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Past Issues
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   In This Issue 
  
 We welcome a new writer and photographer, Chris Armold.
 Chris has our feature interview with Kenny Wayne Shepherd this week.  
 We have six CD reviews for you this week! 
  Jim Kanavy reviews a new CD from Mark T. Small. Gary 
 Weeks reviews a new CD from Mary Flower. John Mitchell reviews a new CD from 
 Josh Smith and also one from Mighty Sam McClain and Knut Reiersrud.  
 Eric Steiner reviews a new compilation CD from Oregon's Cascade Blues 
 Association. Mark Thompson reviews a new CD from 
 Alberta Hunter. All this and MORE! SCROLL DOWN!!! 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Interview - 
  Kenny Wayne Shepherd 
 
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  KWS: Yeah absolutely, it's like when I got back to my home town. He's 
  like an adopted member of my family down in Louisiana, so coming to 
  Cincinnati is like coming home for me too. 
  Blues Blast: Well you're into tonight headlining with Joe Walsh on the 
  bill. How did this pairing happen? 
  KWS: Well Joe and I have been friends since I've was17. My first album 
  came out and I was doing the “Hell Freezes Over” tour with the Eagles in 
  Europe plus a few shows in the states. We became friends on the tour and 
  have stayed in touch. We've jammed a few times in Los Angeles with other 
  musicians. Since we've both got new albums out we thought it would be a 
  good chance to go on the road together especially since we get along. 
  Blues Blast: Okay, you've jammed with Joe Walsh, who would you like to 
  perform with that you haven't yet? 
  KWS: Hmmm, I don't know, I've played with just about everyone but 
  Clapton and I would really like the opportunity to do that. 
  Unfortunately every time they have done the Crossroads thing we've had 
  prior commitments. 
  KWS: It's going well and a lot of people believe its our best album to 
  date and I'm really happy. I think it's certainly one of our best 
  records. I'm very proud of the album, everyones performance shows a lot 
  of growth and maturity and that comes from having done this for 20 
  years. 
  Blues Blast: I understand that your approach to this record was to 
  really focus on crafting the song rather than try to put on a blues 
  guitar shredding clinic. 
  KWS: I've just learned over the years after listening to my guitar 
  heroes, Albert King, B.B. King, Albert Collins and even Stevie Ray, that 
  a lot of the times it's the guys with the “less is more” approach that 
  really resonated with me. I felt their music so much. I would hear a 
  lick that I would like and I would want to learn it. It wasn't normally 
  a flurry of notes, it was usually just a collection of powerful notes 
  combined into a lick. I just didn't want to overdo it on this record I 
  wanted to make sure that what I played for the songs was appropriate. I 
  want the music to penetrate people in their soul with those notes. 
  Blues Blast: Do you think it takes a level of experience and maturity as 
  a guitarist to get to be able to capitalize musically on that “less is 
  more” approach? 
  Those guys aren't kids 
  and they still play fast a lot of the time and they are really good at 
  it, really technically talented. For me, it's like Albert King. Nothing 
  that guy does is fast. He never plays anything fast, it's all just 
  straight from the gut feeling. You know Hendrix is about as fast as a 
  player, or Stevie Ray in his later days when his speed was picking up, 
  that's about as fast as it gets for me. It's cool and it's fun to play 
  fast but I feel like when I play with B.B. King he can play just one 
  note and it says everything for him. That's more inspirational to me 
  than seeing how many notes you can cram into a phrase. 
  Blues Blast: You built your chops on the blues and in that genre you're 
  well respected. Do you think you'll continue to explore more rock or 
  alternative styles or stick primarily with the blues? 
  KWS: Well blues will be in everything I do and no matter how many times 
  I branch out in different directions, I'll always return to the blues 
  It's the foundation of what I do. In my heart, I love the blues and I 
  could just play blues guitar all day long and be happy.  
  As a musician, 
  songwriter, composer and producer, taking the blues in different 
  directions keeps things interesting to me. To throw a progression in 
  that isn't typical of the blues to see what direction it takes the music 
  and to see what ideas it generates, I find that interesting. Now, I 
  could sit around and play a slow blues or a 1-4-5 blues shuffle all day 
