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| Hey Blues Fans, Bob Hampton of Chicago Illinois won a free CD by    voting in the Blues Blast Music Awards this week. The new CD by nominee    Fiona Boyes is on the way to Bob. You could win too so be sure to vote    this week.  Next week we will be drawing for 2 free tickets to the 2010 Blues    Blast Music Award ceremonies on October 28th, 2010 at Buddy Guy's    Legends in Chicago. Be sure you vote before August 31st. To cast your vote now,  CLICK HERE.     Blues Wanderings We made it out to the Blues Night at the Illinois State Fair in    Springfield Illinois this week to hear Candye Kane.    Candye is nominated for  Best Female Blues Artist in the 2010 Blues    Blast Music Awards and it was easy to understand why the nominators    chose her.  She played a great set to a packed crowd in the Miller Beer Tent. Her    guitar player Laura Chavez is incredible! Dave Herrero was up next and he    had another great Blues guitar player, Felix Reyes with him. That's what we call a great night of Blues! In This Issue   Marilyn Stringer reviews the Sonora Blues Festival.   We have six new CD reviews this week! James "Skyy Dobro" Walker reviews a   new CD by Eddie Turner.  Sheralyn Graise reviews a new   CD by Smilin' Bobby.  Greg 'Bluesdog' Szalony reviews a new CD by Rocky Jackson.  Gary “Wingman”   Weeks reviews a new CD by Eric Gales.    Ian McKenzie reviews a new CD by Cathy Lemons And Johnny Ace and Steve   Jones reviews a new CD by Outlaw X. All this and MORE! SCROLL DOWN!!! | 
Featured Blues Review 1 of 6
|   Northern Blues Records   13 tracks; 54:24 minutes; Splendid   Style: Contemporary Electric Blues, Blues-Rock, Jazz, R&B   So much Blues; so little time! My apologies go to Eddie Turner for being a   late arrival at his party. I missed his first two CDs, and have only now   caught up with album number three (since 2005), all on the Northern Blues   label. My publisher had been telling me for two years how I have been   missing out.   I discovered that Eddie Turner is anything but stale! He is inventive,   experimental, edgy, yet well rooted. His intellect and sense of adventure   have taken him, along with producer and fellow musician (keyboards, bass,   vocals, arrangements) Kenny Passarelli, into some sonic territories that are   pleasantly different in texture with only smidges of excess here and there.   His sounds are impossible to ignore; the nuances are simply attention   grabbing. Turner’s website bio explains, “His ethereal style is an amalgam   of the [born-in-Cuba-raised-in-Chicago,] Afro-Cuban rhythms of his heritage   and the music that influenced him as a teenager: Chicago Blues, Jazz, R&B,   and Psychedelic Rock.    Some sounds are haunting, some exhilarating, some Jimi Hendrix shrill, and   all with a solid and intricate rhythm section courtesy of Marc Clarke -   Latin congas and percussion, Mark Clark – drums, and Jimmy Trujillo – bass.   Tim Stroh is listed as co-producer.  Here is master song craftsmanship on display – the dance between Turner’s arsty lyrics, lead vocals and vocal harmonies, and the musical score. For example, try “Miss Carrie” for a song where waves of sound from blended layers of lush organ, guitar, and percussion wash over the listener like waves of water on the edge an ocean beach. Forty years ago, a reviewer of a song like this would suggest that it be heard best while stoned.   “Miracles and Demons” is a set of thirteen originals exploring the paradoxes   and polar extremes in a lifelong need for love. There’s both pleasure and   pain and, “walking [in] through [Turner’s] door,” both Miracles and Demons.   The title track is divided into Parts one and two, and it is where you’ll   hear experimental sounds (especially Part two) beside some deft acoustic   guitar. Try “Mr. Blues” for more feedback guitars.   While this album is not straight up Blues, the first song is – until the   final seven seconds. Kicking off with normal-enough-sounding guitar and a   shuffle rhythm, “Booty Bumpin’” will please any purist. The final seven   seconds sound a little like a record being played backwards. I think it is   Turner’s way of telling us there is much more coming from him and his mates   than “normal.”   