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John 'blueshammer' Hammer
Blue Monday Monthly Magazine
www.bluemondaymonthly.com
Hammered By The Blues Weekly Radio
KOWZ 1170am/ 100.9fm
510 West McKinley
Owatonna, MN 55060
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|        From The Editors Desk      Hey Blues Fans,    The Blues Music Awards Ceremonies were held last night in Memphis, TN.    Big winners included Buddy Guy who took home 5 trophies including Album    of the Year , B.B. King Entertainer of the Year, Contemporary Blues    Album of the Year , Contemporary Blues Male Artist of the Year and Song    of the Year.     Charlie Musselwhite picked up two more BMA wins and Solomon Burke who    won both Soul Blues Album of the Year and Soul Blues Male Artist of the    Year.    Sentimental favorite of the awards show was Robin Rogers who won    Contemporary Blues Female Artist of the Year. Robin passed away this    year just a couple days after the 2011 BMA nominees were announced. We    have a complete list of all the winners at the bottom of this issue.    SCROLL DOWN    Noted photographer Marilyn    Stringer was there to catch all the fun for Blues Blast Magazine and we will have her complete    photo coverage of the show in an upcoming issue.    Good Blues To You!    Bob Kieser         In This Issue         Chefjimi Patricola has our feature interview with Eden Brent. Rainey Wetnight   reviews a new CD by The Curbfeelers. George "Blues Fin Tuna" Fish reviews   a new CD by Blues International. Steve Jones reviews a new CD by Eric Bibb.    John Mitchell reviews a compilation CD by Popa Chubby.   Mark Thompson reviews a new CD by Rich DelGrosso & Jonn Del Toro Richardson. All this and MORE! SCROLL DOWN!!! | 
|    Matt  Schofield    Robin & The Bluebirds    Bill Lynch & The    Midwestern Icons    Buddy Flett    The Ominous Anonymous    Peterson Brothers Band    Pleasant Hill Quilting    Group |  |    David  “Honeyboy” Edwards    Allen Fox Band    Ezra Charles Band    Omar Sharriff    Diedra & The Pro Ruff    Band Bobbie Oliver & Jam City Revue    Matthew Davidson Band Presented by Metro PCS | 
|    (903) 756-7774                      www.tbonewalkerbluesfestival.com             Ticket pricing: Online | ||
|       A dynamo whether on piano or vocally, Ms. Eden Brent has taken the Blues    world by storm over the last few years. A fan favorite on the Legendary    Rhythm & Blues Cruise where she holds court at the piano bar, or trading    licks with other keyboardists at piano showcases. But her relaxed    self-effacing posture hides what is a truly talented musician and deeply    interesting lady of the Blues. I was thrilled to get the chance to sit    down and talk to her about how she got here, and where she is headed.    Enjoy !       EB: Boogaloo had been living in the Mississippi Delta since the    mid-1960’s but moved to Greenville, my hometown in about 1980. As a    young teenager, I heard Boogaloo at parties and restaurants. When I was    fifteen, he played my boat christening party after I christened the M/V    EDEN BRENT, a towboat built and owned by my family shipyard and river    transportation company. A year later he played my older sister’s wedding    reception, and a few years after that, he played a celebration honoring    my father as the King of the Queen of Hearts Ball, a kind of Mardi Gras    type celebration here in my hometown. So I had seen Boogaloo play many    times, and he was sort of a fixture all over the Delta. Everybody in the    Mississippi Delta knew Boogaloo, and he normally entertained the white,    wealthy social class here. All of the wealthier folks loved him because    he could play anything, all the old jazz standards, popular country    songs like “Release Me” and popular rock and roll songs like the    Beatles’ “Yesterday.” He could play it all and he was very charming and    charismatic. They all respected him, and I never heard him say “Yes Ma’m”    to anybody like I had been brought up to do and some of the older folks    from his generation customarily do. He drank with the white, wealthy,    social class and visited with them and entertained them. They adored    him. Everybody adored him.       BB: What was it that drew you    in, to want to learn at his side?       EB:   I always admired him but didn’t consider asking him to teach me until I    enrolled at University of North Texas. Before that, I had planned on    being a rock star. I had played in a couple of rock bands as a junior    high and high school student, but usually the guys didn’t really want me    or maybe even any chick in the band. They only needed me to play stuff    like the piano solo in “Freebird” or the synthesizer solo in The Cars’ s    song “Just What I Needed” or that cool opening synth sound and solo in    Rush’s “Tom Sawyer”. As a freshman in music college at UNT, I was not    making much progress learning how to play, really. I was learning a lot    about music theory but having a hard time putting a practical    application to the jazz harmonies and jazz concepts that were    introduced. In other words, I could talk about jazz harmony but I    couldn’t play it. I would go to hear Boogaloo on college breaks and    request certain tunes, and Boogaloo and I developed a kind of    friendship. He knew my parents of course, but we were developing a    friendship of our own. On college break sometime in 1984, I asked him if    he would teach me. He taught me during my college breaks, nearly every    time I came back to Mississippi. I even took a break from UNT for about    nine months, moved home and worked as a commodities broker in training    briefly, then attended classes at Delta State University. Boogaloo    taught me during this time, too. I returned to North Texas to complete    my bachelor’s degree in music theory. Throughout it all Boogaloo was    providing the practical education that I really valued and the very    thing I was not getting in music school. His style was magical. I    watched people light up when they were near him and when they were    listening to him play. He made everybody laugh and smile and dance and    tap their feet. Everybody loved Boogaloo, and I wanted to learn to give    people that kind of joy. After I graduated college, I studied with    Boogaloo more regularly, and we applied for and received a Folk Arts    Apprenticeship Grant from the Mississippi Arts Commission. The MAC paid    Boogaloo to teach me twice weekly for a period of three months. I    learned more in those three months than in any other single year that we    worked together. I took it very seriously because we were required to    submit a final report, and I wanted to make sure that I exhibited    adequate progress so that he would get final payment which was sizable.    