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Friday, April 8, 2011
Don't Pass Me By: A Celebration Of Sean Costello
Bob Corritore Blues News
 April 6th, 2011
-  Dave Riley & Bob Corritore to headline Gray Sky Blues Festival in Tacoma, Washington! The Gray Sky Blues Festival happens this Saturday, April 9th in downtown Tacoma, Washington. The festival utilizes a number of venues for a wonderful day of the blues. In addition to Dave Riley & Bob Corritore, the festival also includes The Randy Oxford Band, The V-Knights, Mark Dufresne, Maia Santell, J.D. Hobson, James King & The Southsiders, Cody Rentas, Alyx & Chris Phippen, and more! for more information click here.
 -  Nick Curran dealing with further cancer issues. Nick Curran has had to cancel all dates on his forthcoming tour to deal with some ongoing health issues. Per Nick Curran's agent/manger Harry Turner; "Last year, Curran underwent treatments to address a cancerous growth on his tongue, and a further procedure is necessary at this time. Although he is eager to get back to a normal life and perform for his many fans, it is crucial to his continuing health that this situation be addressed immediately." Prayers to Nick for a speedy recovery.
 -  Today is Big Walter Horton's birthday! One of the greatest harmonica players of all time was Big Walter Horton, who was born in Horn Lake, Mississippi on April 6, 1917, and died in Chicago, Illinois on December 8, 1981. Big Walter Horton was best known for his unique blues phrasing and his bell-like resonating tone. For examples of this, please enjoy the instrumental "Easy" by clicking here, or Big Walter's "Christine" by clicking here. To hear Big Walter's amazing harmonica accompaniment on Jimmy Rogers' "Walking by Myself", click here. To see our photo page devoted to Big Walter, click here.
 -  Bob Corritore interview in American Blues News! Thanks to interviewer Vinni "Bond" Marini for his phone conversation with Bob which appears as a feature interview in American Blues News. To see this interview, click here.
 -  Bob Corritore to be featured in this week's Blues Blast Magazine! Thanks to interviewer Chefjimi Patricola for his e-interview with Bob which will appear in the April 7 (tomorrow) issue of Blues Blast Magazine which comes via email. To find out more about Blues Blast Magazine and to sign up to enjoy a free subscription, please click here . You can enjoy the current issue featuring Kenny "Beedy Eyes" Smith by clicking here (note this issue will switch to new one tomorrow).
 -  Grammy Awards eliminate numerous categories. In an effort to streamline the many categories of Grammys awarded each year, NARAS has eliminated over 30 music categories. Most unfortunate is that they have paired the two blues categories (Traditional Blues and Contemporary Blues) into just one overall award for the blues. It is also sad to see the Traditional Gospel and the Zydeco/Cajun categories no longer represented as these awards frequently recognized artists close to the blues family.
 -  "A Dinner For Pinetop" photo link! Last week's newsletter contained a broken link to the "A Dinner For Pinetop" photo. Here is the correct link; http://www.bobcorritore.com/photos162.html. We apologize.
 -  Big Walter Horton on YouTube! Please enjoy the great Big Walter Horton performing the "All-Star Boogie" and "Hard Hearted Woman" with a great band including Willie Dixon, Lee Jackson, Lafayette Leake, and Clifton James. All-Star indeed! Click here to see.
 
Illinois Blues News
  © 2011 Blues Blast Magazine
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|                From The Editors Desk         Hey Blues Fans,    The first week of April is always a week to celebrate. We started this    publication with our first issue on April 1st, 2007 which means we are    now in our 5th year of publication. Happy Birthday Blues Blast!    There is one week left on our Spring advertising special rates. Our    Special is a great way to get the Blues word out about your new music    release or music event this festival season. You can get 6 issues of    Blues Blast Magazine and six week of ads on our website for only $200.    But hurry as this lowest rate of the year is only available until April    15. Ads purchased for this special can be used anytime between now and    September 30th, 2011. See complete details in our ad below.    Also the deadline is approaching for sending in your CDs to the 2011    Blues Blast Music Award nominators. You can put your music right into    the nominators hands and there is no cost to do so this year. But hurry    as all CDs must be received by April 15. Get more information in the    announcement below in this issue.    Good Blues To You!    Bob Kieser         Blues Wanderings    We made it    out to hear Albert Castiglia this week.  He is touring in support    of his 5th CD Keepin On, released on Blues Leaf Records. He    played some of the tunes from the CD to a large crowd.  He also had    special guest Dave Gross with him playing bass. On a few tunes a guitar    found its way into Dave's hands and the sparks really flew as these two    guitar players traded Blues licks back and fourth. If anyone    out there in record label land is listening, we think you should get    these two into the studio to record an album together. Based on what we    heard, the result would be a smashing success!        In This Issue         New Blues Blast contributor Chefjimi Patricola   has our feature interview with Bob Corritore.      Rainey Wetnight   reviews a new CD by Blues Dragon. Mark Thompson reviews a new CD by   Sweet baby James & Rob Eyers. John Mitchell reviews a new CD by a   Polish Blues band celled Open Blues.      Gary "Wingman" Weeks reviews a new CD by Rory Block. All this and MORE! SCROLL DOWN!!!  |   