First to be played on the Friends of the Blues Radio Show this Saturday   night will be “Ride a Painted Pony” with its swampy rhythm. Full of   shimmering guitar and a killer mid-song solo, “...Pony” finds Turner singing   about a titillating “Miss Rosie.”   I must also play “Say” which opens with slide guitar before breaking into a   Funk filled, guitar variety showcase. “Because of You” has a mellow groove   to support the lyrics of the narrator confessing he has been a fool “because   of you.” Ear-worm catchy is “I Remember” with a R&B groove and soft, but   wailing guitar.    Some refer to Eddie Turner as a guitar god. He's been profiled in Blues   Revue, Guitar Edge, and has been reviewed in almost every guitar magazine.   This CD is not straight-ahead Blues, but its meld of styles is interesting   and very entertaining. I probably was not supposed to like this album, but I   found most of it intoxicatingly enjoyable!. Reviewer  James "Skyy Dobro" Walker is a noted Blues writer, DJ, Master of  Ceremonies, and longtime Blues Blast Magazine contributor. His weekly  radio show "Friends of the Blues" can be heard Saturdays 8 pm - Midnight  on WKCC 91.1 FM and at www.wkccradio.org in Kankakee, IL. To See James “Skyy Dobro” Walker's CD rating system, CLICK HERE     For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE | 
Blues Society News
| You can submit a maximum of 175 words or less in a Text or MS Word document format.   The West Virginia Blues Society  - Huntington, W.V.   The WV Blues Society, Greater Huntington Park and Recreation District,   and Cabell-Huntington Convention and Visitors Bureau have got together and   will honor WV native Diamond Teeth Mary McClain on August 27, 2010, in   Huntington, WV at Heritage Village, 210 11th Street in the Downtown area,   from 4pm to 10pm - FREE TO THE PUBLIC!!   WVBS will unveil the historical marker commemorating Diamond Teeth Mary   McClain, present awards for the 1st Annual Diamond Teeth Mary Youth Art   Competition where local youngsters will present their interpretations of   “the blues”, and celebrate with music by:   John Taylor- acoustic blues virtuoso and blues historian Maynard Chapman and Black Sedan- Huntington’s own rockin’ bluesman Liz Pennock and Dr. Blues- the boogie-woogie duo friends of Diamond Teeth Mary herself Nat Reese- The WV Bluesman, 2009 WV Music Hall of Fame inductee, 1995 Vandalia Award Winner.   Come join us for an evening celebrating our great array of artists,   artisans, craftsmen, children, musicians and above all, WV’s own Diamond   Teeth Mary McClain.   Windy City Blues Society - Chicago, IL   The Windy City Blues Society is proud to announce the 2010 Chicago Blues   Challenge; a competition featuring some of the finest blues talent the Windy   City has to offer. Winners of the Chicago Blues Challenge will represent the   Windy City Blues Society and Chicago at the 2011 International Blues Challenge in Memphis, Tennessee from February 1-5, 2011. Performers can compete in three categories: Solo/Duo, Band, and Youth. The Chicago Blues Challenge will have competitions in August and September, with finals in early November.   Chicagoland musicians can apply to compete in the Chicago Blues Challenge   starting July 19. Deadline for the Solo/Duo and Youth category is August 15,   and for the Band category is September 1. Applications can be obtained and   returned at several area blues clubs. The application and more information   on the Chicago Blues Challenge can also be found at  www.windycityblues.org, and more   information can also be found on our Facebook, MySpace and Twitter page   Alabama Blues Project   - Northport, AL   On Thursday, September 16, 2010, Tuscaloosa will have a rare treat when   internationally acclaimed, Grammy nominee (and Blues Blast Music Award   Nominee) Ruthie Foster will perform at the Bama Theatre 600 Greensboro   Avenue, Tuscaloosa, AL in a benefit concert for the Alabama Blues Project.   For sponsorship and ticket inquiries please call (205) 752-6263 or email   Cara Smith at cara@alabamablues.org.   