Showing posts with label Tony Z. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tony Z. Show all posts

Friday, February 24, 2017

Tony Z - Get Down With The Blues

Size: 133,2 MB
Time: 57:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1995
Styles: Blues Jazz, Modern Electric Blues, Soul Blues
Art: Full

01. Get Down With The Blues (7:04)
02. Something Funky About Your Love (3:33)
03. Too Fine To Be Mine (4:57)
04. I've Got A New Love (4:10)
05. Paradise Memorial Gardens (8:32)
06. Roger Pace (3:58)
07. The Blues That Was Waiting For Me (6:41)
08. Tone Cool (8:47)
09. Who Are You Thinking Of? (5:21)
10. Dan't Fuss & Fight (4:47)

Personnel:
Tony Zamagni - Hammond B-3 Organ, Vocals,
Duke Robillard - Guitar
Bernard Purdie - Drums
Houston Person - Saxaphone
Johnny B. Gayden - Bass
Sugar Blue - Harmonica

Hammond B-3 blues organist Tony Z was long a fixture on the New England blues club circuit, and for two years as part of Boston-area guitarist Ronnie Earl's touring band, the Broadcasters.

Born and raised in Boston, Tony Zamagni began playing organ at St. Patrick's School in Roxbury. He cut his musical teeth with the Boston band Combat Zone and then went on to play with the Platters for the next ten years. He spent most of the latter part of the 1980s trying to organize his own touring band (no small feat) and working as a session player in Miami for TK Records, where he recorded an LP with the group Miami. After meeting Ronnie Earl through a mutual friend, trumpeter Bob Enos, Zamagni teamed up with the guitarist and joined his road band, the Broadcasters, from 1989 to 1991.

In 1991, Zamagni moved to Chicago, where he worked for three years with guitarist Larry McCray and found work as a session musician on albums by Son Seals, Saffire, Little Smokey Smothers and Lee "Shot" Williams. Zamagni's debut album, Get Down With the Blues, was released on Rounder's Tone-Cool subsidiary in 1995. The outing is first-class, self-produced in Chicago's Streeterville Studios with some stellar backing musicians: former Roomful of Blues guitarist Duke Robillard, drummer Bernard "Pretty" Purdie, saxophonist Houston Person, harmonica master Sugar Blue and former Albert Collins band bassist Johnny B. Gayden. Buddy Guy was so impressed by Get Down With the Blues that he hired Tony Z to tour with him. In 1998, Tony Z released his second record for Tone Cool, Kiss My Blues. The record featured another all-star cast including Cornell Dupree on guitar, Bernard "Pretty" Purdie on drums again, Chuck Rainey on bass, Lenny Pickett on sax and Kim Wilson blowing harp on two tracks. Since then he has toured with Buddy Guy and on his own, continuing to spread his unique take on the B-3 sound. ~Bio by Richard Skelly

Get Down With The Blues

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Tony Z - Kiss My Blues

Year: 1998
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:12
Size: 120,1 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. All Alone (4:26)
2. It's All The Same (4:10)
3. 15 Years (4:51)
4. This Tear's For You (4:55)
5. You Are My Everything (4:26)
6. You Ain't Who You Think You Are (4:15)
7. Voodootize Me Baby (6:42)
8. Soul Talk (2:59)
9. Communicate (6:48)
10. If You Ever Need A Friend (8:36)

Keyboardist Tony Z uses the Hammond B-3 organ blues sound and style to paint a new tapestry of music on this disc. The groove on this album is immensely fortified by the formidable presence of Cornell Dupree on guitar, Bernard Purdie on drums and Chuck Rainey on bass as the rhythm section. But instead of aping the tunes and styles of B-3 masters like Jimmy Smith, Jimmy McGriff or Groove Holmes, Tony comes to the plate with a batch of his own songs for this album. With Lenny Pickett emoting soulfully on saxophone and a two-song guest turn from Kim Wilson on harmonica, this session goes into realms previously uncharted by your Hammond B-3 practitioner, retro or otherwise. Highlights include "Voodootize Me Baby", "All Alone", "You Ain't Who You Think You Are" and "Communicate". /Cub Koda, AllMusic

Kiss My Blues mc
Kiss My Blues gofile