|       Blues Blast   has the   Lowest Advertising Prices Of The Year!   We know times are tough so  Blues Blast Magazine is offering a Spring Ad special until April 15. This is our lowest   pricing of the year and offers an effective way to get the   Blues word out for Blues festival advertising budgets and CD promotion   projects. This 6 week combo rate of only $200 allows you to affordably   add significant impact to your Blues event. It is a great way to kick   up the visibility of a CD release or Blues Festival! Normal 2011 Advertising   rates are $45 per week for magazine ads and $70 a month for website ads.     So normal price for this six week advertising is $375. But during this limited time, you can advertise your Blues event or CD in six issues of Blues Blast Magazine and on our website for a month and a half for only $200. That is less than the cost of a small ad in your local newspaper to get135,000 ad views during the six week ad run. To get the special rate simply reserve your ad space by April 15th, 2011. Ads can be scheduled to run anytime between now and September 30, 2011. Blues Blast Magazine is a great way to promote the Blues. More than 17,000 Blues fans read our magazine each week. They are located in all 50 states and in more than 80 countries. We get more than 25,000 visitors a month on our website and more than 1,000,000 (That's ONE MILLION) hits a month. Blues fans want to know about Blues events and music! Reserve your space today! Space is limited and sold on a first come. Ads must be reserved and paid for before April 15, 2011. To get more information or to book your ad call 309 267-4425 or email info@thebluesblast.com today!  |   
       Featured Blues Story - Bob    Corritore Interview   
|           Bob is considered one of the best traditional blues harmonica players on    the scene today, as well as producer, writer and winner of the coveted    and highly prestigious KBA (Keeping the Blues Alive) award,as well as    winning Blues Music Awards, and Blues Blast Awards. Bob has been    nominated this year for two BMA's, Historical Recording, and Harmonica    Player.  -------       Blues Blast: Do you ever sleep ? I ask because when one looks at    your legacy of work one has to wonder when do you get the beauty sleep    that you obviously get ?        Bob Corritore: I wake up each morning excited by what the day    might bring. I have been very blessed with lots to do. But when you look    at the things I do you are actually looking at what a team of people are    doing. I have a great support system around me: Mona Watkins who is the    Rhythm Room GM, and all her staff, Randy Chortkoff and all the folks at    Delta Groove, my webmaster George Vaught, My social media coordinator    Amy Brat, Dale Baich of Blue Witch Records, Clarke Rigsby of Tempest    Recorders, John Wrobble of Porcupine Productions, Dave Shirk at Sonorous    Mastering, my volunteers (Tony Tingle, Linda Marlowe, Tracey Thomas and    Brandi Carter), all the great musicians I work with, and all the great    friends, fans, festivals, promoters, publicists, writers, photographers,    and many other people in many other support roles. Quite a great team!        BB: Now I have to admit if we were to ask 100 or so people (Blues    fans) to name hub cities for the Blues - Phoenix might not turn up. But    with all work you have been doing there and the migration history of    artists to the area that might change. Chico Chism is a prime example,    he was there some 20 plus years - tell me a bit about how that came    about and how he became the club drummer with the Rhythm Room All-Stars?        So to answer the second part of your question, let's fast forward to    1986 and you have the great Chico Chism moving to Phoenix. Chico was    Howlin' Wolf's last drummer and he was a great singer and a charismatic    showman. Chico was filled with humor and personality, and he described    himself as "Chico Chism, I'm the woman's pet and the men's threat, the    house-rocker and the show stopper. I'm Chico the boogie man!" I met    Chico in 1975 when I went to see Wolf on the West Side of Chicago at the    1815 Club. Chico came up and introduced himself to me during the break,    and we were immediate friends. So I kept in touch with Chico after I    moved to Phoenix. We started having phone conversations about him coming    out to do some gigs. I had a few months of work lined up and Chico came    out to Phoenix in the summer of 1986. As soon as he arrived, Chico was    immediately loved by everyone in Phoenix, and he loved Phoenix back.    Chico rose quickly to great popularity. We worked many, many gigs    together. It was a great pleasure to have that Chicago beat in Phoenix.    When I opened up the Rhythm Room in 1991, I put together the Rhythm Room    All-Stars as a kickin' house band that could back up the many guests    artists that we would bring to Phoenix. Chico was the front-man of this    group but we also played backup for so many great artists that would    come to town: Jimmy Rogers, Bo Diddley, John Brim, Big Jack Johnson,    Henry Gray, Louisiana Red, Lil' Ed, R.L. Burnside, Jessie Mae Hemphill,    Nappy Brown, Luther Tucker, Smokey Wilson, Pinetop Perkins, and so many    others. Not only did the Rhythm Room All-Stars support the live shows    but we participated in many recording sessions with many of these great    artists. Chico and I always had a blast and we collaborated on so many    projects. After his stroke in 2002 Chico's health began to decline and    playing ability was limited, but he still came out regularly and played    as best he could until his passing on January 28th, 2007. He was my    close friend and musical partner, and he left an indelible mark on    Phoenix. Chico was recently inducted in Arizona Musicians and    Entertainer's Hall Of Fame. The Rhythm Room All-Stars have gone on in    the Chico Chism tradition with a current lineup that includes Chris    James, Patrick Rynn, Brian Fahey, and myself.        