  long and it would be a lot of fun but as a writer I like to try 
  different things. I also like to incorporate my rock influences because 
  you know blues and rock were cut from the same mold. 
  KWS: If I had to place myself on a chart, I'd say I'm musically 
  somewhere between Stevie Ray and Jimi Hendrix. I think my music has more 
  of an edge to it that Stevie Ray Vaughan's music but it isn't quite as 
  out there or not as psychedelic as Hendrix. But there are plenty of 
  songs I've performed and recorded over the years that I don't think 
  Steve Ray Vaughan would have recorded. “Blue on Black” is a perfect 
  example, I can't say that I could see Stevie Ray doing that song, that's 
  not to say he wouldn't like it but I don't know, as an artist I just 
  don't think that is a song he would have done. My fourth album, “The 
  Place You're In”, the album I sung on, is a straight ahead rock record 
  and I don't think it's a record that Stevie Ray would have done. So, you 
  know, I feel like I'm in the middle ground between those two guys. I 
  have a pretty significant rock background growing up listening to ZZ 
  Top, Jimi Hendrix, Lynyrd Skynyrd ,Almond Brothers, lots of southern 
  rock bands and all of that stuff finds its way into your music, 
  intentional or not simply because you absorb it. 
  Blues Blast: Do you think people who describe you as an “SRV clone” have 
  actually listened to your musical catalog? 
  KWS: You know man, it seems like everyone tries to fit you in to a box. 
  Look at Stevie Ray, when he was around people were calling him a Hendrix 
  clone. Listen to B.B. King's early stuff, it's all T. Bone Walker stuff 
  because T. Bone was B.B.'s hero at the time. Everyone has their heroes 
  and influences and that's not something I'm going to disregard. If it 
  wasn't for Stevie Ray Vaughan I would probably not be doing what I'm 
  doing. Kenny Wayne Shepherd might not even exist as a guitar player 
  that's how significant he was to me on a personal level and on a musical 
  level. So I have no problem, he's one of the greatest guitar players to 
  pick up the instrument, so if people want to compare me to him or throw 
  me in that category that's okay. There's a lot of people who would love 
  to be mentioned in the same breath with him. 
  Blues Blast: Today the tables are somewhat turned and now you're 
  influencing a host of younger guitarist. Guys like up and coming 
  blues/rock guitarist Scotty Bratcher. He's 23, plays a KWS signature 
  Strat and lists you as one of his influences. How's that feel? 
  Blues Blast: Let me ask you about your rig, I understand you're using 
  some gear from Pennsylvania based effects maker Pigntroix. How did you 
  get hooked up with them and what's your impression of their gear? 
  KWS: Yes, I'm using one of their effects pedals in the studio, one of 
  the guys at Pigtronix sent me one of their EP2 Envelope Phasers, it's a 
  big unit and it gets these really crazy sounds. You can go like way far 
  out there and get really trippy with it or you can get some very subtle 
  effects. I used it on a song called “Anywhere The Wind Blows” with a 
  couple chorus pedals and was able to get this great big monstrous sound. 
  It's a really cool sounding pedal, it's the only pedal I have from 
  Pigtronix but I am very impressed with it, impressed enough to use it on 
  an album! 
  KWS: Look, that's why my Kenny Wayne Shepherd Fender Strat signature 
  model guitar is so ideal because the guitars are built the way I want. 
  Now, if I bought a new guitar off the shelf I would to do it what have 
  been done to the signature model. I would immediately put 6100 jumbo 
  frets on it. I would put Graph Tech guitar labs saddles on it, I would 
  probably put my signature series pickups in it because we worked a year 
  and a half on them to get the right sound and I think they sound really 
  good! Feeling and sound is most important in a guitar, if the frets 
  aren't big enough you can always re-fret it and the graphite saddles are 
  so important to reduce string breakage. Since I've been using those 
  saddles if a string has broken it's because of a flaw in the string, 
  they make a big difference. 
  Blues Blast: Well hey Kenny, thank you very much for your time this 
  evening, have a great show and enjoy Cincinnati. Any final thoughts for 
  our readers? 
  KWS: It was good meeting you and yes, I hope they will pick up a copy of 
  my new record “How I Go” I think they'll like it. 
  Kenny Wayne Shepherd is currently on tour with Joe Walsh. For more 
  information on Kenny Wayne Shepherd, visit his official website at
  
