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|        Hey Blues Fans,     Otis Rush - 2010 Lifetime Achievement     Award!     Otis is one of the top Chicago Bluesmen of all time! If you know     anything at all about bending strings, you know Otis. His singing,     stirring guitar playing and original songs have influenced and     inspired artists such as Albert King, Eric Clapton, Jimi     Hendrix, Buddy Guy, Led Zeppelin,     Peter Green, Carlos Santana, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Bonnie Raitt and     Sean Costello among many others. Otis Rush evolved and the whole     genera of Blues guitar evolved with him! He was a contemporary of Blues     legends Willie Dixon, John Lee Hooker, Howlin' Wolf and Muddy     Waters.      Otis has not been performing since a stroke in 2004. He is coming     to the awards to accept and we are excited to meet him!    This week we feature a few videos we found.     These are GREAT examples of his talent and a primer on his     work. SCROLL DOWN!     Info on the 2010 Blues     Blast Music Awards on October 28th at Buddy Guy's Legends in     Chicago        is available    HERE.     2009 BBMA winner Robin Rogers hospitalized     Though she is now out     of ICU, and has been transferred to a hospital in Charlotte, NC, she     has a very tough set of circumstances as described on her Facebook     fan page; "Robin Rogers has had Hepatitis Type C and this condition     has attacked her liver and has caused multiple complications. Robin     has had to have an emergent intubation (tube to maintain her airway)     and sedated to help with her pain and discomfort of being placed on     a the ventilator (breathing machine)". Prayers for our sister in the blues"     Robin won the 2009 Blues Blast Music Award for Best Female Artist.     Her new CD "Back In The Fire" is scheduled to be released on     September 14th, 2010.         Like many musicians and most Blues musicians in general, Robin does     not have insurance to the huge costs of this tragic medical     emergency. There are plans forming now to have some benefit concerts     and The Robin Rogers Medical Trust Fund has been created. For more     information and to donate please        CLICK HERE    In This Issue   We have six new CD reviews this week! James "Skyy Dobro" Walker reviews a   new CD by Walter Trout.  Steve Jones reviews a new   CD by Chris Beard.  Mike Lightfoot reviews a new CD from Delmark with   Jimmy Dawkins.    Sheralyn Graise reviews a new CD by Little Al Thomas.  Ian McKenzie reviews a new CD by   Bob Corritore.          George "Blues Fin Tuna" Fish   reviews a new CD from an Indianapolis, Indiana artist Rich Hynes. All this and MORE! SCROLL DOWN!!!  |   
  Featured Blues Videos  
|     Otis Rush Videos    and Biography Information    Our 2010 Blues Blast Lifetime Achievement Award    honoree is Otis Rush. Simply stated, Otis Rush is the    master of Chicago Blues guitar!      Otis has not performed since he suffered a stroke in    2004. Here are a few videos from the 1960's - 1990's as a primer to    refresh your memory.   |   ||
| Click images to view videos | Otis Rush bios:      Answers.com - HERE All Music Guide - HERE Gibson Guitar - HERE About.com - HERE Wikipedia - HERE Blind Pig Records - HERE  |   |
|           w/ Luther Allison & Eric Clapton "Every Day I Have The Blues". Luther calls Otis his "Idol" 1986  |           "Double Trouble" 1986 w/ Eric Clapton. Stevie Ray named his band after this Otis Rush song.  |   |
|        w/ Buddy Guy and Scott Holt on guitars and Willie Hayes on drums 1993  |           "All Your Love (I Miss Loving)" 1997 w/ Billy Flynn on guitar and Bob Stroger on bass  |   |
Featured Blues Review 1 of 6
|       Provogue Records       12 tracks; 63:04 minutes; Suggested     Style: Blues-Rock       Walter Trout is a monster! People have known that for years, but on the   chance a reader is unfamiliar with Trout, let me repeat, he’s a monster.   Walter Trout will also raise the disdain of Blues purists quicker than   another spam e-mail about properly fitting bra’s. Those who hated Jimi   Hendrix for being too loud may not like Trout any better. With sarcastic   irony, Trout has sold T-Shirts at concerts that say on the back “Walter   Trout: Too Many Notes -- Too loud”.     Playing with just his hands and no foot pedals for special effects, here is   a man whose guitar is as close to an artificial appendage as a wooden leg,   He has played his same guitar every day for over thirty five years to the   point where it is wired directly to his brain. Here is a man whose emotions   are legendary; no one plays (or writes songs) with more heart felt and gut   wrenching emotion or intensity. Here is a man whose social conscience,   faith, and humanitarianism can charge some of his lyrics to way higher   levels than the standard Blues conventions, “love” and “money.”     