Showing posts with label Charlie Musselwhite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlie Musselwhite. Show all posts

Friday, October 17, 2025

Charlie Musselwhite • The Blues Never Die



Biography by Mark Deming
Among the most celebrated harmonica players in the blues, Charlie Musselwhite rose to fame as part of the blues-rock explosion of the mid- to late-'60s. Despite that, while he hasn't been adverse to collaborating with rock musicians, his heart has always been firmly in the blues, and his sound is a potent, muscular blend of rootsy Delta blues influences and the harder-edged tone of classic Chicago blues (a fitting blend given his formative years spent in Memphis and Chicago). Musselwhite is also a performer whose passion is matched by solid technique, and after overcoming an addiction to alcohol in the late '80s, he welcomed the most productive and popular period of his career after more than two decades in the music business. Though his allegiance to the blues is strong, he knows how to fuse his style with a wide variety of artists; few other instrumentalists of any stripe could successfully record with John Lee Hooker, Cyndi Lauper, and Tom Waits. Highlights of his recording career include his striking debut on 1967's Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's Southside Band; 1993's In My Time, the best of his early-'90s comeback albums for Alligator Records; 2000's Up and Down the Highway Live: 1986, one of the best of his many live albums; and 2013's Get Up!, a collaboration with Ben Harper that earned the veteran bluesman his first Grammy Award.

Charles Douglas Musselwhite was born on January 31, 1944, in Kosciuska, Mississippi. Both of his parents were amateur musicians -- his father was proficient on guitar and harmonia, while his mother played piano. When he was three years old, Musselwhite's family moved to Memphis, Tennessee, where he would later attend high school and soak up the rich influence of the city's blues and rock & roll community. He learned to play harmonica and guitar when he was 13, and he sought out some of the city's legendary blues artists, learning from the likes of Furry Lewis, Will Shade, and Memphis Willie B. After a few years of chasing odd jobs, Musselwhite followed the lead of plenty of folks from the Deep South and headed North to Chicago in 1962 in hopes of landing steadier and better-paying work. Much as he did in Memphis, he began ingratiating himself into the Windy City's blues scene. He worked part-time at the Jazz Record Mart, one of the city's best sources for jazz and blues music, and became a regular at nearby clubs, where he was mentored by heroes like Muddy Waters, Junior Wells, Little Walter, Howlin' Wolf, and Sonny Boy Williamson.

Learning from some of the most esteemed names in the blues, Musselwhite started his own band and became a fixture on the South Side club circuit. After the Paul Butterfield Blues Band began enjoying commercial and critical success, record labels were on the lookout for other white artists who could play authentic blues in a style that appealed to rock fans, and Musselwhite more than filled the bill. In 1965, under the name Memphis Charlie, he appeared on a Vanguard Records compilation Chicago/The Blues/Today!, Vol. 3, and the label next signed him to a full recording deal. His debut album, Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's Southside Band, was hailed as an instant classic following its release in 1967, despite the fact his first name was misspelled on the cover. The success of the record prompted Musselwhite to move West; he settled in San Francisco and became one of the leading lights on the city's blues scene as other friends and blues luminaries followed suit, including Mike Bloomfield, Paul Butterfield, and John Lee Hooker.

Musselwhite cut two more albums for Vanguard -- 1968's Stone Blues and 1969's Tennessee Woman -- as well as releasing material though a variety of small labels before signing with Capitol for 1975's Leave the Blues to Us. The Capitol album was not the commercial breakthrough Musselwhite and the label were hoping for, and he continued to tour regionally and record for a number of small labels in America and Europe. (One of his releases of this period, Harmonica According to Charlie, was originally recorded to go along with an instructional book but later received a stand-alone release.) His career took a turn for the better when he gave up drinking in 1987, and 1990's Ace of Harps, his debut release for the well-established blues label Alligator Records, earned him his first Grammy nomination. More than two decades into his recording career, Musselwhite was busier than ever, with a beefed-up touring schedule, and his next two albums for Alligator -- 1991's Signature and 1993's In My Time -- were also nominated for Grammys. He was exposed to a new audience when INXS brought him in to play on their 1990 album X, and longtime fan Bonnie Raitt invited him to perform on her 1994 album Longing in Their Hearts, which would top the album charts that year. Musselwhite moved on to Virgin Records' blues imprint, Pointblank Records, for his next LP, 1997's Rough News. 1999's Continental Drifter saw him experimenting with Latin music, and 2002's One Night in America was influenced by country and Americana sounds. He would also make guest appearances with Tom Waits on 1999's Mule Variations (it was the first of many cameos he would make with Waits) and the celebrated Japanese percussion ensemble Kodo on 2002's Mondo Head.

One Night in America was a one-off release through Telarc, and 2004's Sanctuary was his first album for Realworld, a set steeped in Delta blues featuring guest appearances from the Blind Boys of Alabama and Ben Harper. 2006's Delta Hardware was another exploration of Musselwhite's Southern roots, informed by the death of his parents. He performed on the score of the 2007 film Black Snake Moan and returned to Alligator Records to record 2010's The Well. That same year, he lent his talents to Memphis Blues, a rootsy project from eclectic pop star Cyndi Lauper, and in 2011 he toured as part of Hot Tuna for a blues-themed show. Musselwhite teamed with Ben Harper for a co-starring project, 2013's Get Up!, which earned the much-nominated harmonica master his first Grammy Award. His next studio album was another project with Harper, 2018's No Mercy in This Land; in the interim, he brought out a pair of live albums on his own Henrietta label, 2013's Juke Joint Chapel and 2014's I Ain't Lyin'. He also played harp on 2014's Tell 'Em I'm Gone, a blues-influenced effort by Yusuf (aka Cat Stevens). Musselwhite hit the road with good friend and former Paul Butterfield Blues Band guitarist Elvin Bishop for an intimate concert tour in 2019; the musicians and the fans enjoyed the performances, and the players took the show into the recording studio to cut 100 Years of Blues, released by Alligator in 2020.

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Biografía de Mark Deming
Charlie Musselwhite, uno de los intérpretes de armónica más célebres del blues, alcanzó la fama en el marco de la explosión del blues-rock de mediados y finales de los años 60. A pesar de ello, aunque no ha sido reacio a colaborar con músicos de rock, su corazón siempre ha estado firmemente en el blues, y su sonido es una potente y musculosa mezcla de influencias del blues del Delta de raíz y el tono más duro del blues clásico de Chicago (una mezcla adecuada dados sus años de formación en Memphis y Chicago). Musselwhite es también un intérprete cuya pasión va acompañada de una sólida técnica, y tras superar una adicción al alcohol a finales de los 80, dio la bienvenida al periodo más productivo y popular de su carrera tras más de dos décadas en el negocio de la música. Aunque su fidelidad al blues es fuerte, sabe fusionar su estilo con una gran variedad de artistas; pocos instrumentistas de cualquier tipo podrían grabar con éxito con John Lee Hooker, Cyndi Lauper y Tom Waits. ¡Entre los aspectos más destacados de su carrera discográfica se encuentra su llamativo debut en el álbum de 1967 Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's Southside Band; In My Time, de 1993, el mejor de sus álbumes de regreso de principios de los 90 para Alligator Records; Up and Down the Highway Live, de 2000: 1986, uno de sus mejores discos en directo; y Get Up! de 2013, una colaboración con Ben Harper que le valió al veterano bluesman su primer premio Grammy.