Boogaloo taught me throughout our friendship, but our teacher and    student relationship developed into a performing duo and a lifelong    friendship which continued until his death February 4, 2002. We    celebrated birthdays together and went out drinking and dancing.    Boogaloo taught me the importance of a strong, rhythmic bass line in    solo playing and some wonderful piano licks, but he also taught me how    to dress properly and be gracious to the audience. He was really    something.       BB: You have been quoted as    saying something to the effect of 'music school taught me to think, but    Boogaloo taught me to Boogie", tell me more about this and the    differences that exist between thinking and really playing music. What    is your background musically?       The academic education that I received at North Texas did help me to    understand the techniques that Boogaloo was teaching me. Most    importantly, my academic education gave me tools that aided my    understanding and helped me to remember what he showed me lesson to    lesson. I also recorded our lessons on a cassette recorder, but having    notes and figures notated on staff paper to help me practice the licks    and bass lines he was showing me was very helpful, and I would not have    had good ways to communicate that without my North Texas experience. The    two types of education actually complemented each other nicely, and    neither without the other would have been as effective. In other words,    the whole was much greater than the sum of the parts. I’m really lucky    to have had both experiences, and I think it gave me a more rounded    musicianship. I’m very proud of my music degree from North Texas and    also very proud of my time with Boogaloo.       BB: With    Pinetops' passing, where does that leave the state of piano blues?       The Pinetop Foundation will carry on Pinetop’s legacy through the annual    workshops. The second annual workshop is scheduled for June 15 – June    17, 2011 in Clarksdale. Scholarships are available for students under    the age of 21, but students of all ages are encouraged to participate.    Ann Rabson will once again lead the piano classes, and this year’s    workshop features the addition of a guitar workshop, led by Bob Margolin.    More information can be found at PinetopPerkinsFoundation.org.       BB: You won the the Pinetop    Piano Player Award from the Blues Foundation at the BMA's, what was your    relationship with Pinetop?         EB:    I met Pinetop at his Homecoming in Clarksdale in October 2002 held    annually at Hopson Plantation. Ike Turner was in town, too, and I met    both of them there. Ike had been a student of Pinetop’s way back, and I    noticed that Pinetop was wearing a suit just like Ike’s band members had    been wearing that weekend. It showed me that Ike still had a great    admiration for Pinetop and was looking after him a little. I was    completely star-struck, of course, and Pinetop was really sweet to me    that afternoon. I got my photo made with him and was really excited    about that. Since then, I saw Pinetop at Mississippi and blues events    and always made a point to sit and visit with him when I saw him. We’d    smoke cigarettes together and snicker at all the pretty gals passing by.    I played at the Mississippi Blues Trail Marker unveiling in Clarksdale    in 2008 where Pinetop was an honoree. I started into “Pinetop’s Boogie”    to encourage Pinetop to play because I could tell that everybody wanted    him to. And he did, and he was wonderful. I watched him with adoration    during his short set that day and gave him a big tip for playing. We    only worked on the same stage together once, at a Mississippi Grammy    event in 2009. I was really proud to sing a duet with him at that event    and knew that the moment would always be a career milestone in my    memory. Then, last year, when my name was announced as the Pinetop    Perkins Piano Player Award recipient, I know the smile on my face must    have said it all. What a moment! I’ve never really felt like music is a    contest, and I take awards for what they are: a way to celebrate    everybody, not just trophy takers, but all of the nominees. Winning an    award isn’t necessarily the measure of one’s ability or quality of one’s    work, but winning does validate your music to some extent, and it really    meant a lot to me to hug and kiss Pinetop and his manager Pat Morgan at    that “winning” moment and to pay homage to Pinetop and to my mentor,    Boogaloo. I admire Pinetop and am really proud of his Mississippi roots,    and I want to honor his memory and follow his example. The Pinetop Piano    Player Award is really the award I have wanted more than any other, and    I am so grateful that I was able to live that moment while Pinetop was    still with us. I’m grateful that he shared that moment with me. It don’t    get no better than that.       EB:   I am very blessed to have an eclectic taste in music so I enjoy    performing and appreciate lots of styles. I really enjoy entertaining    and have always considered myself a better entertainer than a recording    artist. I try to tackle various styles so that my shows can have a    beginning, middle and end, just like a sonata or a stage play would    have. In order to try to keep the audience’s interest, I try to    incorporate boogies and ballads and shuffles and slow blues and soul    songs and even some comedy, at least with funny songs. I work to keep    the show interesting for everybody. Boogie is about the most fun to    play, but I like to vary the rhythms and moods of the songs so that the    show flows. When I sing a mournful ballad, I sometimes start to cry, and    while I want to move the audience, I don’t really want to make them sad.    So I try to offer happy songs and funny songs to give a little comic    relief. I do love to sing ballads, like “Leave Me Alone”. I want for the    audience to feel something, to forget their troubles, to hopefully    transcend the moment and leave the show with the feeling that they’re    glad they came. I like all of it, but not all repeatedly throughout a    show. For instance, I used to work with a blues band that performed a    lot of tunes in a row that vamp on only one chord with maybe a certain    catching riff, songs like “Wang Dang Doodle”. I love that song, but I    don’t want to play it “all night long.” Eventually, I want to change    keys or play a chord progression or a different groove or rhythm. So, I    love playing all sorts of grooves and keys and tempos, but I enjoy all    of them best when they are followed by something contrasting but    complementary.       BB: How    did you develop your vocal style?          EB: What’s really funny is that I’ve never really considered    myself a singer first, always a piano player first, but more people    respond positively to, or compliment my voice than my piano playing.    