - Back Door Man (5:23)
11. Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters Feat. Kim Wilson - Ridin' In The Moonlight (4:07)
12. Sam Myers & Anson Funderburgh - Hep Cats In Big Town (4:54)
13. Lee McBee & Mike Morgan - Sweet Lolita (3:32)

Blues Harmonica Spotlight mc
Blues Harmonica Spotlight zippy

Friday, January 12, 2018

Willie Lomax Blues Revue - 2 albums: Ribs Are Ready / Give Me Back My Teeth

Album: Ribs Are Ready
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:25
Size: 149.8 MB
Styles: Delta blues, Southern blues rock
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[3:28] 1. Back Rub
[6:04] 2. Don't Know What I Did
[4:52] 3. For Better Or Worse
[7:04] 4. Too Many Fences
[4:41] 5. People Get Ready
[3:05] 6. Ribs Are Ready
[3:46] 7. Eddie Mae's Cafe
[4:06] 8. She's So Sweet
[3:19] 9. Hip Joint
[3:35] 10. Don't Fight The Feeling
[2:56] 11. Struttin'
[5:00] 12. Take Away Your Lonliness
[4:47] 13. I Want To Show You
[4:11] 14. Freedom Is In Your Heart
[4:22] 15. Too Many Fences (Radio Edit)

"One of 1999's best releases...literally bursting with talent...an incredible listening experience that blows away 95% of the competition on today's recording scene... hailed as the Hit of '99." ~ REAL BLUES

Ribs Are Ready mc
Ribs Are Ready zippy

Album: Give Me Back My Teeth
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:33
Size: 161.5 MB
Styles: Delta blues, Electric blues
Year: 1996
Art: Front

[ 4:18] 1. Where I've Been
[ 4:56] 2. Blues For Peewee
[ 3:10] 3. Mojo Man
[ 3:23] 4. Crumblin' Down
[ 5:17] 5. Lonely With The One You Love
[ 3:46] 6. Long Day Blues
[ 3:37] 7. Give Me Back My Teeth
[ 4:11] 8. Cow Cow Boogie (Moo Moo My Love)
[ 2:42] 9. Way A Tree Falls
[ 2:56] 10. Pretty Baby Blues
[11:42] 11. Blues For Jackie Robinson
[ 4:48] 12. King Biscuit Blues
[ 3:22] 13. Crumblin' Down (Alternate Mix)
[ 2:41] 14. Razorback
[ 2:28] 15. Keep Your Hands Off Of Him
[ 3:30] 16. Down The Road
[ 3:38] 17. Hissy Fit

Featuring Ronnie Earl, Sam Carr, James Peterson and Rock Bottom."Smouldering guitar licks" ~BLUEPRINT. "Guitar fireworks showcase elegant dynamics of touch and tone...Sam Carr's dominating delta time separates this from the hordes of generic new blues.

Give Me Back My Teeth mc
Give Me Back My Teeth zippy

Thursday, November 30, 2017

Diane Blue - Blues In My Soul

Year: 2015
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:12
Size: 127,4 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. That's What They Call The Blues (3:18)
2. Do I Move You (4:05)
3. Nothing You Can Do (3:49)
4. In The Dark (5:48)
5. I Love Your Lovin' Ways (3:41)
6. Someday Soon (5:23)
7. Soulville (2:20)
8. Today I Sing The Blues (5:07)
9. Day And Night (3:02)
10. I Can't Shake You (6:32)
11. Man About Town (3:09)
12. Cry Daddy (4:07)
13. Jump For Joy (4:44)

Diane Blue's debut album features blues royalty: The masterful blues guitarist, Ronnie Earl, and Boston's Queen of the Blues, Ms. Toni Lynn Washington singing along with Ms. Blue on a few tracks. Ms. Blue performs vocals and harmonica in this soulful collection of original and cover tunes, paying homage to Nina Simone, Koko Taylor, Dinah Washington, and Aretha Franklin. Her ensemble includes drummer Lorne Entress and pianist/Hammond B3 organist Dave Limina (both of Ronnie Earl's "Broadcasters"), along with Boston's Bobby Gus on guitar, Johnny "Blue Horn" Moriconi on trumpet. Scott Shetler does double duty on saxophone and horn arrangements.