BB: Why did you originally come out to Phoenix, goodness, some    thirty years ago? What were the deciding factors to stay here?        BC: I originally came to Phoenix with the idea that I would only    stay for about a year. My younger brother John had settled in the    Phoenix suburb of Scottsdale after he graduated from ASU, and I liked    the idea of a warm Arizona winter. I was in love with the Chicago blues    scene that I had left, so I had every intention of returning. Within a    month or so of being gone, I get a call from Louisiana Red, who at the    time was living in Chicago. We had worked together at the Delta Fish    Market on the West Side and had exchanged phone numbers. Red had called    and got my forwarding number and when I told him I had moved to Phoenix,    he said he had been wanting to come out to Arizona and that he knew a    blues singer named Eunice Davis who was also living here . I suggested    that we should get some gigs together if he did come visit, and a few    weeks later Red shows up! Note that at that time in Red's life, he was    quite the roaming bluesman, traveling from town to town looking for a    place to play and belong. So for about a week or so, Red stayed with    Eunice until that did not work out, and the next thing I knew I had    Louisiana Red as my room-mate! Red stayed with me and my then girlfriend    Anne Columna for the next year. We scuffled for gigs and played around    the house everyday together. We became like family. Red is such a    brilliant blues player and I looked back at the blessing it was to have    had that time with him. Red would leave Arizona for a European tour    where would meet Dora, his loving wife of almost 30 years. Red and I    still are very close friends and we find ways to play together each    year. He will be playing at the Rhythm Room on June 3 and 4 coming up.    FYI in 1982, Red and I used to play quite a bit at this club called the    Purple Turtle. This club would later became the Rhythm Room! So it is    very symbolic for Red to come back and play at his old digs! My    girlfriend and I had developed our relationship around looking out for    Red, and so ironically, after Red left, our common cause was gone and we    soon broke up!        BB: With regard to the Rhythm Room, it is still going strong,    since 1991 - congratulations - with the economy still somewhat shaky and    Blues clubs closing down, how do you manage to do it?        BC: The blues club business is a tricky one. The Rhythm Room has    been very lucky to have much support from the community. We look at    our-self as a music venue with a primary focus on the blues. While the    weekends are strictly blues and soul, we invite concerts of all genres    to make up our weekdays. It is a great sounding, great feeling, live    music room with no TVs, dart boards, or pool tables. We are a concert    club venue with no apologies. Also my wonderful GM, Mona Watkins does an    amazing job of keeping a great team of employees together. In September    of this year the Rhythm Room will celebrate our 20 year anniversary with    a 3 day blues extravaganza on September 16, 17 and 18!        BB: If I can just touch on your radio show for a moment. I have 2    releases from your KJZZ 91.5 FM in Phoenix, these are just great. They    feature such artists as Lazy Lester, Lowell Fulson, Henry Gray and    current hot property Jerry Lawson. These are a priceless aural portrait    of a wonderful time in Blues music, it's like a history lesson. How    great has it been doing this broadcast ? Did you ever think it would run    this long?        BB: What would be your assessment of the Blues currently and what    does the future look like for it's continued viability and growth?        BC: If you go to the IBCs or the BMAs in Memphis you know that    the blues is a healthy, living, growing thing. As it has always done    throughout history, the blues will adapt to its surroundings and reflect    the new world it now exists in. Since the blues is a multi-generational    movement and the elders are the respected teachers and the inspiration    for those that came after, it is hard to see all the passings. We are    blessed to still have artists like Pinetop Perkins, and Honeyboy Edwards    who are both in their 90s. They are a window into the past. I recently    had a heart to heart conversation with Barrelhouse Chuck who reminded me    how privileged we were to know many of the great Chicago bluesmen who    formed the music, and we need to hold up their memory and the lessons    that they taught us. I agree that those entrusted with these sacred    lessons from the blues elders have the responsibility to keep that music    alive. I have seen some promising young blues players on the scene:    Marquise Knox, Vincent Bury, Matt Hill, Cleome Bova, of course Cedric    Burnside and Lightnin' Malcolm, Gina Sicilia, Dave Gross, Kilborn Alley,    Zoe Savage (from Joe Filisko's harmonica class), Valerie June, Steve    Marriner, and Bharath Rajakumar to name a few. The blues will live on.        