Mississippi Valley Blues Society   - Davenport, IA   MVBS presents Candye Kane and her band on Sunday August 29 at The Muddy   Waters, 1708 State Street, Bettendorf. Show time is 7:00 p.m.; admission is   $10, $8 for MVBS members. For more information visit  www.mvbs.org  Crossroads Blues Society - Rockford, IL  Crossroads Blues Society  is producing their very first Blue festival this year. The Byron  Crossroads Blues Festival will run from noon to midnight on Saturday,  August 28, 2010, in downtown Byron, Illinois.  The  festival lineup includes The Resistors, noted artists Filisko and  Noden, The Cashbox Kings, Westside Andy/Mel Ford Band and Dave Weld and  the Imperial Flames. For more information visit the Crossroads website  at: www.crossroadsbluessociety.com The Friends Of The Blues - Watseka, IL 2010  Friends of the Blues shows -  August 24, Chicago Kingsnakes, 7 pm ,  Bradley Bourbonnais Sportsmen’s Club, September 2, Ivas John Band, 7 pm ,  Moose Lodge, N State Rt 50 ( Kinzie Ave ), Bradley IL, September 21,  Shawn Pittman, 7 pm , Kankakee Valley Boat Club, October 12, Too Slim  & Taildraggers, 7 pm , Kankakee Valley Boat Club, October 26, Perry  Weber & DeVilles, 7 pm , Bradley Bourbonnais Sportsmen’s Club. For  more info see: http://www.wazfest.com/JW.html   Illinois Central Blues Club - Springfield, IL  BLUE  MONDAY SHOWS - Held at the Alamo 115 N 5th St, Springfield, IL (217)  523-1455 every Monday 8:30pm $3 cover. August 23 – Bryan Lee “Blind  Blues Daddy”, August 28 – ICBC Blues Challenge at the Old Capitol Blues  & BBQ, August 30 – Kilborn Alley Blues Band | 
| Friday - September 17 Maple Road, October Soul, Aaron Williams & the Hoodoo, The Jimmys Saturday - September 18 Eric Noden & Joe Filisko, Leroy Airmaster w/ guests Greg Koch & Jim Liban, Robert Allen Jr & the Zootsuits with Cadillac Pete. Grana Louise, Dennis Jones, Lil Ed and the Blues Imperials, Zac Harmon Festival Website: | 
Featured Blues Review 2 of 6
|   10 tracks   I live in a fairly large metropolitan area.   It’s the capital of a state with the seventh highest population in the   nation. For some reason, we have regular power outages. The last one was   just under three hours. After I lit all of the candles, I contemplated what   to do next. It was evening but way too early to go to bed. So, I decided to   dig out my portable CD player and headphones and insert fresh batteries to   listen to Big Legged Woman by Smilin’ Bobby. I had read the liner   notes a few days before and I was a little apprehensive. The liner notes   were extensive. It is possible to provide too much information. The liner   note writer did Smilin’ Bobby a disservice. In stead of focusing on the   good, he wrote about uneven musicianship, bad backing bands, and   inappropriate venues and the like. As it turned out, listening to Big Legged   Woman was a pleasant way to pass the time.   I love a good instrumental and the CD starts   with a good one with “I Play For Keeps.” The second track, “I Didn’t Know”   has an old rock and roll feel to it and his voice on it is gruff and gritty.   “Cold, Cold Feeling” gets blusier. “Big Legged Woman” has a steady beat with   the guitar swirling around it almost psychedelically. You can hear all the   nuances listening with the headphones in the dark. “Little By Little,” “I   Got To Leave This Woman,” and “They Call Me Dog” are average fare that   probably are best suited for a live performance. “The Bobby Strut” is   another fine instrumental. “You Don’t Love Me” is my favorite, It’s headed   to my mp3 player which is the highest level of praise I can give because   that means I want to carry it around with me. The song has a definite   Chicago wang dang vibe to it. (I made that description up.) “You Are The   One” is a good number to end the CD. It’s a positive song, no you done me   wrong, I done you wrong.    