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   In This Issue 
  
 Ian McKenzie has our feature interview with Popa Chubby this week. 
   
 We have six CD reviews for you this week! 
  Mark Thompson
   reviews a new CD from Toronzo Cannon. Greg “Bluesdog” Szalony reviews a new CD from 
 Patrick McLaughlin. John Mitchell reviews a 
 new CD from Steve Gerard & The National Debonaires featuring James “Rock” 
 Gray .  Eric Steiner reviews a new CD by Big Mamma’s Door. Gary Weeks 
 reviews a new CD by Big Daddy D And The Dynamites. Rainey Wetnight 
 reviews a new CD from Dani Wilde. All this and MORE! SCROLL DOWN!!!  
  
   From The Editor's Desk 
 
   
Hey Blues 
  Fans, 
  
Here we go 
  again! 2012 begins our 6th year of publishing Blues Blast Magazine.  
As we start 
  the new year there are plenty of challenges. A big one is the fact that 
  an increasing number of you folks get your email on your smart phone. 
  For us that means we will be working to make our weekly issues fit on 
  android phones, Iphones, Windows phones and other devices including 
  netbook PCs, Ipads and many other hand held forms of communication.  
We will also 
  be working to expand our presence on social networks. To meet these 
  goals we are looking for some help. We need a couple folks to work as 
  our social networking editors and we continue to look for someone to 
  write some phone apps for Blue Blast Magazine. Please see our ads below 
  and let us know if you can be of any help or know someone else who might 
  be able to help. 
Wishing you 
  health, happiness and lots of Blues music! 
Bob Kieser 
 | 
 