BB: In December 2010, you produced (and played on) 'Oil Spill    Blues' with Dave Riley for 'Blues for the Gulf' for the VizzTone label    Group. On it there are some outstanding musicians and all the proceeds    goes to the Voice Of The Wetlands charity fund, which is great. How did    you get involved with that project?        BC: Just to clarify, the Blues For The Gulf CD was produced by a    group of concerned individuals around that terrible environmental    disaster. Dave Riley and I just donated a song that we wrote for the    project, and we hope that it will do a little something for the cause.    We became aware of this project from Honey Sepeda and Bob Margolin and    immediately wanted to contribute.        BB: But you have a long legacy of producing Blues artists such as    Louisiana Red, Tomcat Courtney, to local artists like Chief Schabuttie    Gilliame and Dave Riley. I would guess you feel right at home on either    side of the studio? What is it that you bring to the studio as a    producer that makes you so requested?       BB: What are you up to these days ? I know you have been working    with Jessi Colter, does working in another genre (Country) provide any    special challenges or opportunities to you as a harp player?        BC: I am in the middle of a number of exiting recording projects    right now: Dave Riley and I are busy working on our third CD together. I    mentioned earlier the Mud Morganfield CD that is in the works. I have    produced about half of Diunna Greenleaf's forthcoming CD, with Diunna,    Anson Funderburgh, and others producing the remainder of the record. I    will be putting together a 20 year anniversary CD of live performances    over the years from the Rhythm Room. I play harmonica on 4 or 5 tracks    on the forthcoming CD by Louisiana Red (with Little Victor's Juke Joint)    which will be out this year on Ruf Records. I recently wrote the liner    notes for a new Lazy Lester CD for the Bluestown label in Norway. I have    upcoming shows this year in Chicago, Brazil, the Netherlands, Belgium,    Switzerland, Canada, Takoma, Washington, Simi Valley, California and    more! It will be a great year of gigs. Dave Riley and I will bring our    band to the Moulin Ospel Blues Festival in the Netherlands in May (I    will leave for the festival from Memphis the day after the BMAs). We    have nice week of European touring after that planned. I am excited to    return to Brazil for a tour with Dave Riley. I just found out that I    will be bringing the Rhythm Room All-Stars with Tail Dragger, Henry    Gray, and Kirk Fletcher to the 2011 Lucerne Blues Festival in    Switzerland. That is one hard hitting group of blues players! I will    playing the Edmonton Labatts Blues fest with Dave Riley one day and the    Delta Groove Harp Blast Revue the next. I am excited to play at the Simi    Valley Cajun and Blues Festival as a guest of the Mannish Boys and    backing my friend and harp mentor Johnny Dyer. I will playing the    Chicago Blues Festival with Mud Morganfield. Dave and I will play the    Gray Sky Blues Festival in Takoma, Washington coming up.        Speaking of Jessi Colter, we work a few gigs together each year. We have    been doing this for about 8 years now and she has become a close friend.    I met her when she stopped into the Rhythm Room shortly after Waylon    died. It is really an honor to make music with her. It's a whole other    bag then I normally play but I love the gentle ballads and the country    romps she does. We both meet in the middle stylistically and somehow it    works! She has such a sweet spirit to her music. She lives in a very    high profile, celebrity prone world, and it is fun to visit that world,    which is quite a contrast to the blues life that I normally lead. For    example, earlier this year I did a gig with Tail Dragger where we played    2 nights of unapologetic, raw, down home blues, and the very next    weekend I am at a posh charity dinner performing "I'm Not Lisa" with    Jessi Colter to an audience that included former Vice President Dan    Quayle, Jane Seymour and other high profile people. The contrast was    unbelievable. I will always be a blues musician through and through, but    it is nice occasionally have my blues upbringing interface with another    style of music, especially when it's with Jessi Colter!        BB: You also have a new release with Louisiana Red due out soon?    I saw you with Red and Little Victor at last years' BMA's what a dynamic    show.        BC: That was a fun show with Louisiana Red at the BMAs. Red has    such a rich blues sound, and we have such a long history together that    there is a natural thing that happens when we play. Little Victor has a    similar chemistry with Red, and you put all that together with the great    band that Victor organized and you have a real groove. It was great to    be up there with Red and stand next to him at his moment of glory. The    next day we did a Blues Foundation event at Alfred's on Beale Street,    then right after gig we went directly to Leeway Recording studio where    we started 2 non-stop days of recording. At each of these stops we    played full throttle, intense blues which is the only way Red likes to    play. By the end of those two days in the studio we had given our all    and were completely wiped out. But we captured a passionate, validated    Louisiana Red at a special moment in time. I'm am really looking forward    to the release of this CD later this year. It will be powerful!        BB: Bob, thanks for taking the time to do this interview with us,    and let's hope people realize a bit more about what you do for the Blues    family and music that we all love.        You can find out more about Mr. Corritore at his web site,    http://www.bobcorritore.com/    including his many releases and his remarkable history in the Blues.         Interviewer    Chefjimi Patricola is a classically trained chef, blues loving writer    and creative master of Blues411.com.    He can also can be found on FaceBook and at festivals and clubs in your    neighborhood and town.          For other reviews and interviews on our website        CLICK HERE  |   