Smilin’ Bobby is Bobby G. Smith, originally   from Helena Arkansas. His stage name is based on his sunny disposition as   evidenced by the numerous photos of him smiling on the liner notes. Bobby is   the vocalist and lead guitarist. The Hidden Charms on this CD are: Brian   Reed also on guitar, Warren Lethan on bass, and Myron Katz on drums. Smilin’   Bobby is another talented musician’s musician that the average lay person   has never heard of. He has played with Little Walter, Eddie Clearwater,   Junior Wells, Koko Taylor, and others. His early influences were his   grandmother who played piano and Magic Sam with whom he also played. His   later influences were Little Milton, Albert King and Albert Collins. He   plays “modern” Chicago Blues and R&B. Although, people seem to forget that   the B in R&B stands for Blues. So in a sense, it’s all the same. Big   Legged Woman is good stuff. I now listen to the CD with the power on   too..    Reviewer Sheralyn Graise graduated from the University of Akron a while    back. A former Social Services professional, she is now pursuing other    interests such as music history, writing, and photography. She has been    a member of the Blues Foundation since 2001.    For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE | 
  Featured  Festival Review 
| Fire on the Mountain Sonora Blues    Festival Photos & Commentary by Marilyn    Stringer Fire on the Mountain, nestled in the    Sonora Fairgrounds, up in gold country, may only last one day but it is    a mighty festival with a strong main-stage line-up, an indoor    (air-conditioned) stage with lots of seating and a large dance floor    (which was always full and active), and an indoor workshop stage, MC’d    by Mick Martin & Thom Myers, conducting Q&A’s and audience interaction.    So when the temperature outdoors soars to the 90’s, and the spaces below    the giant shade trees are packed and the misting tent is full of    dancers, there is refuge indoors with great entertainment. But the sun &    heat was welcomed by most of us NorCal residents, who have lived under a    persistent marine layer all summer, and the festival was as good as it    gets. Main Stage: The Alastair Greene Band,    a mainstay of Southern Cal. for over twenty years, was the perfect    high-energy kick-off to the festival. Joined by Tom Lackner (drums), and    Jim Rankin (bass), his solid blues/rock guitar playing was impressive-a    new find for me! The Laurie Morvan Band, also from    SoCal –Long Beach to be exact – was next up and they are one of my    favorite Cal blues bands, and have gotten to see them a few times this    year. And if you know Laurie’s style, she winds up and then cuts loose    on the guitar, shredding it with style. You forget she is that “skinny    legged white chic” when she is rolling. The band includes Lisa Grubbs    (vocals), Pat Moran (bass), Tommy Salyers (piano), and Donto James    (drums).  Well dressed, cool and refreshed, that    is the best description for Rick Estrin & the Nightcats. The heat didn’t    stop them for a second. Kid Anderson had J Hays (drums) fretting for    him, or Rick helping out, and he never missed the dance beat on the    stage. Lorenzo Farrell was mighty fine on the bass. I was fascinated    when Rick played an entire song on the harmonica-it was stuck straight    in his mouth (not the normal direction), no hands – now that is talent! Nick Moss & The Flip Tops, all the way    from Chicago, wowed the west coast crowd. I have only seen Nick a couple    of times, playing with other bands, and always thought he was kind of    quiet. But this was the first time I actually saw him with his band and    realized that he may subtle in his movements but powerful in the    results. What a range of music he and the band produced. And his new CD    –which I was inspired to buy - is outside the box and so in the zone.    The band included Nik Skilnik (Bass), “Piano Willie” Oshawny, and Bob    Carter (drums). Michael Burks, who had arrived    half-way through the 2:15 workshop (see below) after driving all night,    was the blues machine Iron Man we all know and love. He is equally    soulful, deep blues, kid at play, and pure musician when he is on stage    along with his band: Popcorn Louden keeping it straight on the drums,    Wayne Sharp- rock-star on the B3, and Oskar (last name unknown still)    oohing on the bass. They stuck around for the after party and kept    playing late into the night.  