  http://www.kennywayneshepherd.net/ 
  
  
    
   Interviewer Chris Armold is a writer and photographer in Ohio. Much 
  about him and his work is at: 
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Blues Want Ads 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 1 of 6 
 
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  Lead Foot Music 
  14 Tracks, 44:30 
  Solo acoustic blues is making a comeback recently. It's never really 
  gone away and probably never will as long as hard times and guitars 
  cross paths. Maybe this intimate style of blues is surging in popularity 
  now due to over-blown excesses of pop music, pop culture, government, 
  and banking institutions. History is repeating itself as the United 
  States and other countries feel the oppression of economic distress just 
  as it did in the depression when musicians carried guitars on their 
  backs from town to town, entertaining people, empathizing through their 
  lyrics, and generating smiles with good time boogies and occasionally 
  bawdy lyrics. There is no shortage of artists keeping this tradition 
  alive and Mark T. Small has thrown his hat into the ring. 
  Armed with a 1947 Martin, a 1958 Martin D-18, a trusty Fender Telecaster 
  and a handful of other rustic guitars, Small takes a look back at the 
  by-gone era of roaming musicians, dusty roads, sharecropping, and 
  soul-crushing debt to the company store. Small's vocals aren't exactly 
  steeped in cigarettes and whiskey, but his voice is filled with 
  character. He inhabits the world of each song, singing it like he's 
  lived it and though many of the songs are half a century old or more, he 
  has probably seen similar situations in his years on the road. His 
  guitar playing is impeccable and like musical alchemists of blues' early 
  days, me mixes melodies and lyrics from various sources, creating 
  something fresh and yet familiar. Small does this to great effect on the 
  album opener, mixing the signature lick from "Smokestack Lightning" into 
  Muddy Waters' "Trouble No More." If only Muddy and the Wolf had done 
  this together, who knows what music may have followed.  
  Some of the song choices on Blacks, Whites & The Blues look like 
  re-treads at first glance, but Small makes even the most over-done 
  songs, like “Sweet Home Chicago” and “Catfish Blues,” sound relevant and 
  neoteric. Small masterfully re-imagines "The Thrill Is Gone," making it 
  sound like it's always been played by folkies and acoustic blues 
  troubadours. Gone are the horns and overblown production and in place 
  are minor chords and lonesome guitar lines guaranteed to move paupers 
  and kings alike. Mark T. Small closes the album with a delicate, finger 
  picked rendition of Scott Joplin’s “Solace.” As on many songs here, his 
  guitar playing is precise and nuanced as he weaves a tapestry of notes 
  around the melody, cradling the song with care and respect. He reveres 
  the music but not to a point of simply duplicating it. He makes it his 
  own in subtle ways that will keep listeners entertained over and over 
  again; that is the point isn’t it? 
  Like the traveling bluesmen of yesteryear who, long before cassettes, 
  CDs, iPods or streaming music, brought popular songs, regional hits, 
  show tunes, and the latest Tin Pan Alley creations to the rural masses, 
  Mark T. Small blends the best elements to create enjoyable music for not 
  only blues fans but music fans in general. 
  