Charles Douglas Musselwhite nació el 31 de enero de 1944 en Kosciuska, Mississippi. Sus padres eran músicos aficionados: su padre dominaba la guitarra y la harmonia, mientras que su madre tocaba el piano. Cuando tenía tres años, la familia de Musselwhite se trasladó a Memphis, Tennessee, donde más tarde asistiría al instituto y se empaparía de la rica influencia de la comunidad del blues y el rock & roll de la ciudad. Aprendió a tocar la armónica y la guitarra a los 13 años, y buscó a algunos de los legendarios artistas de blues de la ciudad, aprendiendo de gente como Furry Lewis, Will Shade y Memphis Willie B. Después de unos años de buscar trabajos ocasionales, Musselwhite siguió el ejemplo de mucha gente del sur profundo y se dirigió al norte, a Chicago, en 1962, con la esperanza de conseguir un trabajo más estable y mejor pagado. Al igual que hizo en Memphis, empezó a congraciarse con la escena del blues de la Ciudad del Viento. Trabajó a tiempo parcial en el Jazz Record Mart, una de las mejores fuentes de música de jazz y blues de la ciudad, y se convirtió en un asiduo de los clubes cercanos, donde tuvo como mentores a héroes como Muddy Waters, Junior Wells, Little Walter, Howlin' Wolf y Sonny Boy Williamson.

Aprendiendo de algunos de los nombres más estimados del blues, Musselwhite creó su propia banda y se convirtió en un fijo del circuito de clubes del South Side. Después de que la Paul Butterfield Blues Band empezara a tener éxito comercial y de crítica, los sellos discográficos buscaban otros artistas blancos que pudieran tocar auténtico blues con un estilo que atrajera a los aficionados al rock, y Musselwhite cumplía con creces. En 1965, bajo el nombre de Memphis Charlie, apareció en un recopilatorio de Vanguard Records, Chicago/The Blues/Today!, Vol. 3, y el sello le firmó un contrato de grabación completo. ¡Su primer álbum, Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's Southside Band, fue aclamado como un clásico instantáneo tras su publicación en 1967, a pesar de que su nombre estaba mal escrito en la portada. El éxito del disco hizo que Musselwhite se trasladara al Oeste; se instaló en San Francisco y se convirtió en una de las principales figuras de la escena del blues de la ciudad, mientras otros amigos y luminarias del blues le seguían, como Mike Bloomfield, Paul Butterfield y John Lee Hooker.

Musselwhite cut two more albums for Vanguard -- 1968's Stone Blues and 1969's Tennessee Woman -- as well as releasing material though a variety of small labels before signing with Capitol for 1975's Leave the Blues to Us. The Capitol album was not the commercial breakthrough Musselwhite and the label were hoping for, and he continued to tour regionally and record for a number of small labels in America and Europe. (One of his releases of this period, Harmonica According to Charlie, was originally recorded to go along with an instructional book but later received a stand-alone release.) His career took a turn for the better when he gave up drinking in 1987, and 1990's Ace of Harps, his debut release for the well-established blues label Alligator Records, earned him his first Grammy nomination. More than two decades into his recording career, Musselwhite was busier than ever, with a beefed-up touring schedule, and his next two albums for Alligator -- 1991's Signature and 1993's In My Time -- were also nominated for Grammys. He was exposed to a new audience when INXS brought him in to play on their 1990 album X, and longtime fan Bonnie Raitt invited him to perform on her 1994 album Longing in Their Hearts, which would top the album charts that year. Musselwhite moved on to Virgin Records' blues imprint, Pointblank Records, for his next LP, 1997's Rough News. 1999's Continental Drifter saw him experimenting with Latin music, and 2002's One Night in America was influenced by country and Americana sounds. He would also make guest appearances with Tom Waits on 1999's Mule Variations (it was the first of many cameos he would make with Waits) and the celebrated Japanese percussion ensemble Kodo on 2002's Mondo Head.

One Night in America was a one-off release through Telarc, and 2004's Sanctuary was his first album for Realworld, a set steeped in Delta blues featuring guest appearances from the Blind Boys of Alabama and Ben Harper. 2006's Delta Hardware was another exploration of Musselwhite's Southern roots, informed by the death of his parents. He performed on the score of the 2007 film Black Snake Moan and returned to Alligator Records to record 2010's The Well. That same year, he lent his talents to Memphis Blues, a rootsy project from eclectic pop star Cyndi Lauper, and in 2011 he toured as part of Hot Tuna for a blues-themed show. Musselwhite teamed with Ben Harper for a co-starring project, 2013's Get Up!, which earned the much-nominated harmonica master his first Grammy Award. His next studio album was another project with Harper, 2018's No Mercy in This Land; in the interim, he brought out a pair of live albums on his own Henrietta label, 2013's Juke Joint Chapel and 2014's I Ain't Lyin'. He also played harp on 2014's Tell 'Em I'm Gone, a blues-influenced effort by Yusuf (aka Cat Stevens). Musselwhite hit the road with good friend and former Paul Butterfield Blues Band guitarist Elvin Bishop for an intimate concert tour in 2019; the musicians and the fans enjoyed the performances, and the players took the show into the recording studio to cut 100 Years of Blues, released by Alligator in 2020.

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Charlie Musselwhite • Curtain Call Cocktails


www.charliemusselwhite.com ...


Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Charlie Musselwhite • Signature



 Charlie Musselwhite seemed destined to be a bluesman. Born in Mississippi, the cradle of the blues, in 1944, Charlie moved to Memphis at an early age and became immersed in the city's diverse musical culture. While Charlie soaked up the music of Memphis with the enthusiasm of a true devotee, it was the blues that caught his soul. In his teens, he befriended several of Memphis' legendary traditional bluesmen, including guitarist Furry Lewis, Will Shade and the surviving members of the Memphis Jug Band. It wasn't long before Charlie began sitting in with his more experienced friends, and establishing a name for himself.

When Charlie was 18, he had an awakening. Music wasn't paying the rent, so for $50 a trip, Charlie would run moonshine whiskey from remote country stills into downtown Memphis, and his bosses would distribute it to dozens of drive-in burger joints around town. When the state police followed him home one day, Charlie decided it was time for a change of profession. The next day, he packed up and headed north on Highway 51 to try his luck in Chicago.

With the intent on finding a factory job in the Windy City, he instead found urban blues in all of its soulful glory. He hung out in the smoky blues clubs on the city's South and West sides and frequently sat in with legends like Little Walter, Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf. He also worked as a band member with Big Joe Williams, J.B. Hutto, Big Walter Horton, Johnny Young, Robert Nighthawk and Floyd Jones. "Coming to Chicago was like walking into Fat City," says Charlie. "These guys inspired me. They gave me an incentive to find my own sound."

Charlie remembers all of those rough and tumble years that, he says, "toughened me up", performing at South Side clubs for a dollar or two. "My feet would be wet from walking in the snow," he recalls. "I had great big holes in my shoes and I remember that really well...once you've been there you don't forget."

Charlie's sound was firmly rooted in Memphis and Chicago-style blues, but it was also inspired by the high energy of rock 'n' roll. In the mid-sixties, Charlie and Paul Butterfield tapped a whole new audience of young rock fans who were drawn to their high-energy style of blues harp. In 1966, Charlie's crossover popularity was rewarded. Charlie signed with Vanguard and recorded the classic album “Stand Back.” It was one of the first blues albums marketed to the rock audience and, along with his subsequent albums in the late '60s and early '70s, established Charlie as a worldwide touring talent. As one critic wrote at the time, "Charlie Musselwhite is the natural born heir to carry the torch for the big city blues tradition."

After recording three excellent albums for Vanguard, which by the way are available in a compilation reissue, Charlie moved to the San Francisco Bay Area, where he still lives. Over the next two decades, he recorded for numerous labels. Blind Pig has reissued one classic album that captured Charlie in one of his most creative periods, “The Harmonica According To Charlie Musselwhite.”(1979) This material has never before appeared on compact disc. On this recording, Charlie offers a superb master class in blues harmonica style and performance, recording 13 tunes in 13 different keys.

Charlie did many albums for many labels through the years. A few highlights were the ones he did for Alligator in the ‘90’s as; “Ace of Harps,” (’90) “Signature,” (’91) and “In My Time.” (’93) He went into a different direction in 1999 with his release of “Continental Drifter.” There are two sets of musicians on the album one being the Cuban players which give a Buena Vista feel to some of the cuts. It proved to be a well received innovative project.

After signing with Telarc Blues in 2002, he continued exploring his musical roots by releasing “One Night in America.” The disc exposed Musselwhite's innate interest in country music. “Sanctuary,” a rock and soul excursion, released in 2004, was Musselwhite's first record for Real World. He then followed up in 2006 with “Delta Hardware.” Recorded with his road band, it has the feeling of motion along with its looking into the past, which for Charlie is all the way back into the original Delta Blues. He plays this music with an authenticity that only comes from experience.