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Blues In My Soul zippy

Friday, November 17, 2017

Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters - The Luckiest Man

Size: 162,4 MB
Time: 69:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. Ain't That Loving You ( 5:35)
02. Southside Stomp ( 4:10)
03. Death Don't Have No Mercy ( 5:57)
04. Jim's Song ( 2:58)
05. Heartbreak (It's Hurtin' Me) ( 6:38)
06. Howlin' Blues ( 4:07)
07. Never Gonna Break My Faith ( 5:24)
08. Long Lost Conversation (10:09)
09. Sweet Miss Vee ( 4:16)
10. Blues For Magic Sam ( 5:21)
11. So Many Roads (10:48)
12. You Don't Know What Love Is ( 4:01)

On The Luckiest Man, Ronnie and the Broadcasters, both current as well as some of the earliest members, contribute to the new album, which follows the sudden loss of Jim Mouradian, the band’s beloved bass player following a show in January. Mouradian was also a respected guitar luthier, family man and a gentleman. This musical journey through loss and healing can be felt in the hauntingly beautiful “Death Don’t Have No Mercy,” and in Ronnie’s tender tribute to his brother on “Jim’s Song.” Life moves ever onward in the pulse and beat of “Heartbreak,” and faith takes hold in “Never Gonna Break My Faith.” For the song, “Long Lost Conversation,” Ronnie is reunited with some of the earliest Broadcasters and current members of Sugar Ray and the Bluetones, who were on his first albums in 1983, all of whom contributed to this truly being a family band project: Sugar Ray Norcia – vocals, harp; Anthony Geraci – piano; Mike Welch – guitar; Neil Gouvin – drums; Michael “Mudcat” Ward – double bass & Fender bass.

The title of the album, The Luckiest Man, is a phrase and response spoken by Jim Mouradian who always lived with gratitude in his heart and who never wasted a moment of his life: “I’m the luckiest man you know — and I don’t even know who you know.”

Besides the original songs on The Luckiest Man, Ronnie Earl puts his own, indelible stamp on interpretations of “Ain’t That Loving You,” “So Many Roads” and “You Don’t Know What Love Is.”

In addition to Ronnie Earl on guitar, the Broadcasters include Dave Limina – piano and Hammond B3; Diane Blue – vocals; Forrest Padgett – drums; and Paul Kochanski – bass. Guest musicians on the new disc also include Nicholas Tabarias – guitar; Mark Earley – baritone sax; Mario Perrett – tenor sax; and Peter Ward – guitar.

They say that you can’t keep a good man down and that inner resolve is both heard and felt within each song on The Luckiest Man, Ronnie Earl’s twenty-fifth album and his eleventh on Stony Plain Records. Since 1983, Ronnie Earl has released a series of traditional blues albums, often interlaced with jazz, gospel and soul offerings; however he has always returned home to his “mother music” which is traditional blues. Ronnie Earl continues to be one of the most emotive blues guitarists today, whose musical voicings deal with loss and healing, gratitude and love, compassion and passion. Indeed, it is those emotional touchstones within his music, which is so beautifully reflected in the swirl of colors expressed in artist Tom Noll’s painting of Ronnie on the cover.

