Showing posts with label Terry Gillespie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terry Gillespie. Show all posts

Saturday, May 6, 2017

Terry Gillespie - Home Boy

Size: 155,3 MB
Time: 66:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. New Mown Lawn (Live) (7:51)
02. Tijuana (Live) (7:49)
03. Monkey Hunger (Live) (4:46)
04. Little By Little (Live) (3:23)
05. Brother Of The Blues (Live) (4:29)
06. Another Black Night (Live) (3:21)
07. I'm A Man (Live) (4:47)
08. Businessman (Live) (3:40)
09. Junco Partner (Live) (3:44)
10. The Devil Likes To Win (Live) (3:26)
11. Killing Floor (Live) (5:03)
12. Pass The Peas (Live) (4:28)
13. New Orleans Wobble (Live) (5:06)
14. New Mown Lawn (Radio Edit) (Live) (4:16)

Warm. Laid back. Amiably home made.Constantly surprising.

Homeboy, his fifth album, will be released Friday May 5, and it’s Gillespie’s surprising mix of influences and genres, but remains solidly rooted in the blues.

Homeboy, has a warm, “island” feel, that permeates the whole record (that’s been the case, since he has been spending winters in Jamaica for many years) even though it was recorded last summer live off the floor at the Granary Restaurant in Vankleek Hill, east of Ottawa, where the Gillespies’ have made their home.

The record opens with two seven-minute jams — an unusual way to start any conventional CD. (The first piece, “New Mown Lawn” is reprised in a powerful 3:51 radio edit to close the record.)

More familiar songs like “Little By Little,” Wolf’s “Killing Floor” and Bo Diddley’s “I’m a Man” will resonate, and there’s a lesser-known Willie Dixon song — “Businessman” — to intrigue hardcore blues fans.

What’s unusual are the intriguing Gillespie originals, including the opening tracks, and a powerful song — “Brother of the Blues” — about a too-familiar subject, terrorism, but one rarely covered in song. “Monkey Hunger,” and re-interpreted versions of “Junco Partner” (originally done by Heaven’s Radio), “New Orleans Wobble” and “Another Black Night” also demand attention.

Terry Gillespie has sometimes been called a musical shaman, Canada's king of roots music and even Mr. Groove — and all for good reason. There’s no showboating, no over-the top guitar pyrotechnics. His live performances are laid back, entertaining and captivating in a way that allows his audience to become involved as listeners — or dancers responding to the groove.

Home Boy

Monday, January 27, 2014

Heaven's Radio - Rendezvous

Size: 114,1+114,0 MB
Time: 48:36+48:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2007
Styles: Modern Electric Blues, Blues Reggae
Art: Full

CD 1: Active (1977)
01. Voodoo Music (3:03)
02. Checkin On My Baby (3:49)
03. You Lost Again (5:31)
04. I Think - Work Out Fine (3:44)
05. Junco Partner (4:38)
06. Good Time Station (4:15)
07. Voodoo Musicince's Song (2:41)
08. High And Lonesome (3:52)
09. Kinky Reggae (8:14)
10. Theme (2:28)
11. 707 (3:17)
12. If You Like Music (2:58)

CD 2: Uptown Babies (1979)
01. Uptown Babies (5:13)
02. Little Piece Of Heaven (4:04)
03. I Ain't Got It (3:59)
04. The Round And Round (2:42)
05. New Mown Lawn (9:10)
06. Rough Rider (5:55)
07. Soul Rebel (4:07)
08. River Of Jordan (2:39)
09. Heed The Word Of The Lord (2:32)
10. When I Come Back To Ya (4:42)
11. Natural Girl (3:31)

Heaven's Radio "Active" and "Uptown Babies" digitally remixed and mastered with 4 bonus tunes! "Heaven’s Radio leaps ahead with Uptown Babies. This is the kind of album you would like to take home to meet your mother. This is one of the best albums to come out of anywhere by anybody in a long time. – Victor Botari "

Terry Gillespie formed Heaven’s Radio – who were widely considered the best band to come out of Ottawa, Ontario in the '70s. Their highly acclaimed albums of the early 80s, 'Active' and 'Uptown Babies', were re-released as a box set in May 2007. Holger Petersen, President of Stony Plain Records and host of CBC’s long running Saturday Night Blues calls Heaven's Radio, "A highly under-rated band of that era."

Band:
Terry Gillespie - Vocals, Guitar, Trumpet
Miche Pouliot - Drums
Corky Kealey - Drums (regular player but not on all albums)
Vince Halfhide - Guitar, Vocals
Bob Blacker - Bass

Rendezvous

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Terry Gillespie & The Granary Band - Brother Of The Blues

Size: 93,1 MB
Time: 39:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2006
Styles: Modern Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. Brother Of The Blues (4:39)
02. Yellow Moon (2:39)
03. Big Boy (3:57)
04. Carl Nicholson (3:48)
05. Love Again (3:34)
06. Cold Ground (3:22)
07. Those Days Are Gone (4:13)
08. Change My Style (2:43)
09. Rue Guy Boogie (2:45)
10. Bath Tub (3:48)
11. Kruschev (4:13)