Such a long an distinguished carrer has not been without accolades garnered along the way. With 18 W.C. Handy awards to his credit and 6 Grammy nominations, he is firmly entrenched in musical history. Musselwhite has also been honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award from The Monterey Blues Festival and the San Javier Jazz Festival in Spain and the Mississippi Governor's Award for Excellence in the Arts. Perhaps most meaningful to him personally, in 1987, he conquered a long-running battle with alcoholism.

Musselwhite's version of the blues ventures far beyond conventional honky-tonk as he is simply interested in music with feeling, as he puts it, "music from the heart": "For me, it's about the feeling, and connecting with people. And blues, if it's real blues, is loaded with feeling. And it ain't about technique either, it's about truth, connecting to the truth and communicating with people." https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/charlie-musselwhite/
 
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Charlie Musselwhite parecía destinado a ser un bluesman. Nacido en Mississippi, la cuna del blues, en 1944, Charlie se mudó a Memphis a una edad temprana y se sumergió en la diversa cultura musical de la ciudad. Mientras Charlie absorbió la música de Memphis con el entusiasmo de un verdadero devoto, fue el blues lo que atrapó su alma. En su adolescencia, se hizo amigo de varios de los legendarios bluesmen tradicionales de Memphis, incluido el guitarrista Furry Lewis, Will Shade y los miembros sobrevivientes de la Memphis Jug Band. No pasó mucho tiempo antes de que Charlie comenzara a reunirse con sus amigos más experimentados y a hacerse un nombre.

Cuando Charlie tenía 18 años, tuvo un despertar. La música no pagaba el alquiler, así que por $ 50 el viaje, Charlie llevaba whisky moonshine desde alambiques remotos del campo hasta el centro de Memphis, y sus jefes lo distribuían en docenas de restaurantes de hamburguesas en el autocine de la ciudad. Cuando la policía estatal lo siguió a casa un día, Charlie decidió que era hora de cambiar de profesión. Al día siguiente, empacó y se dirigió al norte por la autopista 51 para probar suerte en Chicago.

Con la intención de encontrar un trabajo en una fábrica en la Ciudad de los Vientos, en cambio encontró el blues urbano en todo su esplendor conmovedor. Pasaba el rato en los clubes de blues llenos de humo en los lados sur y oeste de la ciudad y con frecuencia se sentaba con leyendas como Little Walter, Muddy Waters y Howlin ' Wolf.  También trabajó como miembro de la banda con Big Joe Williams, J. B. Hutto, Big Walter Horton, Johnny Young, Robert Nighthawk y Floyd Jones. "Venir a Chicago fue como entrar a Fat City", dice Charlie. "Estos muchachos me inspiraron. Me dieron un incentivo para encontrar mi propio sonido."

Charlie recuerda todos esos años difíciles que, dice, "me endurecieron", actuando en clubes del South Side por uno o dos dólares. "Mis pies se mojaban por caminar en la nieve", recuerda. "Tenía grandes agujeros en mis zapatos y lo recuerdo muy bien...una vez que has estado allí, no lo olvidas."

El sonido de Charlie estaba firmemente arraigado en el blues al estilo de Memphis y Chicago, pero también estaba inspirado en la alta energía del rock 'n' roll. A mediados de los sesenta, Charlie y Paul Butterfield atrajeron a una audiencia completamente nueva de jóvenes fanáticos del rock que se sintieron atraídos por su estilo de arpa de blues de alta energía. En 1966, la popularidad cruzada de Charlie fue recompensada. Charlie firmó con Vanguard y grabó el álbum clásico " Stand Back."Fue uno de los primeros álbumes de blues comercializados para la audiencia de rock y, junto con sus álbumes posteriores a fines de los 60 y principios de los 70, estableció a Charlie como un talento de gira mundial. Como escribió un crítico en ese momento, "Charlie Musselwhite es el heredero nato para llevar la antorcha de la tradición del blues de la gran ciudad."

Después de grabar tres excelentes álbumes para Vanguard, que por cierto están disponibles en una reedición recopilatoria, Charlie se mudó al Área de la Bahía de San Francisco, donde aún vive. Durante las siguientes dos décadas, grabó para numerosos sellos. Blind Pig ha reeditado un álbum clásico que capturó a Charlie en uno de sus períodos más creativos", La Armónica Según Charlie Musselwhite."(1979) Este material nunca antes había aparecido en disco compacto. En esta grabación, Charlie ofrece una magnífica clase magistral de estilo e interpretación de armónica de blues, grabando 13 melodías en 13 teclas diferentes.

Charlie hizo muchos álbumes para muchos sellos a lo largo de los años. Algunos aspectos destacados fueron los que hizo para Alligator en los años 90 como; "Ace of Harps", ('90) "Signature", ('91) y" In My Time."('93) Tomó una dirección diferente en 1999 con su lanzamiento de" Continental Drifter."Hay dos grupos de músicos en el álbum, uno de ellos son los músicos cubanos que le dan una sensación de Buena Vista a algunos de los cortes. Resultó ser un proyecto innovador bien recibido.

Después de firmar con Telarc Blues en 2002, continuó explorando sus raíces musicales al lanzar " One Night in America."El disco expuso el interés innato de Musselwhite por la música country. "Sanctuary", una excursión de rock y soul, lanzada en 2004, fue el primer disco de Musselwhite para Real World. Luego siguió en 2006 con "Delta Hardware."Grabado con su banda de gira, tiene la sensación de movimiento junto con su mirada al pasado, que para Charlie es todo el camino de regreso al Delta Blues original. Él toca esta música con una autenticidad que solo proviene de la experiencia.

Una carrera tan distinguida no ha estado exenta de elogios cosechados en el camino. Con 18 premios W. C. Handy en su haber y 6 nominaciones a los Grammy, está firmemente arraigado en la historia musical. Musselwhite también ha sido honrado con el Premio a la Trayectoria del Monterey Blues Festival y el Festival de Jazz de San Javier en España y el Premio del Gobernador de Mississippi a la Excelencia en las Artes. Quizás lo más significativo para él personalmente, en 1987, conquistó una larga batalla contra el alcoholismo.

La versión de Musselwhite del blues se aventura mucho más allá del honky-tonk convencional, ya que simplemente está interesado en la música con sentimiento, como él dice, "música desde el corazón": "Para mí, se trata del sentimiento y de conectarme con la gente. Y el blues, si es blues de verdad, está cargado de sentimiento. Y tampoco se trata de técnica, se trata de verdad, conectarse con la verdad y comunicarse con la gente."https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/charlie-musselwhite/

www.charliemusselwhite.com ...

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Charlie Musselwhite • One Night in America



Review by Hal Horowitz:
Charlie Musselwhite continues his prolific four-decade career jumping over to Telarc for his first album of the millennium after spending the '90s recording for Alligator and Virgin. A recap of his formative Memphis roots, Musselwhite receives substantial assistance from guests Robben Ford on guitar (Musselwhite provided Ford with his first gigs when the guitarist was in his late teens), Texas vocalist Kelly Willis, and guitarist/mandolin player Marty Stuart; the last two bring a rootsy, laid back country feel to the album that effectively fuses the swampy C&W, R&B, and blues of Memphis into a cohesive statement. Musselwhite blows unamplified harp on every track, but it's his weathered, understated vocals that infuse these songs with down-home charm. Covers from Jimmy Reed, Los Lobos (the album takes its title from their "One Time One Night"), Ivory Joe Hunter, and Kieran Kane flow beautifully into each other as the artist masterfully blurs the lines between genres. He tears into Johnny Cash's "Big River" like it was a Chicago blues classic and retells his own childhood in the affecting original "Blues Overtook Me." He and producer Randy Labbe generate a Creedence-styled swamp vibe on the opening "Trail of Tears," with both Willis and Christine Ohlman chiming in on gripping backing vocals that set the atmosphere. But the album resonates most effectively on the sparsest tracks. "Ain't It Time" exudes a resigned, almost gospel feel in its achingly slow groove, and "In Your Darkest Hour," another Musselwhite original, shimmers with just harp and T-Bone Wolk's spooky walking bass creating a foggy mood that envelopes the listener. Not just a fresh start at a new label, this album is a sentimental and sincere recap of Musselwhite's influences and a stirring listen throughout.