Roy Rogers and The Delta Rhythm Kings:    what can I say except if you have never seen him perform, then you must.    Roy is the slide guitar wizard, intense rockin’ blues, and when    partnered up with the equally amazing fiddle player, Carlos Reyes, you    have an explosion on the stage-music and fun! With Steve Ehrman on bass    and Billy Lee Lewis on drums, who both have their own unique style, it    was a mesmerizing set. Wow!  The Piano Boogie, aka Pianorama, was    scheduled next but due to some difficulties, it was cut a little short.    But what we got was worth the wait. Piano Willie (Nick Moss Band),    Deanna Bogart, and Tony Stead (Tommy Castro Band) started out on three    pianos, only to join up at the end with a six-handed boogie woogie    extravaganza.  The final act of the day was The Tommy    Castro Band, with Deanna Bogart joining them on keyboards and sax. She    has toured with them quite a few times with the Legendary Blues Revue.    And as usual, they had everyone dancing and singing along. Great fun    that went nice and late – we loved every minute of it. The band includes    Ronnie Smith (drums), Scot Sutherland (bass), Tony Stead (keyboards),    Keith Crossan (sax) and Tom Poole (trumpet). It is great to hear each    them do their solos, as they are all extremely talented in their own    right and together they just rock! SIERRA STAGE: the place to cool off    and dance (aren’t those mutually exclusive?) was the indoor Sierra    Stage. The bands were geared for dancing and were mostly from CA. I    didn’t catch them all but the ones I did were fantastic. First up was    Loose Change (names unknown). Then Mick Martin with Tim Barnes (who    was part of a workshop later in the day) One of the best dance and “big band”    soul and blues sets was Big MO and The Full Moon Band with Carlos Reyes    and Volker Strifler. Big MO (Maurice Hauffman) decided one day (so I    heard) to put together a blues band and this was IT – he did a great    job! Volker Strifler (guitar) has his own blues band and was just a    headliner at two earlier festivals so to see him as part of this group    was a treat. And Carlos was everywhere – later to be seen with Roy    Rogers. The rest of the band included Eric Weber (sax), Hal Race (Drums)    Patrick Hilton (trumpet), Steve Valine (pedal steel), Terry Smith    (keys), and the bass player (unknown name). They packed the bulding! Mike Hammer & The Nails, who are    headed off to the IBC’s in January, are pretty popular in NorCal, and    deserve it. They are a great blues band and Mike was part of the Blues    Guitar Jam/Workshop earlier in the day. The band members are Sparky    Gehres (bass) and Greg Merino (drums), Allan Carroll (keyboard), and Jim    Pederson (harmonica).  WORKSHOPS: The Workshop Stage had a    great variety of subjects and included Q&A’s with the performers. My    stops down there were brief, but fun when I could sit a minute. Valerie    Johnson & Al B Blue did a workshop on instruments and blues topics. Roy Rogers, Carlos Reyes, and Volker    Strifler did a jam and blues guitar workshop. It is always great to hear    about influences and how they all got a start in music. And the last workshop I made it to was    Blues Guitar Jam #1 with (L-R) Tim Barnes, Alastair Greene, Michael    Burks, Mike Hammer, and Nick Moss. When I arrived, Michael B had not    arrived yet and the Q &A was in process. That is when I got to see the    subtle Nick Moss humor at work. Very subtle, very funny. And then    Michael B slid in his seat and added his humor to the conversation. At    one point, Nick told MC Thom Myers that HE had a question. The room went    silent. Nick very calmly asked “All I want to know is has this stage    been weight tested? We have a lot of PSI going on here.” Well that got    everyone in the audience laughing and the guys on the stage a little    nervous. I though it was hilarious!! Go Nick. Tim Barnes (the smallest    guy on the left by half) and I got a good laugh about that later, after    he was safely off the stage.  Hats off to Richard Burleigh and    Corinne Grandstaff for organizing a wonderful festival. Thanks for the    Fire on the Mountain Blues Festival – it is definitely a NorCal    favorite! (http://fireonthemountain.com)    Eventual set of photos at   http://MJStringerPhoto.com | 