|     Beverly Lewis All Shades Of Blues ”Forceful, robust and soulful    offering from South Florida blues vocalist Beverly Lewis.”  Available for download at ITunes,    CDBaby and Amazon.  |   
       Featured Blues Review 1 of 4   
|     12    songs; 54:48 minutes Styles:    Modern Electric Blues    Juxtapositions can be wonderful, even though they may seem bizarre at    first glance. When listeners think of the word "Blues," is a picture of    a dragon conjured in their minds? Most likely not, but against all odds,    the band of this same name makes the combination work! Blues    Dragon has been raising heads throughout South Florida for more than ten    years, and now seeks to expand their reach throughout the United States    with a self-titled recording debut. Using a variety of instruments    (guitar, piano, harmonica, alto sax and more) to stoke a fire in their    audience, lead vocalist and bassist Mark Telesca and his posse roar!  The album's    most notable songs start off with the surprisingly-funny "Electric    Chair." Beginning with a bouncy bongo beat by percussionist Rico Geragi,    it ends with a prisoner's plea for execution by a certain shocking    method: "Just burn me from the inside out and bury my body on Bunker    Hill!" Fearless and brash, it minces no words and welcomes death like an    old friend.  Not so with    the atmospheric final track, "Living on Death Row." As the sounds of    thunder and pouring rain soak his vocals in spookiness, Telesca notes,    “There’s a criminal living right next door. Might be a burglar--maybe a    killer--I don’t know.” Neither do we, and the song genuinely makes one    wonder. Don’t listen to this one with all the lights off!  Blues    Dragon, after paying a funky tribute to the gospel favorite “This    Train,” does almost a complete 180 two songs later with “Blackest    Woman”. Eschewing all forms of political correctness, the narrator    rejoices in his affair with the subject of this song--although he    cautions, “She got a big, black husband, and man, that mother-f***er’s    mean!” This song is the very definition of a guilty pleasure.  Last but    not least, there’s “Crocodile Shoes,” adding a bit of psychedelic flair    and smoking-hot harmonica to what might be considered a “pure soul”    number.  Members    rounding out the band are: Mike "Big Dog" Hundley on electric guitar and    Dr. Sample; Tony "The Reverend" Monaco on Hammond B3, piano and    background vocals; John Boyle on harmonica, alto sax, flute and    background vocals; Fred Weng on acoustic drums, percussion and trumpet;    Rico Geragi also adds background vocals. Pat Monaco and Lyndsey Brown    add the Violins on "Living On Death Row." With the    plethora of blues musicians and bands out there, what makes Blues Dragon    unique? Chief factors here are their purely electric ensemble, boundless    enthusiasm and persistent emphasis on multi-layered sound. It’s almost    impossible to concentrate on the line of a single instrument in any song    on the album (drums, bass, horn, etc.), and that’s fantastic! It shows    that blues music consists of far more than twelve bars and a catchy    refrain. There’s no denying it: Blues Dragon proves that opposites    attract!     Reviewer Rainey Wetnight is a 31 year old female Blues fan. She brings    the perspective of a younger blues fan to reviews. A child of the 1980s    music, she was strongly influenced by her father’s blues music    collection.                        For other reviews and interviews on our website        CLICK HERE  |   
|         Get Your Blues Music Considered for    Nomination!    We have a    simple process for Blues artists and record labels to get their    recordings considered for nomination in our annual Blues Blast Music    Awards.        We have 30 nominators and you can send    in copies of your CD to be considered. Eligibility dates for recordings    are releases between    April 1, 2010 and March 31, 2011.      The 2011    nomination process started March 1st when we began accepting    submissions from labels and artists. Artist do not necessarily have to    submit their releases to be considered but any that do will have their    recordings screened by the nominators.  Read all the details at the    link below for complete information to have your CD release    considered now.    Our    nominators include, music journalists, radio DJs, festival promoters,    club owners and others who are very active in the Blues scene. This year    as every year, the nominees are artists and music that the nominators    got the opportunity to hear. (They can't nominate something they haven't    heard!)    Our diverse    group of nominators hear many CDs and see many performing artists but if    an artist or label really wants a release to be considered by all the    nominators, they can send in copies of their CDs beginning March 1. CDs    will be sent to the nominators. You must send 30 copies so that all    nominators get to listen to them. There is no charge for this in 2011.         DEADLINE: CDs MUST BE RECEIVED BY APRIL 15!         You send us the CDs and we will cover the cost of getting the CDs into the    nominators hands. Act NOW to get your music considered! For complete    information on sending in your release      CLICK HERE    Nominators    will start submitting their nominations May 1st and final nominations will be    announced after May 31st, 2010. Voting Begins in July. The winners in    the 2011 Blues Blast Music Awards will be announced on Thursday October    27th, 2011.    |     