It’s kind of ironic that I spent years and years trying to be a piano    player and most audiences think of me as a singer first. I always sang,    ever since childhood. Everybody in my family sings. We sing together    during family holidays and gatherings and harmonize nicely together. I    grew up in a house where we often sang together after supper and nearly    always sang a song or two for guests who visited. Often when I and my    family are guests of a party, we are coaxed into performing a tune or    two. So I suppose that my voice sort of developed naturally. In music    school at UNT, voice was my second instrument, but I was studying    classical voice, very different than the more popular style that I sing    now. I was singing soprano then, too, and I am definitely an alto in my    chest voice or popular voice. It seems much more natural to me because    even my speaking voice has always been rather low. I am repeatedly    referred to as “Sir” on the telephone, much more often than “Ma’am.”    What’s great is that even though I never felt that my voice was suited    for classical or opera, many of the techniques that I learned were    helpful for any style. For instance, breathing from below the diaphragm    (as I had also learned when playing flute in high school band) is    helpful to maintain more vocal and pitch control. Opening my mouth and    throat gives better vocal tone and control. Even visualization    techniques are helpful. For example, if I imagine the pitch above a high    note that I am having trouble hitting or that I tend to sing flat, it    helps to more consistently hit the proper note. My visualizing the pitch    above the high note, or trying to sing that problematic note a bit sharp    helps to achieve the desired pitch.        All in all, the thing that developed my vocal style is singing a lot and    singing everything from arias to Aretha. Singing is on one hand very    simple because even babies can do it. But on the other hand, singing is    complex because there are many things to focus on: annunciation, breath,    pitch, vibrato, dynamics, melody, phrasing, rhythm and emotion. The    trick is to somehow use all of the elements of the voice and melody to    convey the message of the song, whether pensive or sassy or humorous,    whatever. I love to sing, and I am thankful that my voice has been well    received by audiences. The voice is the most universal and powerful    instrument in the world. I’ve listened to and mimicked many voices and    even horns and violins. I love lots of singers, but probably my most    favorite are the voices that are unusual or androgynous and voices that    have a lot of overtones. The voices that I am least drawn to are those    that are simply pretty without being distinctive. I would rather listen    to a not so pretty voice sing with feeling than a pretty voice sing    without. I wouldn’t say that I have any major influences exactly.    Anybody who I have ever heard sing has influenced me, and I love    listening to both men and women. I’ve listened to many different styles,    but my study of jazz probably colored my style more than anything else,    besides Boogaloo. I studied the jazz greats like Ella Fitzgerald, Nat    King Cole, Mel Torme, Dinah Washington, June Christy, Chet Baker, Billie    Holiday, and loads of others, as well as many blues and soul greats. One    of my most influential albums was Aretha Franklin, Aretha Sings the    Blues, recorded in 1965, I think, and on it she not only sings great    blues but plays great blues piano, too.       EB:    Boogaloo was overwhelmingly my major piano influence, but I have    listened to lots of pianists and have been influenced or at least    impressed by most of them. I studied the jazz styles of Art Tatum, Errol    Garner, Horace Silver, Nat King Cole, Bill Evans and other greats. I    also studied blues piano records like Memphis Slim and Floyd Dixon, but    I was most drawn to the women who sing and play, like Julia Lee, Camille    Howard and Katie Webster. Boogaloo didn’t mention a lot of contemporary    piano players, so it wasn’t until some years after we got together that    I learned about contemporary greats like Marcia Ball. She and I actually    know each other now, and it knocks me out that I am friendly with    somebody whose music and career inspired mine. One of my newer    inspirations is the best kept secret in blues music, Memphis pianist and    singer Di Anne Price who delivers a song with as much charisma as anyone    on the planet ever has.       BB:    Let's see, in 2006 you won the IBC's, in 2009 you walked away with 2    BMA's, and in 2010 the Pinetop Perkins Piano Player Award, dang, that's    not bad !       EB:    My career progress before becoming a member of my local blues society    versus afterwards is remarkable. The Mississippi Delta Blues Society of    Indianola sponsored me at the 2006 IBC which introduced me to The Blues    Foundation, and the rest has been like a blues fairytale. I know that    “blues fairytale” sounds like an oxymoron, but it’s the best way I can    describe it. Apparently, I had the proper tools for a greater success,    but The Blues Foundation and its membership introduced me to a worldwide    audience that enjoyed my music. Since Boogaloo’s passing, the most    important relationship that I have developed in his absence has been    that with The Blues Foundation which changed my life exponentially.            BB: Where does Eden Brent go    now ?       EB:    I’m headed to the top of course, but that doesn’t mean I won’t have to    crawl back up from the bottom! The great thing about music is that the    sky is the limit. In other words, there are no limits. I continue to    strive towards developing my musicianship, style and performance. In    music or any other art form, the blessing is the curse, since the    artist’s pursuit is endless. Every success is satisfying, but no success    is truly satisfactory. Every success celebrated, of course, but only    tentatively because the drive toward progress is so strong. It is a    blessing to always have something to strive for, but likewise, it is a    curse to always have to strive for something.            I want to continue to write songs that folks relate to, make albums that    people respond to and perform shows that audiences connect with, but I    want to do these things with increasing perfection. Perfection can’t    ever be reached, naturally, but the pursuit of it is relentless. I would    be delighted to win awards, stay on the charts, and get great reviews,    but pleasing myself and satisfying audiences are very personal and    enduring rewards. As I’ve said before, while trophies, charts, reviews    and other accolades validate one’s music to some extent, the musical    pursuit is ongoing and very personally rewarding. I love connecting with    people and visiting new places. Very often I am humbled by the kindness    and generosity of music fans from all over the world.       