For example, check out the title track “Common Ground”, which sums up my   personal feelings perfectly. “I look all around and what do I see / Pain and   anger everywhere / and so much hatred, fear and misery / ...The distance   that’s between us grows greater everyday / ... We need to come together, put   away our earthly pride / ... If there’s a place where truth can still be   found / Lord, lead us to the Common Ground....”     Trout has excelled in meeting my challenge: “Recording artists one and all,   try to include at least one relevant topic song (beyond “love and money”) on   each new CD.” I issued that under the influence of Australian Bluesman   Sugarcane Collins who had told me, “...in my opinion, we have an art form   lacking edge and lacking relevance. Where are the songs that reflect other   current concerns? How often do we need to hear about ‘I love my baby but my   baby don’t love me?’ ... that line ... sums up the lyric content of most   Blues records.”   For sure, there are some “love and money” songs on Trout’s CD, but more numbers with weight include: “Loaded Gun” sardonically singing, “...Madness and anger fill your soul / ... You find salvation / In a cocked and loaded gun....” Or, try “Excess Baggage’s” message, “When you carry excess baggage / You got to pay the toll.” Another warning is found in “Danger Zone” – “...I’m overwhelmed by the cruelty I see / Intolerance keeps marching on / Just using new technology / ...Some folks will cut you to the bone / They get poisoned by the madness / Here in the Danger Zone....”   Musically, There’s plenty of his patented rip-snorting guitar, but Trout   seems tamer than he did, for example, on 2000’s “Live Trout.” The two   opening tracks, “May Be a Fool” and “Open Book” begin with acoustic guitars.   Trout also adds harmonica to track one. Then, reminding us he is Walter   Trout, electric guitar joins the wooden box by song’s end, and we are   treated to Trout’s deft string bending. Track two stays more ballad-mellow   all the way through.     If you are new to Trout but wanting to go fishing, 2005’s retrospective   “Deep Trout” (his greatest hits 1991-1995) would be a good place to start.   Personally, I would start with “Live Trout” recorded at the Tampa Bay Blues   Festival March 2000. For catching up completely and enjoying a conscience   massaging moment or two, “Common Ground” is his essence. 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  |   
|         |    2007 Blewzzy Award Best CD Winner & Blues Blast Magazine Best Song Nominee Release Second CD | 
| Steve Gerard & The National Debonaires    Words Are Like Bullets  |   |
| Order at www.blueedgerecords.com plus CD Baby and iTunes | |
| www.nationaldebonaires.com | 
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 4th Annual Appalachian Blues Competition is Oct.2, 2010 at Tomahawks   Smokehouse & Saloon Sponsored by the West Virginia Blues Society. Winners in   Band, Solo/Duo and Youth Division will move on to the International Blues   Challenge In Memphis, Tn. Feb 2011. Entry fee is: $ 50. Cash Prizes will be,   1 St. Place $ 500 Band Winner, 2 nd. Place $200 Band, Solo/Duo Winner $ 200   and $ 100 Youth Division. Rules and App. at  www.wvbluessociety.org  or   call, 304-389-1439. Deadline is Sept. 15, 2010.    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. The Friends Of The Blues - Watseka, IL   2010 Friends of the Blues shows - 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    | 
|     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
|       12 tracks   Chris Beard is a great guitar player who sings well and produced a “big”   sounding CD here. Fans of Ronnie Baker Brooks will eat this CD up. The   production, songs and style of this CD hearken to the sound Ronnie gives his   CDs; he even wrote or helped write four of the songs. Big, driving beats   with guitars layered on the bass line with familiar riffs from softer   ballads through the funky, rocking stuff.   The Syl Johnson’s “Gotta Find My Baby is a wailing good time. He picks and   bends some mean stuff here on his guitar. His straight up blues like this,   “Tied Up, Down and Twisted”, “The Blues is My Livin’” and others are   delivered with precision and soul– these are my favorite tracks.   The title track is a soft and mellow ballad. Beard offers up a few slow   cuts. He pulls off the slow stuff fairly well, but sounds better on the   “bigger cuts” where his guitar and vocals are predominant. The vocals are a   little sing song sounding here and there on some tracks, but that is not a   huge problem overall.    Beard also ventures out into funky stuff that is more “out there” (as does   Ronnie Brooks) and pulls it off well, but his money stuff to me is straight   blues. He’s got a great tone when he plays them and his vocals seem most   comfortable when he got the blues.   This is a nice CD with a lot of new stuff and some good covers. The CD is   well-produced and the sound is clean and balanced. Beard’s fans will love it   and blues fans in general will appreciate his style and sound!.       Reviewer         Steve Jones is secretary     of the Crossroads     Blues Society in Rockford. IL.    For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE  |   