       Blues Society News   
  You can submit a maximum of 125 words or less in a Text or MS Word document   format.     Greater Twin Cities Blues Society, St.   Paul, MN   Greater Twin Cities Blues Society presents "Hurricane" Harold's Harmonica   Extravaganza on April 10, 2010 at Wilebski's Blues Saloon, 1638 Rice St.,   St. Paul, MN. Phone 651-207-8392. The show features RJ Mischo, Big George   Jackson, Javier Matos, Curtis Blake, Everett Smithson, Jean Verstraete   (4:30), Harold Tremblay with HP Band Bruce McCabe, Dan Schwalbe, Jeremy   Johnson, and special guests including, John Ross. Doors 4:00pm, Music   4:30-9:00      Also on May 1, 2011 the Greater Twin Cities Blues Society presents Road to   Memphis Challenge at Wilebski's Blues Saloon with 5 bands, 3 solo/duo acts   competing for slot at IBC. The show starts at 1:00 $10.00 suggested donation  www.gtcbms.org      The Blues Kid Foundation – Chicago,   IL   Columbia College Chicago, Artistic Director Fernando Jones, and the Blues   Kid Foundation proudly present the 2nd Annual Blues Camp July 12 to 16 at   Columbia College Chicago Music Center • 1014 S. Michigan Avenue • Chicago.   This fun-filled experience will give national and international student   musicians ages 12 - 18 an opportunity to learn and play America’s root music   in the Blues Capital of the World, Chicago. Students will receive   professional instruction in the hands-on, user-friendly environment of   Columbia College Chicago’s South Loop campus. Placement in ensembles is   competitive, and student musicians (intermediate-to-advanced skill levels)   must audition for positions. Openings for beginner-level students may also   be available.      Chicago-area student musicians are expected to audition in person Auditions   will take place Saturday April 23  11:00 AM - 1:00 PM at Columbia   College Chicago Music Center 1014 S. Michigan Avenue • Chicago. Out-of-town   and international student musicians may audition by submitting online video   links to BluesNewz@aol.com by Friday,   May 6, 2011.      For Updated Information Visit   www.Blueskids.Com  & Watch The Blues Kids TV Special or contact   Fernando Jones, Blues Ensemble Director Email:  Bluesnewz@Aol.Com • Hotline   312-369-3229   The Blues Blowtorch Society -   Bloomington, IL      The Blues Blowtorch Society presents the 2011 Central Illinois Blues   Challenge on July 15 & 16, 2011 at Tri-Lakes in Bloomington, IL  during the Ain't Nothin But The Blues Festival. The winner will be sent  to Memphis in   early 2012 to compete as our representative in the International Blues   Challenge. To be considered bands must apply by June 18, 2011. The  solo/duo   acts competition is to be determined based on interest.      For further information and submission guidelines, please contact Deborah   Mehlberg, Entertainment Director at:   Deborah464@aol.com   www.bluesblowtorch.org      West Virginia Blues Society -   Charleston, WV   The West Virginia Blues Society presents the 4 th. Annual Charlie West Blues   Fest May 20 & 21, 2011 at Haddad Riverfront Park in Charleston, WV .   Showtime is 4 pm to 11 pm on Friday and Saturday 1 pm to 11 pm, with after   jam to follow both nights at The Boulevard Tavern. Admission is FREE !   That’s right, FREE to everyone !Over the two day period we will be having   over 18 acts performing on both stages. There will be plenty of food vendors   to suite your fancy along with beer and wine sales this year.      The lineup includes Sit Down Baby, Izzy & Chris, Kinds of Crazy, Lil Brian &   The Zydeco Travelers, Davina & the Vagabonds and Joe Louis Walker on Friday   and Lionel Young Band, Slim Fatz, Mojo Theory, Sean Carney, Kristine   Jackson, Smokin’ Joe Kubek & Bnois King and Ana Popovich on Saturday. For   more info contact: 304-389-1439 or   bkravenhawk@hotmail.com or visit  www.charliewestbluesfest.com   or www.wvbluessociety.org       Mississippi Valley Blues Society -   Davenport, IL   MVBS presents Hawkeye Herman Returns for Blues in the Schools. During   the week of April 11-15, blues musician Michael “Hawkeye” Herman will go   into science, math, English, social studies, ESL, and alternative high   school classrooms of four area schools. This is a new approach for Blues in   the Schools in the Quad-Cities, but not for Hawkeye, who has been conducting   cross-curricular blues workshops all over the world. Because teaching at the   classroom level is more intense in both preparation and execution than the   usual performing for school assemblies, Hawkeye will be presenting only one   open-to-the-public event on Wednesday April 13 at Mojo’s in the River Music   Experience (2nd and Main Streets in Davenport) beginning at 7:00 p.m.   Admission is free.   Rosedale Crossroads Blues Society   - Rosedale, MS   Rosedale Crossroads Blues Society presents The Crossroads Blues and Heritage   Festival Saturday, May 7, 2011 at the River Resort. Highway 1 S. in historic   Rosedale, MS. Gates open at 12:00 noon - music starts at 1:00. Admission $5   - adults, $1 - children under 12. Bring your own ice chest - $10 No beer   sold - No glass - No pets, please! Parking $5 Lineup ( in order of   appearance - subject to change): Vinnie C., Eddie Cusic, Mickey Rogers,   T-Model Ford, Daddy Mack, Big T, Guitar Mikey and the Real Thing, and Eden   Brent.   