  
    
   Reviewer Jim Kanavy is the greatest guitar player in his house. He 
  has been reviewing albums in his head for 30 years and in print since 
  2008, and is deeply committed to keeping the blues alive and thriving. 
  For more information visit 
  http://jimkanavy.com. 
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 2 of 6 
 
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  12 tracks: Time: 47:08 
  Fans of acoustic blues players John Hammond, Rory Block and Fiona Boyes 
  will probably get the same sort of satisfaction when they listen to 
  Misery Loves Company by Mary Flower. 
  Bouncing back and forth between covers and originals, Flower shines as 
  an example of being a torchbearer of bringing traditional music into the 
  public light. Residing in Portland, Oregon doesn’t seem to deter her 
  from presenting songs enriched in the cultures of the Deep South. 
  This journalist remembers catching her set at the Blind Willie McTell 
  Blues Festival a couple of years ago. It was the kind of stuff that went 
  down well with some audience members, particularly those who closely 
  aligned with a purist background. 
  As she has done with other releases, Flower continues to explore the 
  finger-picking style of folk, Piedmont, ragtime and Delta blues. While 
  no new ground may be broken here, it is a welcome sojourn into a rural 
  America that we forgot existed. 
  While the greatest strengths are wrapping her guitar and lap slide 
  guitar lines around this material, the collaborations with various 
  guests gives the tracks an extra boost. 
  Harmonica player Curtis Salgado drops in to add his buttery harmonica 
  lines to Muddy Waters’ “Hard Day Blues.” Guest singer LaRhonda Steele 
  applies a sweet background vocal to the Gary Davis gospel churched “Goin 
  to Sit Down On The Banks Of The River.” Her rendition of Son House’ 
  “Death Letter Blues” personifies more of a Piedmont air then Delta 
  menace. 
  While tackling the other acoustic treasures of players, Flower displays 
  strong prowess in her own material. If you want a shot of ragtime, 
  there’s the duet with Brian Oberlin in “Recession Rag” which can’t get 
  any more authentic. And delving deep into the Piedmont rudiments of 
  guitar seems to suit Mary best when she neatly picks her way through the 
  instrumental “Jitters.” 
  Handling the production chores herself can be considered a great move. 
  There is no over-production and the songs seem to be done in one or two 
  takes. 
  Perhaps the best union is with Colin Linden who adds his haunting 
  electric Dobro to Flower original “Way Down In The Bottom.” It’s as dark 
  and depressing as the title implies and perhaps the most melancholic 
  number on the CD.  
  But depression isn’t something Flower chooses to wallow in. It’s back to 
  the Piedmont business as usual with snaky lap slide playing in Tampa 
  Red’s “Boogie Woogie Dance” that ends too quickly before you begin to 
  appreciate the tune in full. The weirdly titled “I’m Dreaming Of Your 
  Demise” shows a humorous side of Flowers and Dave Frishberg’s piano is a 
  nice added touch. 
What you’re looking at is an easy and relaxed cd to listen too. James Mason’s violin lazily plays along to Mary’s gentle finger-picking in the slow lull of “Miss Delta.” 
  Listeners of acoustic-based blues will want to seek this record out. If 
  you want a traditionalist take on things that doesn’t scream of 
  electricity, then Mary Flower can be one of the best sources to turn 
  too. If you check out her website, not only is she playing the normal 
  club circuit in the Portland area, but she serves as an instructor for 
  various music camps such as Jorma Kaukonen’s Fur Peach Ranch. It doesn’t 
  come as a surprise as she is one of the best choices to look to when 
  wanting to pursue a career in music that reeks of Americana and not 
  coming out formulated in an attempt to being accepted by the mainstream. 
  Thankfully Flower recognizes true traditions can save the day. 
  