Featured Blues Review 3 of 6
|   High Life Records   time-71:15   Good intentions, able guitar skills and vocals don't necessarily a great   blues record make. Rocky opens up with an overlong version of Muddy Waters'   "I Just Want To Make Love To You" handling lead and rhythm guitar duties   adequately but otherwise marred by his affected vocal. On "Stop Breakin'   Down" he comes off sounding like Peter Green which suits the song by giving   a nod to Green. His out-and-out Jimmy Reed imitation on Reed's "Don't Say   Nothin'" is an 'oh my gawd' moment of embarrassment.    His vocal delivery works better when he uses his natural voice that has   enough of a rough edge of it's own. He's a good guitar player  and he's   more comfortable when executing one of his originals. The jaunty Texas   shuffle groove adorning "Big Legs Don't Mean Fat" and "I Wanna Testify(   About My Baby)" tend to grow on you. The same can be said of "Early In The   Morning" where Michael Fell's harmonica provides nice accents as it does   elsewhere. His harp and Rocky's guitar work well in tandem on the   instrumental "Like Magic" a tribute to the late, great Magic Sam.   "Voodoo Spell" points out the lack of developed and more imaginative lyrics.   "Chicken-Legged Woman" has a back porch acoustic vibe with clichéd lyrics.   Rocky saves the best for last....."L.A. To Austin" clicks in on all fronts   as his Johnny Winter-ish slinky slide compliments the lyrics nicely.    Rocky has the guitar skills and a pleasing natural blues voice, but needs to   find and use his own 'voice'. More thought should also be given to his   original songs, besides using them as jumping off points for his guitar   workouts. Only then will he deliver a more even performance. The blurb on   the jacket says 'Old School Roots With A Modern Edge'. That modern edge got   rounded off somewhere, it's nowhere to be found. When Rocky and band shape   there skills into something they can call their own, then they will have   something to testify about. Until that time the few bright spots here will   have to hold us.    Reviewer Greg 'Bluesdog' Szalony is from the New Jersey Delta. He is the    proprietor of Bluesdog's Doghouse at http://bluesdog61.multiply.com.    For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE | 
Featured Blues Review 4 of 6
|   Blues Bureau International   On his latest cd Relentless, guitarist/vocalist Eric Gales dishes out the   same platter of power chords, Sabbath riffs, ZZ Top lines and   Hendrix/Vaughan shaman notes that permeated his previous releases. While   there is nothing ground-breaking in this song selection, its overall   presentation isn't marked by weaknesses. On the other hand, this material   just explodes.   Gales doesn't belong in the traditional blues category. He's too busy   cranking out molten lava rock in "Bad Lawbreaker," mean metal lines in   "Block The Sun" and Eric Johnson/Joe Satriani signature licks in "Universal   Peacepipe." But the blues influence lies beneath the aggressive attack Gales   unleashes. One listen to "The Change In Me" indicates how Eric commits   musical thievery by stealing from ZZ Top's "La Grange."    Though Gales is a left-handed African-American player, he doesn't only play   a Jimi Hendrix bag of licks. The Hendrix influence is felt in "On The Wings   of Rock 'n' Roll" with its spacy electric church vibe.    The lyrics to Gales' songs are autobiographical: Tall tales of redemption.   Breaking the law. Struggles with sobriety. Problems with the law. Keeping   company with lowlife characters. Perfect counterpoints for music embedded in   an urban rock blitzkrieg.    Gales is young. But you can tell that the classic rock era of the sixties   and seventies informs his work. He uses a John Lee Hooker groove in "Make It   There" to furiously drag the song across its finish line with a heart   wrenching solo.   Because so much bombastic fury surrounds this music, it's a nice welcome   when Gales plugs into a happy shuffle with "The Finest Club In Town." It   moves fast with Eric's searing guitar hooks but it's some relief. There's   also a slow scorch in "When You've Got No Place To Go" with Gales dipping   into a mojo bag of Hendrix/Vaughan appetizers.   Running over an hour, some songs could have been left off for a next   release. Being that Gales has personal demons to conquer, maybe it's just as   well as he gets this music out. Otherwise, his hellhounds might just catch   up with him.    Reviewed by Gary "Wingman" Weeks.    For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE | 