Featured Blues Review 3 of 6
|       Delmark     Think of Chicago Blues, and it's quite obvious who springs to mind. Howlin   Wolf, Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon, take your pick from many. However, the   mainstay of any blues scene are the bars and clubs featuring the many   artists who never managed to break out of their local circuit, nor have   attained the recognition they deserve.     So when I received this CD, it came as quite a shock to hear some wonderful   singers and some fine musicians who I'd never heard of before. Credit must   be given to Jimmy Dawkins who launched Leric records with the prime   intention of recording these artists enabling them to attain some airplay,   the possibility of getting reviewed in the music press and having some   product to sell. Some 25-30 years later, these recordings are at last being   made available again, but sadly any recognition will come to late to be of   benefit to the artists.     The first two tracks are taken up by Little Johnny Christian. The first   track, "New Life" is an up tempo blues number featuring some terrific   soulful singing, but with guitar, saxophone, keyboards and harmonica all   featuring, the instrumentation becomes very cluttered. In fact it could have   done with less and allowed one or possibly two instruments to take the lead.   Saying that, I would have liked to have seen this performed live. It was   probably an awesome sight.     "Luv Sumbody" leans very much to the soul side of the blues. In fact,   Johnny's vocals shift fr.om blues to soul and back with the greatest of   ease. The highlight of this track is the Sax solo from Kreen .     Tail dragger is next with two numbers. A man with a distinct and authentic   Chicago blues voice, Tail Dragger was reputedly the natural successor to   Howlin Wolf. So ezee is a standard Chicago blues work out. It features   plenty of tasteful harmonica and piano. "My Head Is Bald" has a distinctive   lyric over another standard blues number and although both tracks are basic   they seem to be perfect for Tail Draggers excellent vocals.     Queen Sylvia Embry makes an appearance with two tracks. A bass player with a   gospel influenced voice, Sylvia at least recorded for the Razor and   Alligator labels, but sadly joins the ranks of those who didn't quite make   it. "I Know I Ain't Number One" is a number which shows the power of her   vocal range and again is a number which would have been sounded great live.   "Too Bad Baby" is a 12 bar blues number which again would have been in it's   element in a live setting.     Vance Kelly weighs in with three numbers. "Use What You Got" is very   reminiscent of Hoochie Coochie Man. "The Jam" is a very funky instrumental   which once again features some fine sax playing from Kreen. "Why You Hurt Me   So Bad" is a mid tempo number underpinned once again by some fine sax and   guitar playing. Vance's vocals are superb . All three numbers are previously   unreleased and if there are any more Vance Kelly numbers in Leric's vaults   we could be in for a fine album.     Nora Jean Bruso provides two tracks. "Untrue Love" is probably the best   track on the album. A fabulous vocal with some fine piano, again this is   number that would really stand out in a live environment. Unfortunately, "Oh   My Love" really doesn't belong on this album. Whilst the vocals are superb,   the track is a ballad probably more suited to the late night soul programme   format.     Big Mojo Elem is next up with "Special Kind Of Love". The one time bassist   with Freddie King with a voice similar to that of J B Lenoir shows why he   was very popular on the Chicago blues scene. This track is previously   unreleased and like Vance Kelly, it will be interesting to see how much   material is still about.     Little Johnny Christian is back with another two numbers, "Ain't Gonna Worry   About Tomorrow" starts with a lovely organ intro which blends very well with   the brass section. Unlike the opening cut the soloing is better structured   allowing the song to breathe. "I Gotta Sad Feeling" really swings with the   brass instruments really prominent.     I know absolutely nothing about Sister Margo and Healing Center Choir,   except to say that "My God Is Real" and "Peace Be Still" show what a fine   gospel singer she is.     