BB:    Your latest release 'Ain't got No Troubles' was produced by Colin    Linden, how was it to work with him?       EB:    Colin is an absolute joy to work with. He is very knowledgeable about    sound gear and microphones and techniques to achieve the right sound,    and he’s an expert at conveying the mood of a certain song. He has loads    of very technical knowledge and ability, but he is also very personable    and charming and clever and funny. He is tasteful in every way,    personally and in his many musical professions. Colin is a truly    versatile musician and not at all limited to any particular style of    playing. He did fabulous guitar work on the album and exactly what was    appropriate for the material. I love his playing and it enhanced the    music in all the right ways. He is also a great song writer and one of    the most played and requested songs on the album is a tune of his called    “Later Than You Think” which has a mysterious sort of edge and chord    changes that are really fun to play. I also had a ball playing that    piano solo. He wound up making the most honest studio recording of me    ever, and I am so pleased with it. I admire him very much not only    because of his tremendous ability as a producer, engineer and guitarist,    but I also admire him because of his very easy disposition. Recording    has never been more relaxed for me, and his method completely erased all    my fear of the studio and the recording process. He knew that I was    intimidated by the process, yet he made it so easy. All I did was play    and sing, and he did everything else. What’s interesting is that as a    teenager years ago, Colin came to Hollandale, Mississippi, only about 25    miles from my home, and apprenticed with Sam Chatmon of the Mississippi    Sheiks, much the same way that I apprenticed with Boogaloo. I am sure    that I probably saw Colin at Chatmon’s grave marker dedication in    Hollandale years later, but we weren’t introduced at the time. It’s too    bad. Interestingly, I didn’t know this story about Colin and Sam until    we had been in the studio for a couple or three days, but I have often    thought this shared history contributed to our getting on so well. Colin    is a genius and a man of many hats, although you wouldn’t know it by    looking at him. He wears the same damn outfit everyday, and I love it!    He is my Blues Rabbi.       BB:    How did you two meet, and what drove you to work together for this    release?       BB: What are you up to these    days ?       EB:    Last year was crazy busy with recording Ain’t Got No Troubles then    promoting and releasing it. Lately my schedule has been slower than I    enjoy. I am glad I got some time to rest, reflect and get myself    together after a busy year, but now I’m getting a bit restless. My    touring schedule picks up later this summer, but this year has had an    unusually slow start. I am using the idle time to plan and develop the    concept for my next album. I am still not sure exactly which direction    this album will take me, but having the leisure time to knock around new    ideas is kind of a luxury, and I’m enjoying that creative process at the    Mississippi Delta pace. I’m writing some new songs and developing songs    from an ongoing collection of song ideas that I maintain. I’m also    practicing licks and bass lines and grooves that I should have mastered    years ago, and I’m learning some new classic songs that I’ve always    wanted to add to my repertoire.            Again, I want my next album to do be fresh and different. I don’t want    to make Ain’t Got No Troubles II either. Ain’t Got No Troubles came to    me by way of the title song just a week before I went into the studio    with Colin, so sometimes the perfect ideas come together at just the    right time, but in their own time. I look at each album as a new    adventure and a way to continue my musical journey. I want to grow and    develop as a musician and songwriter and hope that each new album will    show progress. I don’t have any idea how some recording and touring    artists are able to record, promote, release and tour a new album nearly    every year. That pace amazes but would exhaust me. After all, I’m from    the Delta, and we don’t get in too much of a hurry around here! I’m    still developing my songwriting abilities, and that craft requires    practice. Music is an art form, but it’s also a business, and making an    album is a great way to continue to promote and market your business.    Perhaps I will even hone my business and marketing craft. I am hopeful    that someday I might learn to be a more organized and better    businesswoman. The only problem with all that is that if I had actually    wanted a business career, then I would have likely chosen something a    little more lucrative than a career in blues music, but guaranteed, it    wouldn’t have been nearly this much fun or this rewarding! I guess    that’s the blues for sure!        BB:    OK, here's one for ya. tell us about some music that you listen to    purely for Eden Brent? Stuff that not many people know you listen to?    Like in my case my guilty music pleasure is sometimes going back to    listen to Paul Revere & The Raiders...LOL...what's the stuff no one    would ever imagine you liking?       EB:    I have so much favorite music! My favorite late night radio stations are    the gospel ones like “Hallelujah FM” and the true blues stations where    the DJ talks through most of the song, giving shout outs and singing    along with the record and talking about the recording artist who’s    singing. Right now on my turntable is Mozart’s Symphony 29 in A Major.    In my cassette deck is a recording of my 32nd birthday party where all    my Greenville blues friends showed up to play. In my car CD player is my    sister Bronwynne’s new album that is my absolute new favorite thing. I    love Ray Charles and Betty Carter singing “Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye”    and I’m a sucker for cool rock and roll like Yes’ “I’ve Seen All Good    People” or “Roundabout.” Several years ago my sisters and I were    performing at a local festival. In the middle of our concert we launched    into AC/DC’s “You Shook Me All Night Long.” It was a wonderful choice,    right there in the middle of my boogie and blues and my sisters’    country, folk and indie singer/songwriter stuff and all three of us    harmonizing on classics like CSN’s “Helplessly Hoping.” I love Thin    Lizzy doing “The Boys Are Back in Town,” and one of the best rock and    roll songs ever written is “Stranglehold” by Ted Nugent. I guess the    rock and roll would be the most surprising to people who’ve heard me,    but I don’t know. The blues had a baby and named it rock and roll,    right?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 | 