| Ever  wish you could afford to take a Blues cruise but know you are in the  wrong tax bracket to afford one? Well there is an alternative at a lower  cost.  Fan Cruises  has announced a five day Carnival Cruise departing from New Orleans  December 6, 2010 with Ports of Call in Progreso, Mexico, and Cozumel,  Mexico.  This special package includes private concerts by three Blues Ladies and cruise prices start   at just $155 each for double occupancy,     (plus plus $259.67 each for   fees, taxes and gratuities). This   Caribbean cruise include three private Blues   concerts, private cocktail party with open bar, autograph signings and meet   & greet time with the performers.     You can get a cabin for two for $830 total!    (You can add a 3rd or 4th person to your cabin for only $10 & the   fees each.) Or for a great early Christmas present for you and your  loved   one get the BEST cabins on the boat  for a total cost of $1,290 for two  people!  (Panorama Deck 10 - Forward and Lido Deck 9 - Midship)  The   Blues Lady performers include Pat Hunter,  Terri Lynn & Thunder Blues and Vivian Vance Kelly.     Other special guests include Boston band member Kimberley Dahme,     Sarasota Slim, Steve Nixon and Kevin Kathey.    It is NOT all Blues all the time.  It is an affordable 5 day Caribbean cruise.      Up close with these great musicians and includes two ports of call   (including the island of Cozumel, with three Blues concerts and a Blues   party! For more information visit their website at http://fancruises.com | 
Featured Review 5 of 6
|   Vizztone Label Group   12 Tracks. 60mins:22 secs   Bass man Johnny Ace has been around for a long   time. Back in the 1980s his band (Johnny Nitro and the Door Slammers) were   considered by many to be the top band in San Francisco. Tommy Castro, now an   award winner was sitting in with Mr Ace at the time and both have been   deeply influenced by the likes of Muddy Watters and Wilson Pickett. Ace   played bass with some of the blues greats, John Lee Hooker, Otis Rush,   Charlie Musselwhite and even with Victoria Spivey.   Now Ace has linked up with TX blues-lady Cathy   Lemons who comes with a soulful voice and a touch of Texas attitude (‘You   can always tell a Texan, but you can’t tell him much’.) and they have   brought together some top-class musicians to fill-out this CD.   Tommy Castro is himself on two of the tracks,   ‘Used To These Blues’ and ‘When Bad Luck Looks Good‘ whilst Kid Andersen   (who also mixed and mastered the CD and helped Lemons and Ace produce)   appears on four tracks, one of them ‘Not The Woman I Used To Be’ on organ.   Harp maestro Paul Oscher delivers a sterling performance on ‘Gimme A Penny’.   (I may be biased here as I am one of those who thinks that Ocher with Muddy   is the pinnacle of the blues.)   Most of the songs were written by Lemons and   Ace except ‘Got It’, ‘Shoot To Kill’ (co written with Pierre Le Corre (lead   guitar on many tracks) and ‘Move On’ by Baby Washington and ‘Gimme A Penny’   by Rhone and Moore. And all the songs are strong and some will undoubtedly   be covered before too long.   Not at all ‘traditional’ blues this CD is well   worth checking out.    Reviewer Ian McKenzie lives in England. He is the editor of Blues In The    South (www.bluesinthesouth.com)    a monthly flier providing news, reviews, a gig guide and all kinds of    other good stuff, for people living and going to gigs along the south    coast of England. Ian is also a blues performer (see      www.myspace.com/ianmckenzieuk) and has a web cast regular blues    radio show on www.phonic.FM in Exeter    (Wednesdays: 1pm Eastern/ 12 noon Central).    For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE | 