   
   
   Reviewer Gary Weeks is a contributing writer. He resides in 
  Marietta, GA. 
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
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   Featured Blues Review 3 of 6 
 
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  12 tracks; 58.54 minutes + Bonus CD 4 tracks; 17.02 
  Josh Smith was born in Connecticut, started playing guitar when a 
  teenager growing up in Florida and later moved to LA where he is an 
  in-demand session player. In recent years he has held down the guitar 
  slot in Taylor Hicks’ and Raphael Saadiq’s bands and toured extensively 
  with both singers. He has released albums before, but the most recent 
  was in 1999 (with Jim Gaines producing), so he clearly feels that the 
  time is now right to get back to a solo career. 
  The CD covers a lot of ground and at times I can hear references to an 
  array of great guitarists – BB King, T-Bone Walker, Robben Ford, Albert 
  Collins - but Josh always remains his own man. All the material on the 
  album is original and Josh has been able to call on a lot of LA-based 
  players, including Kirk Fletcher, rhythm guitar on two tracks, Lynwood 
  Slim, harp on one track and Fred Kaplan, piano on three tracks. James 
  Gadson and Mike Clarke share the drum stool, Mike Mennell on bass and 
  Jeff Young on keys are constants throughout; horns appear on three 
  tracks courtesy of Lee Thornburg on trumpet and Lon Price on sax. Josh 
  also produced the CD which was recorded in California. 
  A four track bonus CD of instrumentals is being given away with the 
  first 3000 copies, so I’ll start with that. With titles “Penance”, 
  “Fulfillment”, “Propulsion” and “Inception” you might imagine some sort 
  of concept album, but that is not the case. In fact the four cuts are 
  clearly designed to show Josh’s ability to work in widely different 
  styles. “Penance” is a slow burning, atmospheric piece, the guitar 
  reminiscent of Jeff Beck’s playing, well supported by the organ. 
  “Fulfillment” is a jaunty piece with a touch of jazz rock; Josh gets 
  some great tone on his guitar here and made me think of Robben Ford in 
  the fluency of the playing. I loved the horns in their support role 
  here, their only appearance on the EP. “Propulsion” takes us into 
  bluegrass/country territory, the drums really setting a frenetic pace on 
  the shortest of these instrumentals. “Inception” is more of a 
  straightforward rock tune with a catchy refrain, the organ again playing 
  a vital support role to allow Josh to weave his magic on the guitar. 
  Overall a good introduction to Josh’s abilities. 
  Things get even better on the main CD however as Josh shows us that not 
  only is he a good guitarist but also sings convincingly, again covering 
  a number of styles within the blues idiom. First up “Fine Young Thing” 
  is a shuffle with the added gloss of Lynwood Slim’s harp and Fred 
  Kaplan’s piano. Josh is clearly enamored of his love – “You’re a fine 
  young thing, and I can’t help but get along with you. When my eyes met 
  you, knew that those other girls were through” and delivers an 
  outstanding solo to support his lyrical statement. “Only You” brings the 
  horns into play on a soulful piece that could be a missing Van Morrison 
  piece from the 70s while Josh channels BB King in “Goin’ Out Tonight”. 
  “The Way You Do” is a slow blues with more fine piano from Fred Kaplan 
  and organ from Jeff Young. 
  “You And Me (Don’t Belong Together)” starts with an insistent drum beat 
  that made me think initially of “Keep On Running”, but once the horns 
  arrive to add their weight to the tune we get a lot more soulful and end 
  up with a tune that sounds a lot like Southside Johnny And The Asbury 
  Jukes – not blues, but absolutely up my street as The Jukes are one of 
  my favorite bands, so this one hit the spot for me, with its rousing 
  chorus and great horn arrangement. “I’m Gonna Be Ready” is the longest 
  track on the CD, a mid-paced boogie with some tough guitar. The lyrics 
  sound like a very personal statement from Josh: “People talk about me, 
  they don’t know what I’ve got inside. I don’t even hear them, never 
  going to turn to run and hide. But I’m going to stand my ground, stick 
  with what I believe. People don’t know about all the tricks I’ve got up 
  my sleeve. My time’s coming. I’m gonna hold on still; I’m gonna be 
  ready.” 
  “Newtie” is an instrumental, not dissimilar from the tracks on the bonus 
  CD. “Sober Up Baby” returns to a slower blues. Lyrically we are in the 
  area of failing relationships due to the evils of drink, this time it’s 
  the girl who has the ‘problem’ and Josh is the victim. I particularly 
  enjoyed Josh’s extended solo here. “Where’s My Baby” is more of a 
  shuffle, the organ again giving excellent support to the solid guitar 
  playing. “Ain’t Enough” is another slowish boogie but “Already Found” is 
  a departure, a light piece with a hint of gospel in the playing, 
  particularly the organ. This is a clear statement of love: “From the 
  moment I saw you I knew you were the one. Already found everything I was 
  looking for, everything I was looking for I found it in you”. Josh’s 
  solo skips along over the beat and the song is quite a nice contrast to 
  the previous boogie piece. The final track is “Dead Wrong”, a mid-paced 
  piece of blues rock with ringing guitar and a fine solo to close the CD 
  on a high note. 
  It is always good to discover a new talent and that is what Josh Smith 
  is to me. A name for us to watch out for if he continues to follow his 
  blues muse. Meanwhile this CD comes with a ‘recommended’ tag. 
  