| Self    Release Styles:    Full band sound in Up-tempo Blues, Soul, Funky Rocking rhythms, Slow    Female- Vocal Love Songs, New Orleans rhythms When it    comes to music, deciding whether it’s “good” or “bad” is a matter of    subjective opinion. Case in point: Some listeners like the sound of    horns in blues music. Other listeners can’t stand that! However, this    reviewer feels that in the case of the Curbfeelers and their latest CD,    “Grit ‘n’ Groove,” there lies a certain patch of common ground. Blues    music is not meant to make people feel melancholy or depressed. On the    contrary--it’s meant to chase the blues away and let listeners know that    someone understands (about being broke, losing love, and adult    dilemmas). “Grit ‘n’ Groove” does exactly this and more. Every single    one of this fun album’s songs banishes one’s blues. The    Curbfeelers, a Blues and Soul band based in Arlington VA, have been    playing Chicago Blues and Soul music in area clubs for the past several    years. The band was formed in 1997 with some talented local musicians.    Laying down the "Groove" is the rhythm section of Sally Swan (bass,    vocals, and background vocals) and Jeff Miles on drums. Working that    "groove" and filling out the band are none other than: Pete Connell    (songwriter, guitar & vocals), Peter Runk (songwriter and keyboards,    David Harris (songwriter, blues harp), and the horn section: Neil Reedy    (trumpet), Charles Dharapak (Baritone sax), Tom Anderson (tenor sax),    and Howard Levine (alto sax). Diversity and enthusiasm are their fortes.  On this,    their third record, all but one of the fourteen songs on “Grit ’n’    Groove” are band member originals, and the quality makes one glad no    songs were left off, replaced by remakes and covers. “Try to    Satisfy” takes a commanding lead as the swinging blues first track.    Sally Swan on sassy vocals sings, “My baby went out shopping down at the    mall. He bought me a diamond ring--I said, ‘Take it back, it’s too    small!’ I know you’re trying. Baby, can’t you see? I know I satisfy you.    Why can’t you satisfy me?” Even though this kicker and the funky “Got    Love” are notable earworms, Swan’s finest singing comes on slower songs    like the fantastic “If I Knew Now.” As for Pete Connell, who performs    “grittier” numbers, his highlights are “Red Wine (with red-hot guitar),    the New Orleans flavored “[Back to the] Cul de Sac,” and the hilarious    “Coal for Xmas.” Check out the wry “Jingle Bells” riff on the end! The    Curbfeelers feel the blues deep down, and it shows. No matter what your    personal taste in blues instruments, “The Curbfeelers” will make you    feel fantastic!      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 | 
|   You can submit a maximum of 175 words or less in a Text or MS Word document   format.   Mississippi Valley Blues Society -   Davenport, IA   The Mississippi Valley Blues Society presents the 2011 Mississippi Valley   Blues Festival July 1 -3, 2011 in Davenport, IA.      Artists scheduled to perform include Linsey Alexander, Jimmy Burns, Eric   Gales, Paul Rishell and Annie Raines, Dwayne Dopsie and the Zydeco   Hellraisers, RJ Mischo with Earl Cate with Them, Smokin’ Joe Kubek & Bnois   King,“Way of Blues” Revue from Mississippi on Friday July 1st, Chocolate   Thunder, Kevin Burt, Lionel Young Band, Johnny Nicholas, Ryan McGarvey,   Peaches Staten, Mississippi Heat, Joe Louis Walker and a Koko Taylor Tribute   featuring Nellie “Tiger” Travis, Chick Rogers, Jackie Scott and Delores   Scott on Saturday July 2nd, and The Candymakers, Winter Blues Kids,   Studebaker John and the Hawks, Harper, Chris Beard, The Paul Smoker Notet,   Rich DelGrosso and John Richardson, Sherman Robertson, Mitch Woods and his   Rocket 88s and Otis Clay on Sunday July 3rd.      For more information or to purchase tickets visit www.mvbs.org or   call (563) 322-5837   The Alabama Blues Project -   Northport, AL   Rural Members Association and the Alabama Blues Project presents the 14th   Annual Freedom Creek Festival in honor of the late, great Willie King. The   festival will be held Saturday, June 2nd 2011 from 11am until 10 pm at   “Cookieman’s” Place at 1438 Hwy 17 South/Wilder Circle, Aliceville, AL.      The Rural Members Association is proud to announce the 14th Annual Freedom   Creek Blues Festival founded by the late great Willie King and held this   year in his honor, following his untimely passing in 2009. Lineup:   international blues stars Super Chikan and Homemade Jamz will headline the   show.      The festival will open gospel music from the Mississippi Nightingales. Blues   bands will play all day, including the Alabama Blues Project Advanced   Student Band, local bluesmen Clarence Davis and “Birmingham” George Conner,   the Alabama Blues Women Review including Shar Baby, Rachel Edwards, B.J.   Miller and Debbie Bond. Birmingham blues great Elnora Spencer band, Little G   Weevil, the Missississippi Blues Boys . . . and more! Admissions is by   suggested donation of $10. For more information: www.willie-king.com or call   (205) 752 6263.   The Santa Barbara Blues Society - Santa   Barbara, CA   The Santa Barbara Blues Society is the oldest existing blues society in the   U.S. The next SBBS   show will be on June 11 with dynamic band Café R&B! Check  www.SBBlues.org for more info.   The Henderson Music Preservation Society   - Henderson, KY      The Henderson Music Preservation Society peresents the 21th Annual W.C.   Handy Blues and Barbecue Festival in Henderson on June 11-18. The festival   will host performances in a wide variety of blues styles, from gritty   Chicago blues to smooth soul to Delta blues. The lineup includes Preston   Shannon, The Amazing Soul Crackers, The Cold Stares on Wendesday June 15,   Matt Schofield and Terrance Simien & the Zydeco Experience on Thursday June   16, Dana Fuchs, Guitar Shorty, Deanna Bogart, Mightychondria, Beasley Band,   Damon Fowler on Friday June 17 and John Primer with special guests, Lurrie   Bell and Eddie Shaw, The Dynamites featuring Charles Walker, Carolyn   Wonderland, Lionel Young Band, Eden Brent and Damon Fowler on Saturday June   18.      For more information about the festival, go to  www.handyblues.org or contact:   Christi G. Dixon at cdixon@handyblues.org, Marcia Eblen at marcia@hendersonky.org   or call 1-800-648-3128.   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 4th. 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       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   Illinois Central Blues Club -   Springfield, IL   The Illinois Central Blues Club presents “Ladies Sing The Blues For Illinois   WINGS” Saturday, May 7, 2011 at 7:00pm at the Hoogland Center for the Arts,   Theater III, 420 South Sixth Street, Springfield, Illinois.      