Fest Feast on Friday evening, May 6 at the River Resort with a 5-course   Creole dinner, $50 per person - Cash bar. Limited seating. Call 662-759-6443   or 662-897-0555 for reservations and information. If you have questions   about the above information, call 662-402-6251. Thank you. Mary Anna Davis   Crossroads Blues Society   www.rosedaleblues.com The Friends Of The Blues - Watseka, IL   2011 Friends of the Blues shows - April 26 - The Rockin’ Johnny   Band, Bradley Bourbonnais Sportsmen’s Club, May 03 - Too Slim and the   Taildraggers, 7 pm, Kankakee Valley Boat Club, May 19 - The Sugar Prophets   (2011 IBC Finalists), 7 pm, Bradley Bourbonnais Sportsmen’s Club, June 23 -   Sean Chambers, 7 pm, River Bend Bar & Grill,  July 13 - Reverend Raven & C.S.A.B., 7 pm, River Bend Bar & Grill. For more info see: http://www.wazfest.com/JW.html   West Virginia Blues Society -   Charleston, WV   The West Virginia Blues Society presents the Charlie West Blues Fest May 20 &   21, 2011 in Haddad Riverfront Park, Charleston, WV Here is the lineup: Friday   May 20 - Sit Down Baby, Izzy & Chris, Mojo Theory, Lil Bryan & The   Travelers, Davina & the Vagabonds and Joe Louis Walker. Sat. May 21- IBC   Band Winner, Slim Fatz, Trampled Under Foot, Sean Carney, Kristine Jackson,   Smokin’ Joe Kubek & Bnois King and Ana Popovich.  The Charlie West   Blues Fest is produced by the West Virginia Blues Society, Inc.  www.wvbluessociety.org and  www.charliewestbluesfest.com      Illinois Central Blues Club -   Springfield, IL   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. April 11 - TBA, April 18 - Big Jeff Chapman, April 25 - TBA, May 2 -   Too Slim & the Tail Draggers, May 9 - The Blues Deacons,  May 16 - James Armstrong, May 23 - Eric "Guitar" Davis and the Troublemakers. icbluesclub.org  | 
       Featured Blues Review 2 of 4   
|     Black    Market Music 13    tracks/48:22 Musical    duos featuring a guitarist and drummer have created quite a stir in    recent years. The White Stripes and Black Keys parlayed the    stripped-down format into rock star status. Other groups like Moreland &    Arbuckle and combo of Cedric Burnside & Lightnin’ Malcolm have    electrified blues lovers with their raw, down-home sound. The latest    entry into this genre comes to us from Adelaide, Australia. Sweet Baby    James Weston handles the guitar and vocals while Rob Eyers maintains the    rhythm on drums and percussion. Weston gets writer’s credit on several    tracks and wrote the rest of the original material in collaboration with    lyricist Georgia Mays.  Weston is a    solid performer, able to generate a consistent rhythmic pulse on each    track with his slashing guitar style. He mainly uses a slide on electric    guitars but several cuts are done on acoustic guitar, like “Evil Tongue”    with Weston doing some intricate fingerpicking. On “Hot Plate”, the lone    instrumental track, Weston steps beyond the rhythm mode and showcases    some of his skill as a soloist on electric guitar. But the majority of    the time his guitar work stays confined to generating riffs without a    lot of embellishment, as on the frantic “Come on Here”, which copies the    Mississippi hill country sound. When it    comes to the vocal element, Weston has a good, clean tone and enough    range to easily handle the demands of the material. One highlight is “No    Love”, with the singer wringing plenty of emotion from the description    of a no-good woman accompanied only by his piercing guitar licks. His    energetic vocal on “Thunder From the Sky” makes that steady-rolling’    track another highlight. “Trouble & Strife” is an acoustic number    describing additional trouble with women that features more fine picking    from Weston.  Eyers shows    his versatility throughout the disc, whether pounding out the beat on    the hard-driving “Getting Your Letters” or using brushes for the gently    swinging rhythm on “Evil Tongue”. His spare accompaniment on “Refugee    Child” does a lot with a cymbal and a tambourine. At times,    things drag a bit as Weston’s vocals don’t generate enough excitement to    overcome the simple guitar patterns. Still, there are several memorable    performances on the disc and it is a solid effort that this duo cab take    pride in. It will be interesting to see if this release can capture some    attention amidst the seemingly endless stream of recordings flooding the    market these days.      Reviewer Mark Thompson    is president of the    Crossroads Blues Society in Rockford. IL.       For other reviews and interviews on our website       CLICK HERE  |   
       Featured Blues Review 3 of 4   
|     Self    Release 2010 9    tracks; 38.15 minutes  Open Blues    is a five piece band from Torun in Poland with a fairly standard line-up    of harp/vocals (Przemyslaw Losos)), guitar/vocals (Wieslaw Krysewski),    keyboards (Igor Nowicki), bass (Tomasz Imienowski) and drums (Grzegorz    Minicz). They have been together since 2008 and this is their first CD.    