The Luckiest Man confirms Ronnie Earl’s status as one of the most soulful blues/soul/jazz guitarists working today. He is a three-time Blues Music Award winner as “Guitar Player of the Year,” a DownBeat magazine winner for “Blues Album of the Year,” an Associate Professor of Guitar at Berklee College of Music and has taught at the National Guitar summer workshop in Connecticut. ~by Mark Pucci Media

The Luckiest Man

Monday, September 4, 2017

Peter Ward - Blues On My Shoulders

Size: 117,9 MB
Time: 50:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front

01. She Took It All (3:08)
02. Which Hazel (3:10)
03. Blues On My Shoulders (3:16)
04. Collaborate (4:55)
05. Shiprock (2:36)
06. What Can I Do To You (3:10)
07. It's On Me (4:23)
08. Southpaw (4:09)
09. A Little More (5:17)
10. On The Ropes (3:08)
11. Colletta (3:38)
12. Kansas City Blues (4:23)
13. Drummin' Willie (4:58)

Guitarist Peter Ward announces his new CD, Blues on My Shoulders, on Gandy Dancer Records. Besides Ward on guitar and vocals, special guests on the new disc include multiple Blues Music Award-winning guitar legend Ronnie Earl, Sax Gordon Beadle on sax and the members of Sugar Ray and the Bluetones: Sugar Ray Norcia (vocals and harmonica), “Monster” Mike Welch (guitar), Anthony Geraci (piano), Michael “Mudcat” Ward (Peter’s brother – bass) and Neil Gouvin (drums).

“It pleases me to present Blues on My Shoulders, my first solo project,” Peter Ward says about the new album. “I wrote the words and music to 12 of the 13 songs. I grew up wearing out the vinyl records trying to understand how Robert Jr. Lockwood, Tiny Grimes, Louis Meyers and Jimmy Rogers made songs sound so good. It’s what I wanted to do. I was lucky to sit in often with my friend (and former roommate) Ronnie Earl and play alongside many of my musical heroes. A highlight was touring with the Legendary Blues Band: Joe Willie ‘Pinetop’ Perkins, Willie ‘Big Eyes’ Smith, Calvin ‘Fuzz’ Jones and Jerry Portnoy, who had brilliantly backed Muddy Waters for years. The way they played blues was everything I believed in, then and now. Willie Smith was an inventive drummer — and a wily character. I pay tribute to him in the song, ‘Drummin’ Willie.’ The track ‘Which Hazel’ is my homage to Chuck Berry. Sugar Ray Norcia honored me by singing the heck out of ‘Collaborate,’ a tribute to Lockwood and Lonnie Johnson. I appreciate that Ronnie Earl and Sax Gordon Beadle accepted my invitation to perform on two songs: ‘A Little More’ and ‘It’s On Me.’ ‘Southpaw’ is my ode to lesser-known left-handed swing guitarist Dickie Thompson, who worked with organist and front man Wild Bill Davis. My instrumental, ‘Shiprock,’ reminds me of a hallowed part of Navajo country I visited with my wife Mai Cramer, who died of breast cancer in 2002 and previously hosted a popular blues program every weekend for 24 years on WGBH-FM. She was an avid supporter of the blues and its purveyors. I think she would have liked Blues on My Shoulders. I hope you do.”

As a teenager growing up in Lewiston, Maine, Peter and his brother Michael (“Mudcat”) listened intently to blues records and went to see Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, Junior Wells, Taj Mahal and Hubert Sumlin whenever they performed in the area. Peter played blues with Mudcat and did gigs also with his younger brother Jeff, who died in 1991. “Jeff was too young to drink, but club owners would let him in so he could play bass with New York City drummer Ola Dixon and me,” Ward recalls.

Ward later moved to Boston and played in various bands, frequently sitting in with Sugar Ray & the Bluetones, who then featured his brother and Ronnie Earl, and backed blues artists such as Jimmy Rogers, Eddie ‘Cleanhead’ Vinson and Lowell Fulson. ~by Mark Pucci Media