  
    
  Reviewer John Mitchell is a blues enthusiast based in the UK. He also 
  travels to the States most years to see live blues music. 
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Blues Society News 
 
| 
    
    Send your Blues Society's BIG news or Press Release 
   about your 
    
   
   Submissions must be a maximum of 175 words or less in a Text or MS Word document 
 format. 
   Prairie Crossroads 
   Blues Society – Champaign-Urbana, IL 
   Prairie Crossroads Blues Society shows: Tuesday November 29th, 
   Kilborn Alley Blues Band, Release Party for their fourth CD with 
   Blue Bella Records, Four, at 8 pm at the Iron Post, Urbana; Friday 
   December 2nd, Matt Hill, winner of the 2011 Blues Music Award for 
   Best New Artist Debut from the Blues Foundation, 10pm, Memphis on 
   Main, Champaign. $5 non-members, $3 members. For more info:
   
   prairiecrossroadsblues.org. 
   River City Blues Society 
   - Pekin, IL 
   River City Blues Society presents: Bringing The Blues To You with 
   the following shows - Kilborn Alley Blues Band - Wednesday November 30th, Victor 
   Wainwright & The Wildroots - Saturday December 17th, Jan 11th at 
   7PM • Brandon Santini. Location Goodfellas 1414 S. 8th St, Pekin, Illinois 7:00 pm - 10:00 pm $5.00 
   non-members $3.00 members. For more info visit:
   www.rivercityblues.com 
   Illinois Central Blues Club - 
 Springfield, IL 
   The Illinois Central Blues Club presents "Blue Monday" every Monday 
   night for the last 25 years - BLUE MONDAY SHOWS - Held at the Alamo 
   115 N 5th St, Springfield, IL (217) 523-1455 every Monday 8:30pm $3 
   cover. 11/21 Big Jeff Chapman, 11/28 Deak Harp 
   Blues Band, 12/5 Kilborn Alley Blues Band, 12/12 Nick Moss and the 
   Flip Tops, 12/19 Jason Elmore Blues Band, 12/26 Brooke Thomas and 
   the Blue Suns. icbluesclub.org  
   The Friends Of The Blues - Watseka, IL 
   2011 Friends of the Blues shows -  December 1, Dave Herrero, 7 pm, 
   Kankakee Valley Boat Club. For more info see: 
   http://www.wazfest.com/JW.html 
 | 
  