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Traducción Automática:
Revisión por Hal Horowitz:Charlie Musselwhite continúa su prolífica carrera de cuatro décadas saltando a Telarc para su primer álbum del milenio después de pasar la grabación de los 90 para Alligator y Virgin. Un resumen de sus raíces formativas en Memphis, Musselwhite recibe una gran asistencia de los invitados Robben Ford en la guitarra (Musselwhite le dio a Ford sus primeros conciertos cuando el guitarrista estaba en su adolescencia), la vocalista de Texas Kelly Willis y el guitarrista / mandolina Marty Stuart; los dos últimos aportan una sensación de país arraigada y relajada al álbum que fusiona efectivamente el pantano C&W, R&B y blues de Memphis en una declaración coherente. Musselwhite sopla arpa sin amplificar en cada canción, pero son sus voces desgastadas y sobrias las que infunden estas canciones con el encanto de la casa. Las cubiertas de Jimmy Reed, Los Lobos (el álbum toma su título de "One Time One Night"), Ivory Joe Hunter y Kieran Kane fluyen maravillosamente entre sí mientras el artista difumina magistralmente las líneas entre los géneros. Llega al "Big River" de Johnny Cash como si fuera un clásico del blues de Chicago y vuelve a contar su propia infancia en el original "Blues Overtook Me". Él y el productor Randy Labbe generan un ambiente de pantano al estilo Creedence en la apertura "Trail of Tears", con Willis y Christine Ohlman tocando las voces de acompañamiento que crean el ambiente. Pero el álbum resuena más efectivamente en las pistas más escasas. "Ain't It Time" emana un sentimiento resignado, casi evangélico en su ritmo cada vez más lento, y "In Your Darkest Hour", otro original de Musselwhite, reluciente con solo el arpa y el bajo escalofriante de T-Bone Wolk creando un ambiente brumoso que envuelve el oyente. No solo es un nuevo comienzo en un nuevo sello, este álbum es un resumen sentimental y sincero de las influencias de Musselwhite y una escucha conmovedora.
 

Monday, November 25, 2024

Charlie Musselwhite • Ace of Harps

 


Friday, September 27, 2024

VA • The Best Of Blues

 



Johnny Winter, Charlie Musselwhite, B.B. King, Duke Robillard, Hadda Brooks,Stevie Ray Vaughan, Muddy Waters, Elmore James, Solomon Burke, Lowell Fulson, Howlin' Wolf, Etta James, Chuck Berry, John Lee Hooker,





  

Thursday, September 12, 2024

Charlie Musselwhite • In My Time



Review by Ron Wynn
Charlie Musselwhite takes four different approaches on this Alligator release. On two tracks, he turns to guitar, proving a competent instrumentalist and convincing singer in a vintage Delta style. He also does two gospel numbers backed by the legendary Blind Boys of Alabama, which are heartfelt, but not exactly triumphs. Musselwhite reveals his jazz influence on three tracks, making them entertaining harmonica workouts. But for blues fans, Musselwhite's biting licks and spiraling riffs are best featured on such numbers as "If I Should Have Bad Luck" and "Leaving Blues." Despite the diverse strains, Musselwhite retains credibility throughout while displaying the wide range of sources from which he's forged his distinctive style.
 
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Reseña de Ron Wynn
Charlie Musselwhite adopta cuatro enfoques diferentes en este lanzamiento de Alligator. En dos temas, se dedica a la guitarra, demostrando ser un instrumentista competente y un cantante convincente en un estilo del Delta vintage. También hace dos números de gospel respaldados por los legendarios Blind Boys of Alabama, que son sinceros, pero no son precisamente triunfos. Musselwhite revela su influencia del jazz en tres temas, convirtiéndolos en entretenidos ejercicios de armónica. Pero para los fans del blues, los mordaces licks y los riffs en espiral de Musselwhite son los más destacados en temas como "If I Should Have Bad Luck" y "Leaving Blues". A pesar de la diversidad de estilos, Musselwhite mantiene la credibilidad a lo largo de todo el disco mientras muestra la amplia gama de fuentes de las que ha forjado su estilo distintivo.


Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Charlie Musselwhite • Sanctuary



Biography by Mark Deming
Among the most celebrated harmonica players in the blues, Charlie Musselwhite rose to fame as part of the blues-rock explosion of the mid- to late-'60s. Despite that, while he hasn't been adverse to collaborating with rock musicians, his heart has always been firmly in the blues, and his sound is a potent, muscular blend of rootsy Delta blues influences and the harder-edged tone of classic Chicago blues (a fitting blend given his formative years spent in Memphis and Chicago). Musselwhite is also a performer whose passion is matched by solid technique, and after overcoming an addiction to alcohol in the late '80s, he welcomed the most productive and popular period of his career after more than two decades in the music business. Though his allegiance to the blues is strong, he knows how to fuse his style with a wide variety of artists; few other instrumentalists of any stripe could successfully record with John Lee Hooker, Cyndi Lauper, and Tom Waits. Highlights of his recording career include his striking debut on 1967's Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's Southside Band; 1993's In My Time, the best of his early-'90s comeback albums for Alligator Records; 2000's Up and Down the Highway Live: 1986, one of the best of his many live albums; and 2013's Get Up!, a collaboration with Ben Harper that earned the veteran bluesman his first Grammy Award.

Charles Douglas Musselwhite was born on January 31, 1944, in Kosciuska, Mississippi. Both of his parents were amateur musicians -- his father was proficient on guitar and harmonia, while his mother played piano. When he was three years old, Musselwhite's family moved to Memphis, Tennessee, where he would later attend high school and soak up the rich influence of the city's blues and rock & roll community. He learned to play harmonica and guitar when he was 13, and he sought out some of the city's legendary blues artists, learning from the likes of Furry Lewis, Will Shade, and Memphis Willie B. After a few years of chasing odd jobs, Musselwhite followed the lead of plenty of folks from the Deep South and headed North to Chicago in 1962 in hopes of landing steadier and better-paying work. Much as he did in Memphis, he began ingratiating himself into the Windy City's blues scene. He worked part-time at the Jazz Record Mart, one of the city's best sources for jazz and blues music, and became a regular at nearby clubs, where he was mentored by heroes like Muddy Waters, Junior Wells, Little Walter, Howlin' Wolf, and Sonny Boy Williamson.

Learning from some of the most esteemed names in the blues, Musselwhite started his own band and became a fixture on the South Side club circuit. After the Paul Butterfield Blues Band began enjoying commercial and critical success, record labels were on the lookout for other white artists who could play authentic blues in a style that appealed to rock fans, and Musselwhite more than filled the bill. In 1965, under the name Memphis Charlie, he appeared on a Vanguard Records compilation Chicago/The Blues/Today!, Vol. 3, and the label next signed him to a full recording deal. His debut album, Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's Southside Band, was hailed as an instant classic following its release in 1967, despite the fact his first name was misspelled on the cover. The success of the record prompted Musselwhite to move West; he settled in San Francisco and became one of the leading lights on the city's blues scene as other friends and blues luminaries followed suit, including Mike Bloomfield, Paul Butterfield, and John Lee Hooker.