Terry Gillespie, formerly of Detroit, now calls Ottawa, Ontario home. It is certainly Canada’s gain. The highly regarded critic Tim Holek has called him Canada’s “King of Roots Music.” He has indeed been a bit of a Canadian blues legend for 40 years. Though raised in England, he was born in Edmonton, but it was in Detroit, in the 1950s and '60s, that he cut his musical teeth. He attended MSU to study chemical engineering, but it was musical concoctions that moved his soul. He came up on the local stages and shared space with everyone from John Lee Hooker to Albert Collins, with stops along the way backing Peter Tosh and Jimmy Cliff. He moved from Detroit to Montreal briefly and made the return to Canada permanent when he took Ottawa for his home in 1967. Brother of the Blues, his first recording in many, many years, is an amalgam of all of the above and more influences picked up along the way. The lead-off title tune reminds of Mark Knopfler with its stunning guitar work. On “Yellow Moon,” there is a heavy footed shuffle and a “chorus” of saxophones from Jody Golnick over Stephen Barry’s deep bass and Gordon Adamson’s snappy drums. “Big Boy” has a slinky groove, “Cold Ground,” with Martin Boodman’s harp comping, is deceptively upbeat. “Yellow Moon” has shades of Van Morrison, both in Gillespie’s vocal presence and in the arrangement. “Carl Nicholson” (aka Van Morrison) is even more so, down to the imagery in the writing. ("I will sing my song along a winding lane/one country to another/we were young/our souls on fire/in 1968 that’s when I met my brother”). Jimmy Reed’s “I’ll Change My Style,” the only cover in the bunch, has a lope that’s infectious. “Rue Guy Boogie” is not a boogie. Whatever it is, it is definitely a toe-tapper of the highest order. It has elements that remind of the Band. Jody Golick’s baritone work is the treat on the cut. “Bath Tub” reflects his affection for Jamaica music, with an almost dub style, and the closer “Kruschev” is a flashback for us of a certain age who remember Nikita and his shoe pounding episode at the UN as the enemy.” Cool harp, big percussive beat, This is most decidedly not your daddy’s blues. ~Mark E. Gallo - Blues Bytes

Brother Of The Blues

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Terry Gillespie - Big Money / Bluesoul

Album: Big Money
Size: 111,4 MB
Time: 48:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Blues Folk, Jazzy Blues
Art: Front

01. Soul On Fire (3:44)
02. Big Money (3:24)
03. Legendary Life (3:38)
04. Can't Rember The Blues (2:54)
05. Makeup (2:47)
06. A Certain Thing (4:22)
07. Blood On You (3:27)
08. Jones (3:50)
09. Chant (3:13)
10. Monkey Hunger (4:14)
11. Scared (4:51)
12. In The Park (3:29)
13. You Don't Love Me (4:26)

Today his voice is frequently compared to Van Morrison and Bob Dylan while his guitar is reminiscent of Mark Knopfler.

Terry Gillespie, singer, songwriter and founder of the renowned Heaven’s Radio is best known for his love of rhythm, his musical intensity and his unique soulful voice. He is considered a forefather of the cultural dissemination of American music into Canada. The highly regarded critic Tim Holek has called him Canada’s King of Roots Music. Though raised in England, he was born in Edmonton, but it was in the '60s, in Michigan, that he cut his musical teeth. Through out his career he has played with Blues legends Howlin Wolf, Albert Collins, John Lee Hooker, and Buddy Guy. Today his voice is frequently compared to Van Morrison and Bob Dylan while his guitar is reminiscent of Mark Knopfler. Richard Ludmerer, Vice-President, New York Blues and Jazz Society, describes Gillespie’s music Terry Gillespie possesses a magic that seems to occur right in the middle of each song. It's what causes the hairs to rise on the back of your neck. Terry delivers something that you have never heard. He finds it digging deep into the roots of Americana music. After the assistance Terry gave Peter Karp & Sue Foley on their #1 CD He Said /She Said‚ they labelled Terry a musical shaman.

Big Money

Album: Bluesoul
Size: 116,7 MB
Time: 49:55
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Blues Rock, Blues Soul, Modern Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. The Devil Likes To Win (3:13)
02. What Would Bo Diddley Do (3:49)
03. Early In The Mornin' (4:25)
04. My Tipitina (3:05)
05. You're Gonna Make Me Cry (4:16)
06. Let's Get Together (4:27)
07. My Mama (4:10)
08. It Wasn't Me (3:42)
09. Her Mind Left First (3:04)
10. 16 Days (3:16)
11. She Walks Right In (3:37)
12. Magnolia Tree (3:54)
13. The Devil Likes To Win (Reprise) (4:51)

“Going back to the days of Ottawa’s criminally unheralded ‘Heaven’s Radio’ Terry Gillespie has been a soulful groove master. On ‘BLUESOUL’ his eclectic musical taste has honed in on a distinctive highbred body of intelligent material, resulting in his first, long awaited ‘all blues’ release. Terry says: ‘getting inside the groove is where it’s at’. Like Mark Knopfler, JJ Cale or JB Lenior, he is a player whose comfortable voice perfectly suits his economical deep guitar grooves. Nothing’s wasted and nothing’s missing. “

Bluesoul