Blues On My Shoulders

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom - Best Grooves & Jams

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:18
Size: 158.6 MB
Styles: Blues/Jazz/Funk
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[4:08] 1. Knee Squeeze (Feat. Ronnie Earl)
[3:08] 2. Chicken Fried Snake (Feat. Jimmie Vaughn & Ronnie Earl)
[3:46] 3. Groovelatin' Acid Blues (Feat. Lowell Fulson)
[3:23] 4. Chillin Out (Feat. Albert Collins)
[5:30] 5. Defrostin' (Feat. Albert Collins & Memphis Horns)
[8:21] 6. Prayin The Blues (Feat. Gray Sargent)
[6:22] 7. Greaze Is What's Good (Feat. Melvin Sparks)
[6:53] 8. J-J-Jazz It Up (Feat. Freddie Hubbard)
[6:53] 9. U Rockin' Me (Feat. Sax Gordon & Melvin Sparks)
[5:31] 10. Square Business (Feat. Smokin' Joe Kubek)
[4:41] 11. The Life You Save (Feat. B'nois King)
[6:45] 12. Some Help I Don't Need
[3:53] 13. Smoke & Fire (Feat. Smokey Wilson)

Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom grooveliciously combines, works, plays in, stretches out, distorts, harmonizes and reflects the familiar and exotic, the smooth and toxic, the dynamic ups and the downs, the known and unknown boundaries of Blues and Jazz, Latin and Gospel, Hip-Hop and free style feelings into a unique musical gumbo, exciting young hip club and college audiences as well as the older veteran Blues and Jazz aficionados everywhere across the globe.

Levy, a steady 40+ year veteran of every cool scene to be seen, whether it be with Albert King, B.B. King, Roomful of Blues, Luther 'Guitar Jr' Johnson or Karl Denson and as organist, pianist, composer, arranger, sideman or soloist, producer and A&R man of over 200 recording projects of traditional and contemporary Blues, R&B, Jazz, Gospel, and real deal, hardcore music from New Orleans, Memphis, NYC, West Coast, Texas and beyond, has garnered many awards and nine Grammy nominations. His original compositions and recordings have been used on every television network and over a dozen films.

He has culminated and organized his musical/magical know-how and formed an elite group of top musicians, Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom. He's currently performing on side projects with the up-and-coming Blues guitarist and singer Barrett Anderson [along with Per Hanson], 2013 winners for 'Best Blues Band' at the Boston Music Awards, SPANK! [with Fuzz and Eric Kalb of Deep Banana Blackout] and Philip Pemberton, the current lead singer with Roomful of Blues. Levy and Pemberton were just inducted into the Rhode Island Music Hall of Fame. [Ron is in New Hampshire's HOF too!] Levy is currently teaching Hammond organ and music theory in the Boston area and around the world via Skype as well.

Best Grooves & Jams mc
Best Grooves & Jams zippy

Monday, July 11, 2016

Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom - 2 albums: Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom / Mo' Blues & Grooves

Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom grooveliciously combines, works, plays in, stretches out, distorts, harmonizes and reflects the familiar and exotic, the smooth and toxic, the dynamic ups and the downs, the known and unknown boundaries of Blues and Jazz, Latin and Gospel, Hip-Hop and free style feelings into a unique musical gumbo, exciting young hip club and college audiences as well as the older veteran Blues and Jazz aficionados everywhere across the globe.

Levy, a steady 40+ year veteran of every cool scene to be seen, whether it be with Albert King, B.B. King, Roomful of Blues, Luther 'Guitar Jr' Johnson or Karl Denson and as organist, pianist, composer, arranger, sideman or soloist, producer and A&R man of over 200 recording projects of traditional and contemporary Blues, R&B, Jazz, Gospel, and real deal, hardcore music from New Orleans, Memphis, NYC, West Coast, Texas and beyond, has garnered many awards and nine Grammy nominations. His original compositions and recordings have been used on every television network and over a dozen films.