Musselwhite cut two more albums for Vanguard -- 1968's Stone Blues and 1969's Tennessee Woman -- as well as releasing material though a variety of small labels before signing with Capitol for 1975's Leave the Blues to Us. The Capitol album was not the commercial breakthrough Musselwhite and the label were hoping for, and he continued to tour regionally and record for a number of small labels in America and Europe. (One of his releases of this period, Harmonica According to Charlie, was originally recorded to go along with an instructional book but later received a stand-alone release.) His career took a turn for the better when he gave up drinking in 1987, and 1990's Ace of Harps, his debut release for the well-established blues label Alligator Records, earned him his first Grammy nomination. More than two decades into his recording career, Musselwhite was busier than ever, with a beefed-up touring schedule, and his next two albums for Alligator -- 1991's Signature and 1993's In My Time -- were also nominated for Grammys. He was exposed to a new audience when INXS brought him in to play on their 1990 album X, and longtime fan Bonnie Raitt invited him to perform on her 1994 album Longing in Their Hearts, which would top the album charts that year. Musselwhite moved on to Virgin Records' blues imprint, Pointblank Records, for his next LP, 1997's Rough News. 1999's Continental Drifter saw him experimenting with Latin music, and 2002's One Night in America was influenced by country and Americana sounds. He would also make guest appearances with Tom Waits on 1999's Mule Variations (it was the first of many cameos he would make with Waits) and the celebrated Japanese percussion ensemble Kodo on 2002's Mondo Head.

One Night in America was a one-off release through Telarc, and 2004's Sanctuary was his first album for Realworld, a set steeped in Delta blues featuring guest appearances from the Blind Boys of Alabama and Ben Harper. 2006's Delta Hardware was another exploration of Musselwhite's Southern roots, informed by the death of his parents. He performed on the score of the 2007 film Black Snake Moan and returned to Alligator Records to record 2010's The Well. That same year, he lent his talents to Memphis Blues, a rootsy project from eclectic pop star Cyndi Lauper, and in 2011 he toured as part of Hot Tuna for a blues-themed show. Musselwhite teamed with Ben Harper for a co-starring project, 2013's Get Up!, which earned the much-nominated harmonica master his first Grammy Award. His next studio album was another project with Harper, 2018's No Mercy in This Land; in the interim, he brought out a pair of live albums on his own Henrietta label, 2013's Juke Joint Chapel and 2014's I Ain't Lyin'. He also played harp on 2014's Tell 'Em I'm Gone, a blues-influenced effort by Yusuf (aka Cat Stevens). Musselwhite hit the road with good friend and former Paul Butterfield Blues Band guitarist Elvin Bishop for an intimate concert tour in 2019; the musicians and the fans enjoyed the performances, and the players took the show into the recording studio to cut 100 Years of Blues, released by Alligator in 2020.

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Biografía de Mark Deming
Charlie Musselwhite, uno de los intérpretes de armónica más célebres del blues, alcanzó la fama en el marco de la explosión del blues-rock de mediados y finales de los años 60. A pesar de ello, aunque no ha sido reacio a colaborar con músicos de rock, su corazón siempre ha estado firmemente en el blues, y su sonido es una potente y musculosa mezcla de influencias del blues del Delta de raíz y el tono más duro del blues clásico de Chicago (una mezcla adecuada dados sus años de formación en Memphis y Chicago). Musselwhite es también un intérprete cuya pasión va acompañada de una sólida técnica, y tras superar una adicción al alcohol a finales de los 80, dio la bienvenida al periodo más productivo y popular de su carrera tras más de dos décadas en el negocio de la música. Aunque su fidelidad al blues es fuerte, sabe fusionar su estilo con una gran variedad de artistas; pocos instrumentistas de cualquier tipo podrían grabar con éxito con John Lee Hooker, Cyndi Lauper y Tom Waits. ¡Entre los aspectos más destacados de su carrera discográfica se encuentra su llamativo debut en el álbum de 1967 Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's Southside Band; In My Time, de 1993, el mejor de sus álbumes de regreso de principios de los 90 para Alligator Records; Up and Down the Highway Live, de 2000: 1986, uno de sus mejores discos en directo; y Get Up! de 2013, una colaboración con Ben Harper que le valió al veterano bluesman su primer premio Grammy.

Charles Douglas Musselwhite nació el 31 de enero de 1944 en Kosciuska, Mississippi. Sus padres eran músicos aficionados: su padre dominaba la guitarra y la harmonia, mientras que su madre tocaba el piano. Cuando tenía tres años, la familia de Musselwhite se trasladó a Memphis, Tennessee, donde más tarde asistiría al instituto y se empaparía de la rica influencia de la comunidad del blues y el rock & roll de la ciudad. Aprendió a tocar la armónica y la guitarra a los 13 años, y buscó a algunos de los legendarios artistas de blues de la ciudad, aprendiendo de gente como Furry Lewis, Will Shade y Memphis Willie B. Después de unos años de buscar trabajos ocasionales, Musselwhite siguió el ejemplo de mucha gente del sur profundo y se dirigió al norte, a Chicago, en 1962, con la esperanza de conseguir un trabajo más estable y mejor pagado. Al igual que hizo en Memphis, empezó a congraciarse con la escena del blues de la Ciudad del Viento. Trabajó a tiempo parcial en el Jazz Record Mart, una de las mejores fuentes de música de jazz y blues de la ciudad, y se convirtió en un asiduo de los clubes cercanos, donde tuvo como mentores a héroes como Muddy Waters, Junior Wells, Little Walter, Howlin' Wolf y Sonny Boy Williamson.

Aprendiendo de algunos de los nombres más estimados del blues, Musselwhite creó su propia banda y se convirtió en un fijo del circuito de clubes del South Side. Después de que la Paul Butterfield Blues Band empezara a tener éxito comercial y de crítica, los sellos discográficos buscaban otros artistas blancos que pudieran tocar auténtico blues con un estilo que atrajera a los aficionados al rock, y Musselwhite cumplía con creces. En 1965, bajo el nombre de Memphis Charlie, apareció en un recopilatorio de Vanguard Records, Chicago/The Blues/Today!, Vol. 3, y el sello le firmó un contrato de grabación completo. ¡Su primer álbum, Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's Southside Band, fue aclamado como un clásico instantáneo tras su publicación en 1967, a pesar de que su nombre estaba mal escrito en la portada. El éxito del disco hizo que Musselwhite se trasladara al Oeste; se instaló en San Francisco y se convirtió en una de las principales figuras de la escena del blues de la ciudad, mientras otros amigos y luminarias del blues le seguían, como Mike Bloomfield, Paul Butterfield y John Lee Hooker.

Musselwhite cut two more albums for Vanguard -- 1968's Stone Blues and 1969's Tennessee Woman -- as well as releasing material though a variety of small labels before signing with Capitol for 1975's Leave the Blues to Us. The Capitol album was not the commercial breakthrough Musselwhite and the label were hoping for, and he continued to tour regionally and record for a number of small labels in America and Europe. (One of his releases of this period, Harmonica According to Charlie, was originally recorded to go along with an instructional book but later received a stand-alone release.) His career took a turn for the better when he gave up drinking in 1987, and 1990's Ace of Harps, his debut release for the well-established blues label Alligator Records, earned him his first Grammy nomination. More than two decades into his recording career, Musselwhite was busier than ever, with a beefed-up touring schedule, and his next two albums for Alligator -- 1991's Signature and 1993's In My Time -- were also nominated for Grammys. He was exposed to a new audience when INXS brought him in to play on their 1990 album X, and longtime fan Bonnie Raitt invited him to perform on her 1994 album Longing in Their Hearts, which would top the album charts that year. Musselwhite moved on to Virgin Records' blues imprint, Pointblank Records, for his next LP, 1997's Rough News. 1999's Continental Drifter saw him experimenting with Latin music, and 2002's One Night in America was influenced by country and Americana sounds. He would also make guest appearances with Tom Waits on 1999's Mule Variations (it was the first of many cameos he would make with Waits) and the celebrated Japanese percussion ensemble Kodo on 2002's Mondo Head.