This special concert is to raise awareness and funds for Illinois WINGS, a   non-profit organization whose mission is to bring quality breast cancer   treatment to women and men in central and southern Illinois regardless of   their ability to pay. Female vocalists scheduled to appear will include Mary   Jo Curry, Ruth LaMaster, Brooke Thomas, Josie Lowder, Lorrie Eden and Lori   Ann Mitts and will be backed up by Tombstone Bullet who will serve as the   house band for the event.       Admission to the concert is $10.00 at the Hoogland Center Box Office or   online at   http://www.hcfta.org/tickets.html . Net proceeds from ticket sales will   be donated to Illinois WINGS.   Also 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. May 9 - The Blues Deacons,  May 16 - James Armstrong, May 23 - Eric "Guitar" Davis and the   Troublemakers, May 30 – Steve the Harp, June 6 – Matt Hill, June 13 - Frank   Herrin & Blues Power, June 20 – Roger ‘Hunnicane’ Wilson, June 27 – Jim   Suhler & Monkey Beat.  icbluesclub.org    The Alabama Blues Project -   Northport, AL   The Alabama Blues Project is proud to present the annual "Blues   Extravaganza" Friday May20th 6pm at the Bama Theatre, 600 Greensboro Avenue,   Tuscaloosa AL.   The show features Grammy winner Sugar Blue and the Alabama Blues Project   student blues musicians. Sugar Blue is the Grammy-winning harmonica player   who has played and recorded with Johnny Shines, Willie Dixon. Bob Dylan,   Stevie Wonder and the Rolling Stones, amongst many others.      This annual celebration is the culmination of the Alabama Blues Project's   after-school Blues Camp program and features our young students, alongside   internationally renowned blues artist. The event will feature blues all   night long showcasing our Blues Camp musicians' bands and our Blues   Instructors Bruce Andrews, Shar Baby, Stuart Bond, BJ Reed, Debbie Bond and   BJ Miller.   Tickets available at   brownpapertickets.com  - general seating $12.50, VIP $35 and $50.   For further information call (205) 752 6263 or email  info@alabamablues.org  www.alabamablues.org . We are on   Facebook!    | 
|    Blues International (Australia)    13 tracks - Total time: 53:28    Melbourne, Australia’s Blues International takes its name from the    multi-country origins of its members: guitarist/vocalist Tommy Blank is    Swedish, guitarist/vocalist Chris Dawes in British, and both    drummer/vocalist Les Oldman and bassist John Dynon are Aussies. The    group’s live-in-the-studio debut CD, Smooth and Slippery at Atlantis,    takes its title from its recording at Atlantis Sound—hence the rather    unusual name. A good part of the strength of Blues International is the    versatility of its personnel; three vocalists, and two guitarists who    are able to alternate on both rhythm and lead. In addition, two of its    members, Les Oldman and Chris Dawes, are also songwriters, having    together penned seven of the CD’s 13 tracks. All four musicians    comprising Blues International are long-time veterans of Australia’s pop    and blues music scene.    Also know for his custom-made guitars and amps, Tommy Blank credits the    late British blues guitarist Peter Green as his chief influence, and    Green is further given special thanks by the band as a whole on the CD    jacket. The CD features three Peter Green compositions, with Blank    taking lead roles on two. These are track 1, the lyrical non-blues    instrumental “Albatross,” and track 5, the blues-rock “Oh Well,” two    well-known songs quite familiar to listeners of classic rock radio.    Needless to say, Tommy Blank takes the guitar lead on the lyrical    non-blues instrumental, “Albatross,” and half-talks the vocals and does    lead guitar on the blues-rock “Oh Well,” done here essentially as an    extended instrumental with vocal breaks, each of them highlighting two    different verses. The third Peter Green number, track 10’s “Watch-Out,”    is a lesser-known traditional Chicago-style boogie shuffle, with Chris    Dawes on rhythm guitar and vocals, and Tommy Blank again on lead.    Three other songs on the CD are also non-band originals. Track7, “Need    Your Love So Bad,” sung by Chris Dawes, is a slow, insistent, blues    ballad whose theme is nicely summed up in the title; track 9, also sung    by Dawes, is an up-tempo blues lament again summed up by its title, the    loneliness of living in a “Cold, Cold World.” Les Oldman does the vocals    on the last non-band original, track 13’s magnificent contemporary    medium-tempo blues of money problems and promises to creditors to take    care of them, as the title proclaims, “Soon as I Get Paid.” Oldman also    joined with three other non-band members to compose the lone    instrumental here, the drum-showcase “Show Off,” track 8, where his    chops are amply displayed amidst a simple, direct, riffing tune.    Chris Dawes contributes two originals, and Les Oldman four originals and    is fitting, each sings his own tune. Dawes has the honors on track 3,    “Help Yourself,” a rocking soul number that takes from both Motown and    Stax influences; and again on track 11, “Raisin’ Hell,” with its mid-50s    blues, even rockabilly, feel. Les Oldman enters on track 2, the rocking    philosophical number of fooling others for a time but being found out,    “Smooth or Slippery,” and does another rocker on track 4, “Lovin’s Got    Me.” He switches to more traditional blues approaches on the Jimmy    Rogers-reminiscent jump, “Gotta Go,” track 6, and the    contemporary-sounding song of shyness getting in the way, “Old Time Me.”    Tommy Blank and Chris Dawes complement each other nicely as the group’s    dual guitarists, and there’s a nice separation on the recording that    displays each well: Dawes comes out of the right speaker facing the    listener, and Blank the left. While Dawes’ favorite groove is playing    rhythm guitar in tandem with the rhythm section, but he is an able    soloist as well, and his mellower, lower-register lead approach melds    nicely with Blank’s crisper, more often high-note, lead attack. Blank    also fills in nicely as a rhythm player when Dawes is playing lead, and    each has ample lead space. The same complementariness graces the diverse    vocalists as well. Blues International demonstrates with strength that    is an accomplished ensemble that can draw from several versatile,    skilled performers, each of whom contributes unselfishly to the total    sound, yet where each also has his own space to work things his way.     Lastly, despite the CD’s length it flows seamlessly and well throughout,    and never leaves the listener with an irritated desire to glance at his    watch. Even though several of the numbers contain longish, extended    instrumental approaches, there is never a sense with the listener of any    track being overlong, or of being undermined by gratuitous overplaying.    Which is to recommend both Blues International and Smooth and    Slippery at Atlantis as more fine offerings from a bourgeoning and    creative Australian blues scene that literally spans this island    continent from Harper’s and Dave Hole’s Perth on one end to Tasmania’s    Pete Cornelius and Melbourne’s Blues International on the other.   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 | 