  
   Featured Blues Review 4 of 6 
 
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Portland, 
  Oregon's Cascade Blues Association has released a compilation of a dozen 
  songs by the some of the Rose City’s most notable bluesmen and 
  blueswomen. Smoldering slow blues from Kevin Selfe and the Tornadoes 
  open the CD with “Moving Day Blues” and Lisa Mann and Her Really Good 
  Band follow with a jaunty (horns and all!) send-up of “Stack-O-Lee.” I 
  enjoyed the CD’s balance of up-tempo and softer blues, and Hawkeye 
  Herman’s “Give Me A Grandma Every Time,” Terry Robb’s mournful “Idle 
  Moments,” and Fiona Boyes’ “Love Changing Blues” are three of the many 
  bright spots on this first volume of Puddletown Blues. The frantic pace 
  of “Got It Made” from Boogie Bone is sure to fill any dance floor, while 
  Robbie Laws’ “Texas Crude” reminds me why he’s won Muddy Awards from the 
  Cascade Blues Association and “BB Awards” from the Washington Blues 
  Society. Billy D and the Hoodoos explore a lover’s intuition in 
  “Somethin’s Wrong,” and The Strangetones lament that they were 
  “Overdrawn,” from an independent film of the same name. While the 
  production is generally crisp and even throughout the CD, I wish Ty 
  Curtis’ vocals were turned up just a little bit more on “Do I Love You 
  Too Much.” Woodbrain (formerly the Joe McMurrian quartet) offer up a 
  banjo-infused slow blues on “Scrap Iron Pete,” and the set’s closer 
  recalls Paul delay and Duffy Bishop at the 2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues 
  Festival with “I’ve Got You.” Puddletown Blues, Volume One, is an 
  outstanding document of Oregon’s blues talent captured at clubs, 
  festivals and in the studio. I am especially awed by Blues Foundation 
  affiliates that release compilations like this one, because I know that 
  it’s hard work to produce a CD of this caliber. Some of the songs are 
  new, and some have been on the shelf for some time. While I appreciated 
  the Billy D and the Hoodoos’ performance captured live at the UnTapped 
  Blues and Brews Festival in Washington state this year, I was equally 
  impressed with the older cuts from Hawkeye Herman (2003) and Fiona Boyes 
  (2004). A portion of the proceeds of this CD will go to the Cascade 
  Blues Association’s Musicians’ Relief Fund, and I encourage readers to 
  pick up this CD to learn more about Oregon's vibrant and diverse blues 
  community. 
  
  
  Reviewer Eric Steiner is President of the Washington Blues Society in 
  Seattle, Washington. The Society was the recipient of the 2009 Keeping 
  the Blues Alive Award in the blues organization category. Please visit
  www.wablues.org for more 
  information on the Washington Blues Society  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website  
  CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 5 of 
  6 
 
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Valley 
  Entertainment 2011 
11 
  tracks; 54.04 minutes  
Mighty Sam 
  McClain has been recording for many years and has an impressive back 
  catalogue across a number of labels. In 2010 he recorded with Iranian 
  singer Mahsa Vahdat and that is where he met Norwegian guitarist Knut 
  Reiersrud. Knut has recorded in a very wide variety of contexts, 
  including the blues and the two obviously hit it off, deciding to record 
  an old-style soul album together. The recording was made in Oslo with an 
  all Norwegian cast of musicians. The CD contains a mix of covers and 
  original material written by Sam, Knut and his regular lyricist Jeffrey 
  Wasserman. 
The 
  recording is of high quality, the sound of the instruments and Sam’s 
  voice being crystal clear. The material is definitely soul/gospel rather 
  than blues, with several songs about religious rather than secular love; 
  title track “One Drop Is Plenty” is probably the best example, a stately 
  hymn expressing Sam’s faith. On the secular side of the divide “Can You 
  Stand The Test Of Love” is a smooth soul ballad with some classy guitar 
  playing. 
Most of the 
  songs are gentle ballads and I’m afraid that I did not find the material 
  sufficiently memorable to sustain my interest and full attention. For 
  example Jerry Ragavoy’s “You Don’t Know Nothing About Love” has some 
  strong, pleading vocals from Sam but plods along for almost 6 minutes. 
  “Learn How To Love You Again” has a touch of country ballad about it and 
  some resemblance in the chorus to Kenny Rogers’ “Lucille” – personally I 
  would have preferred BB King’s Lucille. The Reverend James Cleveland’s 
  “I Don’t Feel Noways Tired” also has a country feel, even down to the 
  spoken intro, though once the song proper starts it is clearly a gospel 
  piece, emphasized by the churchy organ which also is a feature of the 
  closing track “Open Up Heaven’s Door”. The most upbeat track here is 
  “Love One Another” which has a far more active drum beat behind it but a 
  dull and repetitive lyric. 
Overall I 
  was disappointed in this CD, as I am a big fan of what is usually dubbed 
  “soul blues”. Mighty Sam McClain has a strong, soulful voice and Knut 
  Reiersrud is a decent guitar player, but, for me, the material here is 
  simply not strong enough. I would class this CD as gospel/soul, with 
  very little blues content.  
  