One Night in America was a one-off release through Telarc, and 2004's Sanctuary was his first album for Realworld, a set steeped in Delta blues featuring guest appearances from the Blind Boys of Alabama and Ben Harper. 2006's Delta Hardware was another exploration of Musselwhite's Southern roots, informed by the death of his parents. He performed on the score of the 2007 film Black Snake Moan and returned to Alligator Records to record 2010's The Well. That same year, he lent his talents to Memphis Blues, a rootsy project from eclectic pop star Cyndi Lauper, and in 2011 he toured as part of Hot Tuna for a blues-themed show. Musselwhite teamed with Ben Harper for a co-starring project, 2013's Get Up!, which earned the much-nominated harmonica master his first Grammy Award. His next studio album was another project with Harper, 2018's No Mercy in This Land; in the interim, he brought out a pair of live albums on his own Henrietta label, 2013's Juke Joint Chapel and 2014's I Ain't Lyin'. He also played harp on 2014's Tell 'Em I'm Gone, a blues-influenced effort by Yusuf (aka Cat Stevens). Musselwhite hit the road with good friend and former Paul Butterfield Blues Band guitarist Elvin Bishop for an intimate concert tour in 2019; the musicians and the fans enjoyed the performances, and the players took the show into the recording studio to cut 100 Years of Blues, released by Alligator in 2020.

www.charliemusselwhite.com ...

Wednesday, August 7, 2024

Charlie Musselwhite • Stone Blues



 Artist Biography by Dan Forte
Harmonica wizard Norton Buffalo can recollect a leaner time when his record collection had been whittled down to only the bare essentials: The Paul Butterfield Blues Band and Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's South Side Band. Butterfield and Musselwhite will probably be forever linked as the two most interesting, and arguably the most important, products of the "white blues movement" of the mid- to late '60s -- not only because they were near the forefront chronologically, but because they both stand out as being especially faithful to the style. Each certainly earned the respect of his legendary mentors. No less than the late Big Joe Williams said, "Charlie Musselwhite is one of the greatest living harp players of country blues. He is right up there with Sonny Boy Williamson, and he's been my harp player ever since Sonny Boy got killed." Musselwhite in particular, from the very beginning of his recording career in the early '60s, established himself as a true lineage member of an earlier generation of Delta bluesmen who made the trek to Chicago to further their careers, creating a new form of blues in the process. Musselwhite is the winner of seven Grammy awards, 27 Blues Music Awards, and is a Blues Hall of Fame inductee.

It's interesting that Williams specifies "country" blues, because, even though he made his mark leading electric bands in Chicago and San Francisco, Musselwhite began playing blues with people he'd read about in Samuel Charters' Country Blues -- Memphis greats like Furry Lewis, Will Shade, and Gus Cannon. It was these rural roots that set him apart from Butterfield, and decades later Musselwhite began incorporating his first instrument, guitar.

Musselwhite was born in Kosciusko, Mississippi in 1944, and his family moved north to Memphis, where he went to high school. He migrated to Chicago in search of the near-mythical $3.00-an-hour job (the same lure that set innumerable youngsters on the same route), and became a familiar face at blues haunts like Pepper's, Turner's, and Theresa's, sitting in with and sometimes playing alongside harmonica lords such as Little Walter, Shakey Horton, Good Rockin' Charles, Carey Bell, Big John Wrencher, and even Sonny Boy Williamson. Before recording his first album, Musselwhite appeared on LPs by Tracy Nelson and John Hammond and duetted (as Memphis Charlie) with Shakey Horton on Vanguard's Chicago/The Blues/Today series.

When his aforementioned debut LP became a standard on San Francisco's underground radio, Musselwhite played the Fillmore Auditorium and never returned to the Windy City. Leading bands that featured greats like guitarists Harvey Mandel, Freddie Roulette, Luther Tucker, Louis Myers, Robben Ford, Fenton Robinson, and Junior Watson, Musselwhite played steadily in Bay Area bars and mounted somewhat low-profile national tours. It wasn't until the late '80s, when he conquered a career-long drinking problem, that Musselwhite began touring worldwide to rave notices. He became busier than ever and continued releasing records to critical acclaim.

His two releases on Virgin, Rough News in 1997 and Continental Drifter in 2000, found Musselwhite mixing elements of jazz, gospel, Tex-Mex, and acoustic Delta blues. After signing with Telarc Blues in 2002, he continued exploring his musical roots by releasing One Night in America. The disc exposed Musselwhite's interest in country music with a cover version of the Johnny Cash classic "Big River," and featured guest appearances by Kelly Willis and Marty Stuart. Sanctuary, released in 2004, was Musselwhite's first record for Real World. After extensive touring globally, he returned to the studio for its follow-up, the back-to-basics Delta Hardware, recorded in Mississippi. The set was hard-edged and raw blues and featured one live track, the hip-shaking "Clarksdale Boogie," recorded in front of a small but enthusiastic audience at Red's Juke Joint in that very town. Musselwhite returned to Alligator in 2009 and got down to business and cut The Well in Chicago, an all-original program that featured a guest duet appearance from Mavis Staples on the track "Sad Beautiful World." The song references the murder of his 93-year-old mother during a burglary in her home.

Musselwhite met guitarist and songwriter Ben Harper, a lifelong fan, during a tour playing harmonica for John Lee Hooker; Harper's band opened those gigs. The pair got on exceptionally well -- the elder bluesman knew Harper's work. Hooker felt strongly that the two men should work together and brought them into the studio to record "Burnin' Hell" with him. The two became friends as their paths periodically crossed on the road. Ultimately, they collaborated on 2013's Get Up!; the album won the following year's Grammy for Best Blues Album. That same year, Musselwhite and his own band released the raw, kinetic Juke Joint Chapel, a collection of five originals and seven covers that many critics argued should have won the Grammy. Musselwhite followed it with the live I Ain't Lyin' in 2015. Given the success of their first collaborative effort and an ever-deepening friendship, the pair teamed again for 2018's No Mercy in This Land for Anti. Produced by Harper, its ten tracks recount both men's personal stories. The title track single appeared in January of 2018, followed by second single "The Bottle Wins Again" and the full-length in March.

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 Biografía del artista por Dan Forte
El mago de la armónica Norton Buffalo puede recordar una época en la que su colección de discos se había reducido a lo esencial: La Paul Butterfield Blues Band y retrocede! Aquí viene Charley Musselwhite's South Side Band. Butterfield y Musselwhite probablemente estarán siempre ligados como los dos productos más interesantes, y posiblemente los más importantes, del "movimiento del blues blanco" de mediados a finales de los años 60, no sólo porque estaban cerca de la vanguardia cronológicamente, sino porque ambos destacan por ser especialmente fieles al estilo. Cada uno se ganó el respeto de sus legendarios mentores. Nada menos que el difunto Gran Joe Williams dijo: "Charlie Musselwhite es uno de los mejores arpistas vivos del country blues. Está ahí arriba con Sonny Boy Williamson, y ha sido mi arpista desde que mataron a Sonny Boy". Musselwhite en particular, desde el comienzo de su carrera discográfica a principios de los años 60, se estableció como un verdadero miembro del linaje de una generación anterior de bluesmen del Delta que hizo el viaje a Chicago para avanzar en sus carreras, creando una nueva forma de blues en el proceso. Musselwhite es el ganador de siete premios Grammy, 27 premios Blues Music Awards, y es un miembro del Salón de la Fama del Blues.

Es interesante que Williams especifique el blues "country", porque, a pesar de haber dejado su huella en las principales bandas eléctricas de Chicago y San Francisco, Musselwhite comenzó a tocar blues con gente de la que había leído en Samuel Charters' Country Blues -- grandes de Memphis como Furry Lewis, Will Shade, y Gus Cannon. Fueron estas raíces rurales las que lo diferenciaron de Butterfield, y décadas más tarde Musselwhite comenzó a incorporar su primer instrumento, la guitarra.

Musselwhite nació en Kosciusko, Mississippi, en 1944, y su familia se mudó al norte, a Memphis, donde fue a la escuela secundaria. Migró a Chicago en busca del casi mítico trabajo de $3.00 la hora (el mismo señuelo que puso a innumerables jóvenes en la misma ruta), y se convirtió en una cara familiar en los sitios de blues como Pepper's, Turner's y Theresa's, sentados y a veces tocando junto a señores de la armónica como Little Walter, Shakey Horton, Good Rockin' Charles, Carey Bell, Big John Wrencher, e incluso Sonny Boy Williamson. Antes de grabar su primer álbum, Musselwhite apareció en LPs de Tracy Nelson y John Hammond y a dúo (como Memphis Charlie) con Shakey Horton en la serie Chicago/The Blues/Today de Vanguard.