| 13    tracks I finally    got to see Eric Bibb live about 5 or 6 years ago. If you have never seen    him live, you are missing out on something that you must try to get to    see and hear. Sure his CD work is spectacular and when captured live on    a special recording like this one you get to hear and feel his depth and    power in singing, songwriting, lyrics and playing. But live he is even    better. Kudos to Telarc for capturing the electricity and spark of a    fine live show- it really transmits the feel of a spectacular show! Recorded in    Upsala, Sweden, about 50 miles north of Stockholm, Bibb is joined by    Swedish guitarist Stefan Astner who has recorded with many of the music    industry greats including Ray Charles, Ian Hunter and Celine Dion. Glen    Scot, Andre De Lange and Paris Renita are known collectively as the    gospel trio Psalm4, who Bibb worked with before (both individually and    as a group) and join him in the latter half of the live show.. The set    opens with “The Cape”, a tune that hearkens back the child-like    innocence of putting one’s mind to impossible tasks and achieving them    despite what adults would deem impossible odds. It is a nice opening    track from one of the top blues story tellers and it precedes even more    great tunes. He then introduces Astner and the two get into a rousing    “New Home” and the title track; Bibbs acoustic guitar and Astner’s    electric guitar blend beautifully on top of Bibb’s storybook lyrics.  They slow    it down for the next four cuts, again harmoniously blending acoustic and    electric guitar in a tasteful and delicious blend and then raise the    tempo up slightly for two before a final slow number encore entitled    “For You”. The Pslam4 singers do an amazing job with Bibb. On    “Connected”, Bibb features DeLange in a moaning Zulu chant. Paris is    amazing “For You” while all three harmonize nicely with Bibb on “New    World Comin’ Through” and “Thanks for the Joy”. The final    two tracks are from the studio that first goes down to the country and    then into a reggae style. “Put Your Love First” is a slow country duet    with Troy Cassar-Daley and “If You Were Not My Woman” is pretty much a    joyful, straight up reggae Bibb delivers sweetly. This is    really a fine and amazing CD that shows this talented man and the    talented people he makes beautiful music with. I give Bibb high marks    for this great high CD and recommend it for anyone who wants to see how    amazing acoustic blues can be and how they can be jazzed up with    electric guitar tastefully and yet maintain the spirit of raw, acoustic    blues.        For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE | 
| Blind Willy Willing To Crawl Available now at | 
| 16    tracks; 74.58 minutes  Popa Chubby    (real name Ted Horowitz) has been a prolific performer and recording    artist since the mid 1990s. He is very popular in Europe and plays    frequently right across the continent as well as back home in the    States. He is originally from New York and this CD represents a value    for money ‘Best Of’ collection from his decade-long association with    Blind Pig. I have kept    an interested eye on this guy since the first time I saw him. Not just    because he played a good set, but also because of the way he behaved    towards the main band that night. He was supporting Little Feat in    London and after playing his set he immediately installed himself at the    front of the theatre to watch the entire Feat set, paying rapt attention    to the two guitarists, Paul Barrère and Fred Tackett. I observed that    here was a young guy intent on learning as much as possible from an    opportunity to watch two great players in action – all credit to him. On this    collection we have tracks from all Popa Chubby’s albums with Blind Pig    apart from his two Hendrix covers CDs, “Electric Chubbyland Vols 1 and    2” and the compilation of early tracks “The Hungry Years”. All material    is original except for three covers, live versions of “Hey Joe” and    “Hallelujah” and AP Carter’s “Keep On The Sunnyside Of Life”, though the    version here is a far cry from the Appalachian country original! Chubby    plays all guitars and harp (as well as drums and bass on two tracks),    supported by a variety of bass and keyboard players and drummers. I expect    that most readers will be familiar with Chubby’s output, but for those    who are not what you get is plenty of cranked up guitar, lots of slide    and good tunes. From an early stage in his career he has blended a wide    range of influences, including something of a rap feel in some tracks –    opening track “Daddy Played The Blues And Mama Was A Disco Queen” is one    such example, “Life Is A Beatdown” another. The tracks here are an    excellent introduction to the big man’s repertoire, offering a    cross-section of styles.  “How’d A    White Boy Get The Blues” is almost a country blues, “Somebody Let The    Devil Out” features some strong harp work as well as slide. “Slide Devil    Man Slide” comes into similar territory, with an element of    autobiography in the lyric. “Like The Buddha Do” is very catchy, as well    as funny. Chubby has    a way with his titles and ones such as the slide-driven rocker “If The    Diesel Don’t Get You Then The Jet Fuel Will” is an immediate winner! The    earliest song here is a live version of his first big success “Sweet    Goddess Of Love And Beer” (a concept the guys can easily relate to)    which featured on his first album released on Okeh in 1995. It’s classic    Chubby, catchy tune and an amusing, slightly unusual lyric. The longest    tracks are a respectful version of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” which    stands up very well, in my view, to other better known versions and    “Grown Man Crying Blues” which is a classic slow blues, beautifully    played. My personal favourite here is “Back In My Baby’s Arms” which is    a real rocker, and I also enjoyed the slower paced “Another Ten Years    Gone” and the slide driven “Somebody Let The Devil Out”, but frankly    every track is a keeper. The last track, the cover of “Keep On The    Sunnyside Of Life” takes what was a country tune and pushes it through    an urban filter – the result is an uptempo romp with a positive message,    a great way to conclude the collection and no doubt the reason why it is    the only exception to a strictly chronological approach.  You should    also be aware that Popa Chubby has issued several CDs on other labels,    so if this one ‘floats your boat’ there is plenty more to listen to!    Those who already have many of his Blind Pig albums will not need this    CD but for anyone just getting acquainted with him this is a highly    recommended place to start.       Review 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 | 