This has been a fascinating CD to review. A mini-documentary of a local   music scene some 25-30 years ago and the possibility of more to come. For   those bands who never got beyond the local club circuit, getting the chance   to record an album must have been a fantastic opportunity. With advancements   in digital technology, for many bands who perform at club level and don't   get beyond the local circuit, recording an album has become a lot easier and   a lot cheaper. Artists like these rarely got that chance. As Dave Whiteis   succinctly wrote in the sleeve notes. It reminds us, yet again, that the   best music is often found off the beaten track, away from the spotlights, on   what the late Johnnie Taylor so memorably called "the soul side of town".    Reviewer Mike Lightfoot is House DJ at the New Crawdaddy Blues Club,    Billericay, Essex UK,    www.newcrawdaddyclub.co.uk and is also a contributor to Blues in    Britain magazine    www.bluesinbritain.org.    For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE  |   
Featured Blues Review 4 of 6
|       13 Tracks       Little Al Thomas is one of those rare older bluesmen that was actually born   and raised in Chicago. His first recording, at the age of 69, was Southside   Story with the Crazy House Band. It became an instant classic-in Chicago. In   2000, he and the band appeared at the Lucerne Blues Festival in Switzerland.   As a result, they released a second CD, In The House.     Meanwhile, guitarist, songwriter John Edelmann of the Crazy House Band   formed a new band, The Deep Down Fools with Mart Binder on drums, Rob Waters   on organ and ad hoc Eddie Galchick also from Crazy house, and Mike Scharf,   both on bass.     Together again Little Al Thomas and John Edelmann have a new CD as Little Al   Thomas featuring The Deep Down Fools titled Not My Warden. There are two   covers, otherwise the songs are written by Edelmann or one of Edelmann’s   band mates in one incarnation or another. The lyrics are humorous and clever   for the most part, especially, “I’m Gonna Buy A Politician,” and the title   track, “Not My Warden.”     Most of the tracks feature a great interplay between the organ and guitar   regardless of whether the song is instrumental, particularly on “Ready   Freddie”-instrumental and “Anger Heats My House”-vocal. “Not My Warden” also   features organ. “Old Time Used To Be” has funny lyrics and a catchy chorus.     I have the CD, Too Long In Exile, by Van Morrison which contains “Big Time   Operators.” Considering the title of the CD and the lyrics of this   particular track, I always considered the song to be highly   autobiographical. Therefore it’s curious that the song would ever be covered   by someone else. I suppose those big time operators have more that one   artist in their sites. “West Side Wind” is the second instrumental but it   has a bit of a country twang to it. “Coronado,” the last track, also   instrumental, is a smooth Wes Montgomery like number.     Overall, the lyrics tell real stories, Little Al’s voice is gruff when it   needs to be, and the band it tight..    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 Review 5 of 6
|       Delta Groove Music     Fifteen tracks: 61mins   The folks in Phoenix Arizona really ought to have a Bob Corritore day to   celebrate the life and works of a man in their city who has done more for   the blues in recent years than any one man could reasonably be expected to   do!    As a harmonica player Bob has supported and practically every top class or   blues musician and that you can think of. He has a back catalogue that   anybody could be proud of and not surprisingly he wants to show it off. This   CD is a selection of 16 tracks featuring his work with people like Koko   Taylor, Little Milton, Louisiana Red, Pinetop Perkins, Honeyboy Edwards,   and, as they say, of many, many more.   You could write a good deal about every track on this CD but I shall have to   be selective. For me, the outstanding track is Baby Don’t You Tear My   Clothes, the old Smokey Hogg number, if only because of the wonderful bass   baritone voice of Nappy Brown on vocals! Another outstanding tracks include   a terrific version of Bumble Bee, the Memphis Minnie a song in the with   Chris James on guitar and Patrick Rynn on bass, say nothing of the piano and   vocal work Pinetop Perkins (also with James and Rynn) on that wonderful old   stalwart Big Fat Mama.   Frankly, there’s not a track on this CD that is not worth listening to and   many of them are outstanding. Corritore is always an impressive player with   a control and a fire that is often second to none. If you are interested in   harmonica blues this is an essential purchase, and for those that are just   lovers of the blues, this one should not be missed either. Go for it!   EDITORS NOTE - Bob Corritore is owner and operator of one of the   most famous Blues clubs in the US, The Rhythm Room in Phoenix, AZ where he   is part of the house band with Big Pete Pearson's Band. He is in the process   of recording his third CD with Delta Blues Man Dave Riley. Both his current   and first one with Dave Riley were/are nominated as "Best Traditional Blues   CD" in our 2008 and 2010 Blues Blast Music Awards. He also was part of last   years winning CD for Best Debut CD in our 2009 BBMAs for his harmonica work   on Chris James and Patrick Rynn's Earwig Records release, Stop And Think   About It.       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  |   