Cuando el mencionado LP de debut se convirtió en un estándar en la radio subterránea de San Francisco, Musselwhite tocó en el Fillmore Auditorium y nunca regresó a la Ciudad de los Vientos. Bandas líderes que presentaron a grandes figuras como los guitarristas Harvey Mandel, Freddie Roulette, Luther Tucker, Louis Myers, Robben Ford, Fenton Robinson y Junior Watson, Musselwhite tocaron constantemente en los bares del área de la bahía y montaron giras nacionales de bajo perfil. No fue hasta finales de los años 80, cuando conquistó un problema con la bebida, que Musselwhite comenzó a viajar por todo el mundo para llamar la atención. Se puso más ocupado que nunca y continuó publicando discos que fueron aclamados por la crítica.

Sus dos lanzamientos en Virgin, Rough News en 1997 y Continental Drifter en 2000, encontraron Musselwhite mezclando elementos de jazz, gospel, Tex-Mex y blues acústico Delta. Después de firmar con Telarc Blues en 2002, continuó explorando sus raíces musicales con el lanzamiento de One Night in America. El disco expuso el interés de Musselwhite por la música country con una versión cover del clásico de Johnny Cash "Big River", y contó con la participación de Kelly Willis y Marty Stuart como invitados. Sanctuary, lanzado en 2004, fue el primer disco de Musselwhite para Real World. Después de una extensa gira por todo el mundo, regresó al estudio para su seguimiento, el regreso a los fundamentos de Delta Hardware, grabado en Mississippi. El set era hardedged y blues crudo y contenía un tema en vivo, el "Clarksdale Boogie", grabado frente a una pequeña pero entusiasta audiencia en Red's Juke Joint en esa misma ciudad. Musselwhite regresó a Alligator en 2009 y se puso manos a la obra y cortó The Well in Chicago, un programa totalmente original que incluía una aparición a dúo de Mavis Staples en el tema "Sad Beautiful World". La canción hace referencia al asesinato de su madre de 93 años durante un robo en su casa.

Musselwhite conoció al guitarrista y compositor Ben Harper, un fanático de toda la vida, durante una gira tocando la armónica para John Lee Hooker; la banda de Harper abrió esos conciertos. La pareja se llevaba excepcionalmente bien, el bluesista mayor conocía el trabajo de Harper. Hooker estaba convencido de que los dos hombres debían trabajar juntos y los trajo al estudio para grabar "Burnin' Hell" con él. Los dos se hicieron amigos cuando sus caminos se cruzaban periódicamente en el camino. Finalmente, colaboraron en Get Up! de 2013; el álbum ganó el Grammy al año siguiente por Mejor Álbum de Blues. Ese mismo año, Musselwhite y su propia banda lanzaron la cruda y cinética Juke Joint Chapel, una colección de cinco originales y siete versiones que muchos críticos argumentaban que deberían haber ganado el Grammy. Musselwhite lo siguió con el Live I Ain't Lyin' en 2015. Dado el éxito de su primer esfuerzo de colaboración y una amistad cada vez más profunda, la pareja se unió de nuevo para el 2018's No Mercy in This Land for Anti. Producida por Harper, sus diez temas relatan las historias personales de ambos hombres. El single con el título de la canción apareció en enero de 2018, seguido por el segundo sencillo "La botella gana de nuevo" y el largometraje en marzo.
Traducción realizada con el traductor www.DeepL.com/Translator

www.charliemusselwhite.com ...  
 

Friday, August 2, 2024

James Cotton & More • Superharps

 

 



Review by Scott Yanow
Four great blues harmonica players (James Cotton, Billy Branch, Charlie Musselwhite, and Sugar Ray Norcia) are featured in various combinations on this spirited disc, backed by a four-piece rhythm section (with guitarist Kid Bangham and pianist Anthony Geraci). Cotton and Norcia have solo pieces, seven numbers feature two harmonicas, and the lengthy low-down blues "Harp to Harp" has all four of the harmonica players taking turns soloing. Much of the material is jazz-oriented, including "The Hucklebuck," "TD's Boogie Woogie," and "Route 66," and the majority of the selections are instrumentals. Each of the harmonica players sounds inspired and the results are consistently exciting and swinging.
https://www.allmusic.com/album/superharps-mw0000259738

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Reseña de Scott Yanow
Cuatro grandes armonicistas de blues (James Cotton, Billy Branch, Charlie Musselwhite y Sugar Ray Norcia) se presentan en varias combinaciones en este animado disco, respaldados por una sección rítmica de cuatro piezas (con el guitarrista Kid Bangham y el pianista Anthony Geraci). Cotton y Norcia tienen piezas en solitario, siete números cuentan con dos armónicas, y el largo blues bajo "Harp to Harp" tiene a los cuatro armonicistas turnándose en los solos. Gran parte del material está orientado al jazz, incluyendo "The Hucklebuck", "TD's Boogie Woogie" y "Route 66", y la mayoría de las selecciones son instrumentales. Cada uno de los intérpretes de armónica suena inspirado y los resultados son siempre emocionantes y con mucho swing.
https://www.allmusic.com/album/superharps-mw0000259738


Colaborador / Contributor:  Santxo


Friday, July 26, 2024

Charlie Musselwhite • The Well

 
 
Artist Biography by Dan Forte
Harmonica wizard Norton Buffalo can recollect a leaner time when his record collection had been whittled down to only the bare essentials: The Paul Butterfield Blues Band and Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's South Side Band. Butterfield and Musselwhite will probably be forever linked as the two most interesting, and arguably the most important, products of the "white blues movement" of the mid- to late '60s -- not only because they were near the forefront chronologically, but because they both stand out as being especially faithful to the style. Each certainly earned the respect of his legendary mentors. No less than the late Big Joe Williams said, "Charlie Musselwhite is one of the greatest living harp players of country blues. He is right up there with Sonny Boy Williamson, and he's been my harp player ever since Sonny Boy got killed." Musselwhite in particular, from the very beginning of his recording career in the early '60s, established himself as a true lineage member of an earlier generation of Delta bluesmen who made the trek to Chicago to further their careers, creating a new form of blues in the process. Musselwhite is the winner of seven Grammy awards, 27 Blues Music Awards, and is a Blues Hall of Fame inductee.

It's interesting that Williams specifies "country" blues, because, even though he made his mark leading electric bands in Chicago and San Francisco, Musselwhite began playing blues with people he'd read about in Samuel Charters' Country Blues -- Memphis greats like Furry Lewis, Will Shade, and Gus Cannon. It was these rural roots that set him apart from Butterfield, and decades later Musselwhite began incorporating his first instrument, guitar.

Musselwhite was born in Kosciusko, Mississippi in 1944, and his family moved north to Memphis, where he went to high school. He migrated to Chicago in search of the near-mythical $3.00-an-hour job (the same lure that set innumerable youngsters on the same route), and became a familiar face at blues haunts like Pepper's, Turner's, and Theresa's, sitting in with and sometimes playing alongside harmonica lords such as Little Walter, Shakey Horton, Good Rockin' Charles, Carey Bell, Big John Wrencher, and even Sonny Boy Williamson. Before recording his first album, Musselwhite appeared on LPs by Tracy Nelson and John Hammond and duetted (as Memphis Charlie) with Shakey Horton on Vanguard's Chicago/The Blues/Today series.

When his aforementioned debut LP became a standard on San Francisco's underground radio, Musselwhite played the Fillmore Auditorium and never returned to the Windy City. Leading bands that featured greats like guitarists Harvey Mandel, Freddie Roulette, Luther Tucker, Louis Myers, Robben Ford, Fenton Robinson, and Junior Watson, Musselwhite played steadily in Bay Area bars and mounted somewhat low-profile national tours. It wasn't until the late '80s, when he conquered a career-long drinking problem, that Musselwhite began touring worldwide to rave notices. He became busier than ever and continued releasing records to critical acclaim.