| 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. | 
| self-released 14    tracks/63:35 Last year I    finally made it to the Blues Music Awards show in Memphis, sponsored by    the Blues Foundation. At one point during the evening, I was talking    with the great guitarist, Billy Flynn, who had just done some Blues in    the Schools programs for our blues society. Billy grabbed someone    walking by and immediately introduced me to Jonn Del Toro Richardson.    Jonn is the award-winning guitarist who has gained fame for his work as    a member of Diunna Greenleaf's Blue Mercy Band. Flynn spoke    highly of Del Toro's abilities and made it clear that he had a    tremendous amount of respect for Jonn's work. During the discussion, Del    Toro mentioned a new project that he was working on with the great blues    mandolin player, Rich DelGrosso. I couldn't wait to hear what these two    Houston – based musicians would come up with – but I knew it would be    special. And now the    wait is over. These two musical forces use an all-original program –    eight by DelGrosso – as a springboard for their stunning instrumental    work. Vocally, the two offer a stark contrast with DelGrosso possessing    a deep, brawny voice while Del Toro has a lighter, more expressive tone.    Their rhythm section is composed of Carl Owens on drums, Ed Starkey on    bass and Nick Connolly on keyboards. DelGrosso    romps through “Mandolin Man” on his amplified National resonator    mandolin, turning the spotlight on three of his influences – Charlie    McCoy, Yank Rachell and Johnny Young – and giving listeners a brief    taste of their individual styles on the mandolin. Another great Houston    musician, Sonny Boy Terry, provides an additional spark with his    down-home harp licks. On the opening cut, “Baby Do Wrong”, DelGrosso    uses a vintage Gibson mandola to get a bright, metallic sound that pairs    perfectly with Del Toro's rich guitar tone. “Shotgun Blues” gets a boost    from the presence of the Texas Horns – Mark Kazanoff on tenor sax, John    Mills on baritone sax and Al Gomez on trumpet. Del Toro recreates the    distinctive sound of Albert Collins and Connolly's B-3 organ work fills    in space underneath the horns.  DelGrosso    takes an unflinching look the plight of working musicians on “A Gig is a    Gig” with Connolly's piano driving the rockin' arrangement and the    leader picking out a tasty solo on the mandolin before Del Toro finishes    off the cut with ringing guitar passages. Terry's amplified harp is    prominently featured on “She's Sweet”, with another booming vocal from    DelGrosso. The instrumental “Good Rockin' Johnny” showcases DelGrosso    playing in the style of Johnny Young. “Hard To Live With” is the longest    cut on the disc and finds DelGrosso doing a humorous self-examination as    the leaders dazzle you with back-to-back solos. Del Toro    possesses plenty of amazing technical skill on guitar but what really    stands out on this recording is the exquisite tone he achieves no matter    what guitar he is playing. On the title song, his yearning vocal is    punctuated by blasts from the Texas Horns, while his biting guitar    statement on his '59 Strat contrasts with DelGrosso's intricate picking.    “Summertime is Here” takes you deep into the Tex-Mex sound with Joel    Guzman on accordion. Connolly's B-3 brings some funk to “The Real Deal”    and Del Toro responds with a more forceful singing approach plus another    spot-on solo. ”Katalin” is taken at a slower pace with Guzman's    accordion helping set the deep groove. Del Toro's solo is an unhurried    masterpiece that proves that tone wins out over speed and volume. The    closing track, “Baby Please” is just the two leaders on a lowdown blues,    with Del Toro's darkest vocal turn over his menacing guitar sound. DelGrosso    is nominated for the fifth time for a Blues Music award for his skill as    an instrumentalist. Del Toro won the Albert King Award as the best    guitar player at the 2005 International Blues Challenge. And when    musicians like Billy Flynn are singing your praises, the rest of us had    better sit up and take notice. If you haven't taken the time to check    out them out, get a copy of this one right away. They serve up    traditional blues in a variety of settings with DelGrosso's mandolin    giving the music a unique texture while Del Toro provides a clinic on    generating awesome sound from a guitar. This one is highly recommended    !!!       Review        Mark Thompson    is president     of the Crossroads     Blues Society in Rockford, IL.       For other reviews and interviews on our website     CLICK HERE | 
| 2011    Blues Music Award Winners Acoustic    Album of the Year - Last Train to Bluesville - The Nighthawks Acoustic    Artist of the Year - John Hammond Album of    the Year - Living Proof - Buddy Guy B.B. King    Entertainer of the Year - Buddy Guy Band of    the Year - The Derek Trucks Band Best New    Artist Debut - On the Floor - Matt Hill    Contemporary Blues Album of the Year - Living Proof - Buddy Guy    Contemporary Blues Female Artist of the Year - Robin Rogers    Contemporary Blues Male Artist of the Year - Buddy Guy DVD - Ruf    Records - Songs from the Road (Luther Allison)    Historical Album of the Year -Delta Groove - Harmonica Blues - (Bob    Corritore & Friends)    Instrumentalist-Bass - Bob Stroger    Instrumentalist-Drums- Cedric Burnside    Instrumentalist-Guitar - Derek Trucks    Instrumentalist-Harmonica - Charlie Musselwhite    Instrumentalist-Horn - Eddie Shaw    Instrumentalist-Other - Sonny Rhodes (Lap Steel Guitar) Koko    Taylor Award - Ruthie Foster Pinetop    Perkins Piano Player - Dr. John Rock    Blues Album of the Year Live! In Chicago - Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band featuring Hubert Sumlin, Willie "Big Eyes" Smith, Bryan Lee and Buddy Flett Song of    the Year - "Living Proof" - Tom Hambridge/Buddy Guy Soul    Blues Album of the Year - Nothing's Impossible - Solomon Burke Soul    Blues Female Artist of the Year - Irma Thomas Soul    Blues Male Artist of the Year - Solomon Burke    Traditional Blues Album of the Year - Joined At the Hip - Pinetop    Perkins & Willie 'Big Eyes' Smith    Traditional Blues Male Artist of the Year - Charlie Musselwhite | 
|    YOU can submit your Blues performances for   FREE at:  http://www.thebluesblast.com/submitnews.htm   Performance dates were submitted by Musicians, Club Owners, Blues Societies   and Blues festivals.   TheBluesBlast.com is not responsible for errors or omissions. 
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