Album: Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:52
Size: 89.0 MB
Styles: Urban blues, Funk
Year: 1986/2012
Art: Front

[3:38] 1. I Know You Know I Know
[3:08] 2. Chicken Fried Snake
[3:38] 3. So Many Roads
[4:52] 4. Why You Stay Out So Late
[3:54] 5. Party In Nogales
[3:49] 6. Big Town Playboy
[3:34] 7. It's Hot In Here
[3:08] 8. My Heart's In Trouble
[4:08] 9. Knee Squeeze
[4:59] 10. Must Have Missed A Turn Somewhere

Ten tunes with an all-star cast including Ronnie Earl, Jimmie Vaughan (guitar), Kim Wilson (harmonica), Greg Piccolo (sax), Wayne Bennett (guitar), and other excellent players. Plenty of fine guitar, keyboards, harmonica, and uptempo blues music. ~Michael Erlewine

Ron Levy's first Wild Kingdom album on Blacktop Records, recorded in Austin Texas with an all-star band made up with members of Roomful of Blues, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Wayne Bennett, Kaz Kazanoff and Mudcat Ward. Recorded in 1986 'live' in the studio. Highly critically acclaimed and named as one of the top modern Blues recordings by many sources. A perennial fan favorite and collectors item. The original edition LPs, CDs & cassettes are long out of print, but it's now available for download in it's entirety! So for all you new Blues fans as well as fans whose LP's are worn out, here's a chance to enjoy this cult classic.

Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom

Album: Mo' Blues & Grooves
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:59
Size: 157.9 MB
Styles: Urban blues, Funk
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:20] 1. Defrostin
[6:38] 2. Levtronic Blues
[6:08] 3. Zz Driver
[3:50] 4. Smoke N' Fire
[3:11] 5. I'm Your Professor
[5:14] 6. Coconut Milk
[5:05] 7. Blues For Bb
[3:46] 8. Poundin' The Streets
[3:41] 9. L & L Special
[3:38] 10. So Many Roads
[5:38] 11. Lonely Avenue
[5:28] 12. Chronic Late Arriver
[2:43] 13. Little Rock
[4:44] 14. Dresser Drawers
[5:48] 15. Get Over Here Baby

This album is part of a four part series showcasing Ron Levy as a composer and master musician. It is an anthology drawn from the various recordings Mr. Levy produced, arranged and played his signature sound on piano, electric piano, vibes, guitar and Hammond organ. There are even a couple of his Blues inspired vocals!

Mo' Blues & Grooves

Monday, June 27, 2016

Ronnie Earl - Healing Time

Year: 2000
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:24
Size: 149,2 MB
Styles: Jazzy blues, jazz, instrumental
Scans: Full

1. Churchin' (7:12)
2. Catfish Blues (4:49)
3. Idle Moments (8:28)
4. Thembi (5:37)
5. Blues For Shawn (6:28)
6. Glimpses Of Serenity (6:13)
7. Lunch At R & M's (4:12)
8. Song For A Brother (3:42)
9. Bella Donna (5:36)
10. Blues On A Sunday (9:49)
11. Amazing Grace (2:14)

Guitarist Ronnie Earl continues his string of all instrumental albums with this stunning follow-up to 1997's critically acclaimed The Colour of Love. With sturdy yet subtle assistance from Anthony Geraci on keyboards, Mark Greenberg or Don Williams on drums, Michael "Mudcat" Ward on bass, and, for two tracks, special guest Jimmy McGriff handling the Hammond B-3 in his inimitable fashion, Earl peels off sweet and spicy jazz-blues-gospel licks with the touch of a musician whose heart and soul is intimately infused in his music.

Earl's love of Muddy Waters shines on a sizzling cover of "Catfish Blues" where his guitar alternately screams and moans through the stop-start rhythm of the song as if it's singing the lyrics. But this is primarily a jazz album with a heavy blues influence, and Earl's Kenny Burrell and Grant Green roots are pervasive throughout. His tensile tone ranges from tender and sensitive to biting and majestic, with touches of Carlos Santana's unique phrasing thrown in. Whether digging deep into the achingly soulful slow groove of "Blues for Shawn" or closing out the album with a rapturous "Amazing Grace," Ronnie Earl proves himself to be a master of moods. Healing Time effectively moves him into the realm of the guitar greats he idolizes. /Hal Horowitz, AllMusic

Healing Time mc
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