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 6 of 6
|       Underground Record Shop   12 tracks - Total time: 35:30   Multi-instrumentalist/singer/songwriter Rich Hynes is one of Indianapolis’s   roots music driving forces, a player, vocalist and composer whose creative   efforts embrace blues, country folk and rockabilly. He also hosts the “Radio   Free Indy” roots music show on local public radio station WICR, and runs the   vintage vinyl Underground Record Shop, also in Indy. On Rollin’ Along   Hynes plays acoustic 6- and 12- string guitar, mandolin, harp, washboard,   stone jug, kazoo, tenor banjo and drums. He’s joined here by the Rollers, a   band that consists of these Indianapolis-area veteran players: drummers Tim   Duffy and Mark Cutsinger, electric/electric slide guitarist Tim Gibson,   electric bassists Dave Calloway and Tom Creviston, and standup bassist Mike   Strauss. All the songs on Rollin’ Along are Rich Hynes originals.   Rollin’ Along is essentially a folk album with contemporary features,   with 11 of its 12 tracks expressive of old-timey blues with an admixture of   elements from old-timey country. Older listeners are likely to find the CD   reminiscent of 1960s folk, with five of these 11 tracks that feature drums,   and also the five of the 11 featuring Gibson’s electric guitar (all but two   of them the same tracks) recalling the acoustic-electric folk-rock of the   1970s. The last track, “Rockabilly Hero,” is in a class by itself—a jumping,   bopping re-creation of mid-1950s rockabilly, a tribute to the genre with a   local inspiration, Art Adams, Indianapolis inductee into the Rockabilly Hall   of Fame who first recorded in 1953 and is still going strong.    These 11 tracks can be divided into four categories. The first comprises   four storytelling songs: the opening track, “The New Railroad,” on crossing   musical and racial boundaries to jam with and influence each other that ends   with Leadbelly influencing Woody Guthrie influencing Bob Dylan; track 3,   “The New Yank Rachell Blues,” a biographical song about this great bluesman   who was a seminal influence on Indianapolis’s blues scene from the 1960s on;   track 4, “Willie Johnson,” the tale of a 99-year-old man dying after living   a full life right to the end; and track 6, “The Legend of Spidey Jack,” the   story of a small-town musician who hits the big time. Then there is the   inevitable category on any blues album of “bad love” songs, here represented   by three tracks: track 5, “Red Headed Stepchild Blues,” about leaving a bad   woman; track 7, “Why Do I Lie To Me,” about fooling oneself over a lover   who’s gone; and “Corinna Lee,” a bittersweet tale of recalling a first love   amidst present adversity. Two of the songs are harp solos that are   reminiscent of Sonny Boy Williamson II’s solo efforts: the up-tempo track 2,   “One Man Boogie;” and track 9, the slow “Mooney Boy Williamson.”    Rounding out the categories are two ruminative folk miscellany: track 10, a   half-jocose look at adversity as represented by the dropping of an atom   bomb, a disciplinary kick in the pants by Grandma, and stepping into dog   poop; and track 11, “Universal Blues,” on fate, resignation and the Eternal   Return. Altogether making Rollin’ Along a CD of note. .       Reviewer   George "Blues Fin Tuna" Fish hails from Indianapolis, Indiana, home of    blues legends Yank Rachell and Leroy Carr. He has written a regular    music column for several years. He wrote the liner notes for Yank    Rachell’s Delmark album, Chicago Style. He has been a blues and pop    music contributor for the left-wing press as well, and has appeared in    Against the Current and Socialism and Democracy.      For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE  |   
 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. 
 or click a state to see Blues shows by State Alabama  Alaska  Arizona  Arkansas  California  Colorado  Connecticut  Delaware  D.C.  Florida  Georgia   Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Other Countries Performance dates submitted by Musicians, Clubs, Blues Societies and Blues festivals. TheBluesBlast.com is not responsible for errors or omissions.  | 
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