  
  Reviewer John Mitchell 
  is a blues enthusiast based in the UK. He also travels to the States 
  most years to see live blues music.  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website  
  CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 6 of 
  6 
 
| 
   
  RockBeat Records 
  18 tracks/71:31 
  Originally released ten years ago, this title features the seemingly 
  ageless Alberta Hunter at the start of her career resurrection. A famed 
  singer who recorded for a variety of labels in the 1920's, including 
  Paramount Records, Hunter had an impressive voice that earned her the 
  backing of legendary musicians like Fats Waller, Fletcher Henderson, 
  Louis Armstrong and Sidney Bechet. She later moved to Europe, where she 
  starred in musicals and was the darling of the cabaret set. By the 50's, 
  she was no longer in demand and so she retired from music, starting a 
  twenty year stint as a licensed nurse at a hospital in New York City. 
  When the hospital finally forced her to retire, Hunter begin to sing 
  again to relieve the boredom of retirement. 
  The owner of the Cookery, Barney Josephson, hired Hunter in 1977 for a 
  six week run at his Greenwich Village cabaret, which sparked Hunter's 
  remarkable comeback that included a series of albums for Columbia. 
  Backed by Gerald Cook on piano and Jimmy Lewis on bass, the singer 
  enthusiastically digs into one of her old hits, “My Castle's Rockin'”, 
  proving that she can still swing at the age of eighty-two. Hunter easily 
  navigates the furious tempo on “I Got Rhythm”, then does an inspired 
  version of a tune she wrote, “Downhearted Blues”, that was a huge hit 
  for Bessie Smith. Cook's forceful piano work keeps pushing Hunter 
  throughout the track. At times his playing is a bit too busy, drawing 
  attention away from Hunter's singing. But his barrelhouse playing on 
  “Two Fisted Double-Jointed Rough & Ready Man” is the perfect compliment 
  to Hunter's saucy vocal. 
  Some of the songs hark back to Hunter's theatrical career. She delivers 
  all of these Tin Pan Alley tunes with gusto and the skill developed over 
  six decades. While her voice may not be as limber as it once was, Hunter 
  injects plenty of emotion into a poignant rendition of “Time Waits For 
  No One”. She gets the audience involved on “I'm Havin' a Good Time”, a 
  swinging statement about her view on life. Her voice wavers a bit on the 
  opening to “Georgia on My Mind” but she recovers with some unique 
  phrasing that follows Lewis's plunging bass lines.  
  Hunter is really in her element on the bluesier material, turning “I've 
  Got a Mind to Ramble” from a ballad into a bawdy romp that has the 
  audience roaring in delight. Her ode to a good loving “Handy Man” is 
  another highlight with a salacious performance that might cause some 
  listeners to blush. Finishing with “You're Welcome to Come Back Home”, 
  Hunter exhorts the audience to write their parents and ease their 
  misery. 
  One of America's musical treasures, Alberta Hunter was fortunate to get 
  a second chance late in life to do what she loved. Once you hear this 
  recording, it will be readily apparent that Hunter embraced the 
  opportunity, her efforts making it clear that she relished being able to 
  once again sing in front of an audience. This entertaining summary of 
  her lengthy career is certainly worth a listen. 
  
  
  Reviewer Mark 
  Thompson is president of the
  Crossroads Blues 
  Society in Rockford. IL. He has been listening to music of all kinds 
  for fifty years. The first concert he attended was in Chicago with The 
  Mothers of Invention and Cream. Life has never been the same. 
  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
  CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
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