Featured Review 6 of 6
|   Outlaw X Music   11 tracks   This is an interesting album. Outlaw X is a   rocking soul-filled funky blues band. Big productions, lots of sound with   the guitar and keyboard/piano/organ amped up and ready to go. Larry Kimmel   fronts the band vocally and plays bass. Herman Matthews is the drummer, Bill   Steinway is on the keyboard instruments, and Ricky “Z” Zahariades is on   guitar. The boys hail from Chicago, Houston, Milwaukee, and Fontana,   California respectively. They lay down a heavy groove and make for a large   sound.   “No Love” has a wicked guitar solo with a   driving funky sound. “I’ll Be the One to Last” and “I Cry” are 70’s soul   funk styled tune that made me hearken back to big collared colorful shirts   and bell bottomed pants. “Old Fashioned Girl” and “Two of a Kind” gets into   the Southern/country rock a bit with the traditional guitar sound and beat   while “I’m Your Friend” is a country ballad with some Southern fried soul   applied to it. They close with a cover of “Stay With Me”   I wanted to like this album a lot, but the one little problem I had with it   was with Kimmel’s vocals. They are not bad, but he strains and stretches it   out a bit. He tries to get too breathy and emotional at times and it doesn’t   sell well. I’d prefer it if he just let it all loose and not hold back. The   band is otherwise pretty tight and focused; the vocals just kept it from   pushing it over the top. It’s a solid effort with some talented guys who I   am sure we will hear from again!    Reviewer      Steve Jones is secretary of the   Crossroads Blues    Society in Rockford. IL.    For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE | 
|  You can listen to music by each of the nominees at a website set up by our sponsor WGLT Blues Radio 24/7 in Bloomington, IL. Be an informed voter and check out the music of the nominees now! - CLICK HERE(The Blues Blast Music Awards ceremonies will take place Thursday, October 28th, 2010 at Buddy Guy's Legends in Chicago, IL) | |
| Best Contemporary Blues CD | Best Traditional Blues CD | 
| Joe Louis Walker - Between A Rock And the Blues | Dave Riley & Bob Corritore - Lucky To Be Living | 
| Mike Zito - Pearl River | David Maxwell & Louisiana Red - You Got To Move | 
| Nick Moss - Privileged | Eddie C. Campbell - Tear This World Up | 
| Sean Costello - Sean's Blues | Fiona Boyes - Blues Woman | 
| The Holmes Brothers - Feed My Soul | The Kilborn Alley Blues Band - Better Off Now | 
| Tommy Castro - Hard Believer | Mississippi Heat - Let's Live It Up | 
| Best Blues Song | Best New Artist Debut Release | 
| Jackie Scott & The Housewreckers - How Much Woman Can You Stand? | Alabama Mike - Day To Day | 
| Joe Louis Walker - I'm Tide | Jackie Scott & The Housewreckers - How Much Woman Can You Stand? | 
| Mike Zito & Cyril Neville - Pearl River | Marquise Knox - Man Child | 
| Pete Anderson - Still In Love | Quintus McCormick - Hey Jodie! | 
| Quintus McCormick - Hey Jodie! | Shaun Murphy - Livin' The Blues | 
| The Kilborn Alley Blues Band- Better Off Now | |
| Best Female Blues Artist | Best Male Blues Artist | 
| Candye Kane | Bobby Rush | 
| Fiona Boyes | Joe Bonamassa | 
| Janiva Magness | John Németh | 
| Ruthie Foster | Magic Slim | 
| Shemekia Copeland | Nick Moss | 
| Zora Young | Tommy Castro | 
| Best Blues Band | Sean Costello Rising Star Award | 
| Magic Slim & The Teardrops | Cash Box Kings | 
| Nick Moss & The Flip Tops | Damon Fowler | 
| Rick Estrin & The Night Cats | Jackie Scott & The Housewreckers | 
| The Holmes Brothers | Joanne Shaw Taylor | 
| The Mannish Boys | Marquise Knox | 
| Tommy Castro Band | The Insomniacs | 
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 Live Blues Calendar
|  YOU can submit your Blues performances for FREE at:  http://www.thebluesblast.com/submitnews.htm Performance dates were submitted by Musicians, Club Owners, Blues Societies and Blues festivals. TheBluesBlast.com is not responsible for errors or omissions. 
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