His two releases on Virgin, Rough News in 1997 and Continental Drifter in 2000, found Musselwhite mixing elements of jazz, gospel, Tex-Mex, and acoustic Delta blues. After signing with Telarc Blues in 2002, he continued exploring his musical roots by releasing One Night in America. The disc exposed Musselwhite's interest in country music with a cover version of the Johnny Cash classic "Big River," and featured guest appearances by Kelly Willis and Marty Stuart. Sanctuary, released in 2004, was Musselwhite's first record for Real World. After extensive touring globally, he returned to the studio for its follow-up, the back-to-basics Delta Hardware, recorded in Mississippi. The set was hard-edged and raw blues and featured one live track, the hip-shaking "Clarksdale Boogie," recorded in front of a small but enthusiastic audience at Red's Juke Joint in that very town. Musselwhite returned to Alligator in 2009 and got down to business and cut The Well in Chicago, an all-original program that featured a guest duet appearance from Mavis Staples on the track "Sad Beautiful World." The song references the murder of his 93-year-old mother during a burglary in her home.

Musselwhite met guitarist and songwriter Ben Harper, a lifelong fan, during a tour playing harmonica for John Lee Hooker; Harper's band opened those gigs. The pair got on exceptionally well -- the elder bluesman knew Harper's work. Hooker felt strongly that the two men should work together and brought them into the studio to record "Burnin' Hell" with him. The two became friends as their paths periodically crossed on the road. Ultimately, they collaborated on 2013's Get Up!; the album won the following year's Grammy for Best Blues Album. That same year, Musselwhite and his own band released the raw, kinetic Juke Joint Chapel, a collection of five originals and seven covers that many critics argued should have won the Grammy. Musselwhite followed it with the live I Ain't Lyin' in 2015. Given the success of their first collaborative effort and an ever-deepening friendship, the pair teamed again for 2018's No Mercy in This Land for Anti. Produced by Harper, its ten tracks recount both men's personal stories. The title track single appeared in January of 2018, followed by second single "The Bottle Wins Again" and the full-length in March.

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 Biografía del artista por Dan Forte
El mago de la armónica Norton Buffalo puede recordar una época en la que su colección de discos se había reducido a lo esencial: La Paul Butterfield Blues Band y retrocede! Aquí viene Charley Musselwhite's South Side Band. Butterfield y Musselwhite probablemente estarán siempre ligados como los dos productos más interesantes, y posiblemente los más importantes, del "movimiento del blues blanco" de mediados a finales de los años 60, no sólo porque estaban cerca de la vanguardia cronológicamente, sino porque ambos destacan por ser especialmente fieles al estilo. Cada uno se ganó el respeto de sus legendarios mentores. Nada menos que el difunto Gran Joe Williams dijo: "Charlie Musselwhite es uno de los mejores arpistas vivos del country blues. Está ahí arriba con Sonny Boy Williamson, y ha sido mi arpista desde que mataron a Sonny Boy". Musselwhite en particular, desde el comienzo de su carrera discográfica a principios de los años 60, se estableció como un verdadero miembro del linaje de una generación anterior de bluesmen del Delta que hizo el viaje a Chicago para avanzar en sus carreras, creando una nueva forma de blues en el proceso. Musselwhite es el ganador de siete premios Grammy, 27 premios Blues Music Awards, y es un miembro del Salón de la Fama del Blues.

Es interesante que Williams especifique el blues "country", porque, a pesar de haber dejado su huella en las principales bandas eléctricas de Chicago y San Francisco, Musselwhite comenzó a tocar blues con gente de la que había leído en Samuel Charters' Country Blues -- grandes de Memphis como Furry Lewis, Will Shade, y Gus Cannon. Fueron estas raíces rurales las que lo diferenciaron de Butterfield, y décadas más tarde Musselwhite comenzó a incorporar su primer instrumento, la guitarra.

Musselwhite nació en Kosciusko, Mississippi, en 1944, y su familia se mudó al norte, a Memphis, donde fue a la escuela secundaria. Migró a Chicago en busca del casi mítico trabajo de $3.00 la hora (el mismo señuelo que puso a innumerables jóvenes en la misma ruta), y se convirtió en una cara familiar en los sitios de blues como Pepper's, Turner's y Theresa's, sentados y a veces tocando junto a señores de la armónica como Little Walter, Shakey Horton, Good Rockin' Charles, Carey Bell, Big John Wrencher, e incluso Sonny Boy Williamson. Antes de grabar su primer álbum, Musselwhite apareció en LPs de Tracy Nelson y John Hammond y a dúo (como Memphis Charlie) con Shakey Horton en la serie Chicago/The Blues/Today de Vanguard.

Cuando el mencionado LP de debut se convirtió en un estándar en la radio subterránea de San Francisco, Musselwhite tocó en el Fillmore Auditorium y nunca regresó a la Ciudad de los Vientos. Bandas líderes que presentaron a grandes figuras como los guitarristas Harvey Mandel, Freddie Roulette, Luther Tucker, Louis Myers, Robben Ford, Fenton Robinson y Junior Watson, Musselwhite tocaron constantemente en los bares del área de la bahía y montaron giras nacionales de bajo perfil. No fue hasta finales de los años 80, cuando conquistó un problema con la bebida, que Musselwhite comenzó a viajar por todo el mundo para llamar la atención. Se puso más ocupado que nunca y continuó publicando discos que fueron aclamados por la crítica.

Sus dos lanzamientos en Virgin, Rough News en 1997 y Continental Drifter en 2000, encontraron Musselwhite mezclando elementos de jazz, gospel, Tex-Mex y blues acústico Delta. Después de firmar con Telarc Blues en 2002, continuó explorando sus raíces musicales con el lanzamiento de One Night in America. El disco expuso el interés de Musselwhite por la música country con una versión cover del clásico de Johnny Cash "Big River", y contó con la participación de Kelly Willis y Marty Stuart como invitados. Sanctuary, lanzado en 2004, fue el primer disco de Musselwhite para Real World. Después de una extensa gira por todo el mundo, regresó al estudio para su seguimiento, el regreso a los fundamentos de Delta Hardware, grabado en Mississippi. El set era hardedged y blues crudo y contenía un tema en vivo, el "Clarksdale Boogie", grabado frente a una pequeña pero entusiasta audiencia en Red's Juke Joint en esa misma ciudad. Musselwhite regresó a Alligator en 2009 y se puso manos a la obra y cortó The Well in Chicago, un programa totalmente original que incluía una aparición a dúo de Mavis Staples en el tema "Sad Beautiful World". La canción hace referencia al asesinato de su madre de 93 años durante un robo en su casa.

Musselwhite conoció al guitarrista y compositor Ben Harper, un fanático de toda la vida, durante una gira tocando la armónica para John Lee Hooker; la banda de Harper abrió esos conciertos. La pareja se llevaba excepcionalmente bien, el bluesista mayor conocía el trabajo de Harper. Hooker estaba convencido de que los dos hombres debían trabajar juntos y los trajo al estudio para grabar "Burnin' Hell" con él. Los dos se hicieron amigos cuando sus caminos se cruzaban periódicamente en el camino. Finalmente, colaboraron en Get Up! de 2013; el álbum ganó el Grammy al año siguiente por Mejor Álbum de Blues. Ese mismo año, Musselwhite y su propia banda lanzaron la cruda y cinética Juke Joint Chapel, una colección de cinco originales y siete versiones que muchos críticos argumentaban que deberían haber ganado el Grammy. Musselwhite lo siguió con el Live I Ain't Lyin' en 2015. Dado el éxito de su primer esfuerzo de colaboración y una amistad cada vez más profunda, la pareja se unió de nuevo para el 2018's No Mercy in This Land for Anti. Producida por Harper, sus diez temas relatan las historias personales de ambos hombres. El single con el título de la canción apareció en enero de 2018, seguido por el segundo sencillo "La botella gana de nuevo" y el largometraje en marzo.
Traducción realizada con el traductor www.DeepL.com/Translator

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