It was recorded live in a local club in Torun, though apart from a    little crowd noise at the end of the tracks it would be difficult to    tell, as the recording is excellent. The album consists of four    originals and five covers. The originals are all in Polish. The    immediate concern is not understanding the Polish lyrics. However, I    have to ask myself the obvious question: how do speakers of other    languages get on with English lyrics and access American or English    blues songs? Well, English is a wider spoken and understood language    than Polish, but I was faced with an issue here (which I recognise is my    own inadequacy in not speaking any Polish). So, I have simply evaluated    the performance on the originals, not being able to appreciate the    lyrics (though I did have the advantage of a translation facility on the    laptop – my apologies if those are not the intended titles!) The CD    opens with “Blues Zawaladnal Moja Dusza” (Blues Possessed My Soul), some    sharp harp introducing a shuffle with excellent piano, including a nice    solo. The title song Seta W Ryja! (Set In The Snout!) is anchored by a    strong guitar riff and an enthusiastic chorus. The first    cover is John Lee Hooker’s “Boom Boom”, played pretty straight. The    singer has certainly an accent but the lyrics are perfectly    understandable, especially given that this is a live recording – I have    heard less clear English bands, to be honest. Here the keyboard player    has switched to organ and interchanges swirling solos with the harp. The    song zips along and was very enjoyable. Jimmy Rogers’ “Walking By    Myself” follows, probably learned from the late Gary Moore’s cover. High    note harp introduces the tune and the piano is back. I did not find the    vocal as convincing here as on “Boom Boom”. The longest    track on the CD is “The Thrill Is Gone” which is played at a relaxed    pace, the piano again playing some lovely jazzy chords beneath the    lyrics. The vocalist struggles at times with this song, his voice    seeming better suited to the uptempo songs. The guitar player uses a    scat vocal technique with his solo, reminding me of George Benson. There    is also a solo on synth sounding like a flute.  The last    four tracks alternate Polish and English lyrics. “Mysle O Tym” (Don’t    Think About It) is a catchy little tune led by the harp. That is a good    way of leading into Junior Wells’ “Messin’ With The Kid” where there are    solos for piano, guitar and harp, the tune being taken at the usual fast    pace we all know. “Komu Bije Blues” (For Whom Blues) is another uptempo    shuffle with the guitar and harp prominent. Final track is Willie    Dixon’s “I Want To Be Loved”. Somewhat to my surprise this is not taken    at breakneck speed as it often is. The tune is therefore closer to the    original and I notice that the singer actually uses “I wants to be    loved” in the chorus – very authentic. The harp is again at the front of    the solos, with electric piano next. All the    tracks bar one are quite short, three or four minutes, so solos are    short and to the point. The CD is well arranged and played and the band    seem to have been very well prepared for the recording. Overall I found    this a good listen, especially the instrumental playing where all the    solo instruments were excellent. The vocals are not quite as good, but    acceptable. It is great to find bands in countries a long way from the    USA interested and motivated by the blues to produce their own material    in a blues vein and I commend the Open Blues guys for their efforts. The CD is    available from the band’s website.          Reviewer                   John Mitchell is a blues enthusiast based in the UK.    He also travels to the States most years to see live blues music. He was    recently on the January 2011 Legendary Blues Cruise.       For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE  |   
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       Featured Blues Review 4 of 4   
|     As with the    previous tributes she has done on Sunhouse and Robert Johnson, Rory    Block sees fit to add an additional link in her tribute to Fred Mcdowell    on her latest release Shake Em On Down. As with the case on the    other releases, it is just Rory playing acoustic guitar wrapping her    snaky slide guitar around the arrangements. She even throws in some    original material of her own which holds well to Mcdowell's    compositions. In her    liner notes on the CD, Block goes over each of the songs, speaking of    the arrangements and how McDowell's influence affected her.Block is one    of the very few artists who can re-interpret the old classics with flair    made popular by the original country blues masters. Her arrangements are    always haunting, fresh from the Delta soil unearthed. How can you    not feel you are standing at the crossroads when Rory puts her stamp on    McDowell's "What's The Matter Now?" And "Kokomo Blues" swims    effortlessly in its bootlegger whiskey.  It make    take a little getting used to the added gospel vocals on the title    track. Because since when does a song of forbidden lust become a musical    candidate for the baptist church?  Though    gender roles are confronted in "Good Morning Little School Girl" and    "The Man That I'm Lovin," Rory has no problem in pulling off the    material as her guitar-work makes the songs otherworldly as if    Mcdowell's spirit is watching closely.  Her own    number "The Breadline" with its lyrics of being down and out in a    poverty stricken world goes hand in hand with the present world. Witness    this from the chorus: "Ain't got no money." "Ain't got no home." "Cant    afford no doctor." "Cant by no food." Accept this as Block preaching to    the choir or simply stating a fact. Ending on    Mcdowell's "Write Me A Few Lines" ends this tribute on an upbeat note.    Meeting John Hurt, Son House, Reverend Gary Davis among others, has    contributed greatly to Block's treasure-chest of musical memories laying    buried somewhere on Highway 61.          Review by    Gary "Wingman" Weeks.       For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE  |   
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