  
   Blues Want Ads 
 
  
   Featured Blues Interview - Popa 
  Chubby 
 
| 
   
  Popa Chubby: I started off as a drummer when I was a boy, and then my 
  parents decided the drums were too loud so I got into electric guitar. 
  (laughs). And then -- when I was a little kid -- my dad took me to see 
  Chuck Berry. And I was like, wow, that looks good. I think I’ll try 
  that. And I did. (laughs). Then when I was a teenager I got into Led 
  Zeppelin, and Jimmy Hendrix, and Jeff Beck and all that stuff and it kinda just rocked my word from there, you know.  
  BB: You were already playing guitar by then I guess? 
  PC: I was starting yea. I was trying to figure out Rolling Stones songs 
  on my acoustic guitar. 
  BB: Did you ever have any lesson or are you entirely self taught? 
  PC: No, I never had any lessons. Man, I was a poor kid. My guitar 
  lessons were getting a really crappy acoustic guitar that you could 
  barely play and fixing the strings by hand and then putting “Brown 
  Sugar” on my little record player and slowing it down to try to figure 
  out what was going on. I had no idea that Keith was playing in open 
  tuning, so I learned it all with regular chords, and kinda faked my way 
  through it. When I was a teenager the big thing was to learn the 
  “Heartbreaker” solo by Jimmy Page, which I think I’m still working on. 
  (laughs)  
  BB: When did you first start working with a band then? 
  PC: I started playing with bands by the time I was 15. I got turned on 
  to the likes B.B. King and Freddy King and Albert King… Otis Rush… and 
  started to see the connection between those guys and blues rock guys. I 
  started the Popa Chubby Band in 1990. Before that I had been just 
  playing guitar and bass as a sideman with various people in New York and 
  with varying degrees of success. I became the house band in New York 
  City at a club called Maddy’s Car Wash -- a very famous blues club –in 
  the 90’s. That started my journey if you will. 
  BB: Is that the way you got your nickname of Popa Chubby? 
  PC: One day in a jam session with Bernie Worrell from P-Funk. He was 
  singing a song, “Popa Chubby, Popa Chubby” and as I’m working, I’m 
  thinking that’s a great name for a band I think I’ll take that. The one 
  thing I want people to do when they hear my music is to get to a new 
  level of excitement. One that they didn’t have before they heard my 
  music. 
  BB: One of the things that I think you’ve said is that you think that 
  music should be dangerous, like the Ramones and the Sex Pistols and so 
  on. Do you still feel like that? 
  PC: Elements of it, yea, definitely. Music should be everything. It 
  should encompass everything. But I think that, you know, I like to see a 
  band that makes me think, wow man, these guys are bad ass, you know? And 
  you know all great rock bands on some level from Elvis Presley. Man, you 
  know, when Elvis got onstage and shook his hips people were threatened. 
  BB: And yet you sit onstage and play things like “Somewhere Over the 
  Rainbow.” How does that fit together?  
  PC: Because there’s beauty too man. I like to offer everybody the full 
  experience.  
  BB: And do you have a favorite blues, rock musician that you regularly 
  listen to. 
  PC: It’s Jimmy Hendrix man, for me, all the time, Jimmy. Nobody, I mean 
  nobody, has even come close. And on a compositional level no one has 
  even come close to what Jimmy did. I still wind up listening to Jimmy I 
  mean a lot of the time and I consider Freddie King to be the true link 
  between blues and rock if you will.  
  BB: Tell me something about the making of the new CD [Back To New York 
  City] .. a lot of tracks are songs that you have written yourself.  
  PC: I’m a songwriter as well as being a guitar player, on this record, 
  man. I felt that the bar had been raised, and I needed to step up and 
  show everybody what I could really do. And I think we really hit it. 
  Everything from like from like straight out Texas blues on “She Loves 
  Everybody But Me” to the quintessential power ballad on “A Love That 
  Will Never Die”. I played some Spanish guitar on a song called “A Pound 
  of Flesh”. We did a great cover of a Leonard Cohen song, “The Future”. 
  The reviews that are coming in right now are saying that it’s my best 
  record ever. 
  BB: In the later stages of this up-coming tour of yours, you’re working 
  with Walter Trout. Have you played with Walter before? 
  PC: I have. We worked together in the past with great success. There’s a 
  lot of mutual respect there. I think Walter and I have a similar 
  sensibility and that we are coming from a similar place with music in 
  general. We’re doing several gigs in Europe and than in London [and 
  elsewhere in the UK]. And I think it’s going to be a really fantastic 
  tour. It’s going to offer people more of what people used to get in the 
  old school, man, when they used to go see a show and there would be like 
  two or three great bands on the bill. You don’t get that so much 
  anymore. And I want to be a proponent of bringing that back. What it 
  really takes is for artists to lose their egos for a little while and I 
  think Walter and I will be able to do that and put on a great show. 
  BB: Are you plan to do some cutting contest stuff with Walter? 
  PC: I never go onstage to cut anybody, man. I’m a big Tai chi guy. I 
  believe that when you play with someone else you should challenge them 
  to play better, not try to play better than them. 
  BB: You just mentioned Tai chi. I believe that you practice Tai chi and 
  Chi Kung before you go on stage is that true? 
  BB: Anything big in the future for you? 
  PC: The CD and the tour’s pretty big. I plan to tour way into through 
  2012. I mean we already have dates booked so. The big thing was I spent 
  two and a half years to make this record, man, and I made a record on a 
  level I had never [achieved] before. I really suffered for this record.  
  BB: Did you now? Was that to do with the song writing? The emotionality 
  of it or what? 
  PC: Everything, you know, the songs usually reflect my life. It’s been a 
  difficult period in my life. The music’s gotten me through. And I think 
  it’s reflected in the music. It’s a matter of [the tensions] between 
  playing the blues and really feeling the blues and you can’t feel the 
  blues until you really get in there and start to live. That was a big 
  piece of me making that record. Now I’m going to be on the road for a 
  long time, so after that I think – and this is just between me and you 
  and whoever [is listening] –I would like to make a live CD-DVD combo. 
  BB: Tell me something about the band that you’ve got at the moment. 
  PC: A.J. Pappas is the bass player has been with me for about six years. 
  And my drummer is just returned to the fold. Many years ago I played in 
  a high school in Warwick, New York – we played for the student body. And 
  then we answered questions about what it’s like to be a musician. None 
  of the kids were like prepared except for one….this kid – he was about 
  six foot eight tall, tattoos up and down his arms, spiky blond hair – 
  came up to me and started talking to me. And his name was Chris Reading. 
  Six months later he was on the road with me at 17. And he stayed on the 
  road with me for five years. Then he had some family issues that he had 
  to attend to so that he left the band for the last three years. But he’s 
  just returned. Chris is by far the best drummer I’ve ever worked with. 
  He’s now 25. You know, he’s mature well beyond his years. So it’s 
  really, right now, we’re in the best place musically we’ve ever been.  
  BB: I noticed that in practically every picture of you, you have a 
  rather battered old Strat that are holding playing. 
  PC: I do, that’s my number one. And that’s my baby …that’s the devil’s 
  guitar. 
  BB: Do you have others besides that? 
  PC: I have 100 guitars. I have many old Strats, many old Les Pauls, I 
  have a ’56 Les Paul, ’54 Les Paul, 335’s, Telecasters, you name it. 
  There’s nothing that rocks like this one Strat. That is really the best 
  guitar that I’ve ever owned. It just gets better with age. People say 
  “you’re crazy. Why do you take it on the road?” And I’m like “you’re 
  crazy ….why would I not take it on the road.” 
  BB: It would be terrible if you lost it though. 
  PC: Yea, but you know what it would be more terrible if I never played 
  it. 
  BB: Popa one of the things that I like to do when I’m interviewing 
  people is to ask them what is the very best thing that has ever happened 
  to you as a professional musician. 
  PC: Many years ago I got a call from a woman saying “my fiancé 
is your 
  biggest fan in the world and he’s gravely ill; his dying wish is to 
have 
  a visit with you.” I was on the road, but I immediately said yes. 
That’s 
  just my nature, I want to be there for people. And then I got a little
 
  scared. I mean it was like, wow! But I went and saw this guy ,and he 
was 
  in such suffering and pain and turmoil. And I hung out with him, and I
 
  played him a song. I played “Same Old Blues” by Freddy King. And all 
his 
  pain went away. I saw his pain vanish. It was really moving, man. And I
 realised it had very little to do with me. You know, I was just the 
  vehicle. 
  BB: What’s the very worst thing that’s ever happened to you while 
  you’ve been working in the profession? 
  PC: Oh man, you know…you don’t dwell on that, you know there’s always 
  some crap that happens. There’s some bad sound or some crooked promoter 
  or some missed flight or .. The worst thing was I was trying to travel 
  to Europe to do a weekend of festivals. And right as I got on the 
  highway the New York City blackout happened. I didn’t have enough gas to 
  turn around so I drove to the airport. And wound up sleeping on the 
  floor for the next 23 hours. So, you know, every once in a while you’re 
  going to come across that too. But it’s not that bad really in the grand 
  scheme of things. 
  BB: Thank you so very much for speaking to me, especially for revealing 
  some of those little personal things. 
  PC: Great pleasure my friend. Great pleasure.. 
  You can visit Popa Chubby at: 
  www.popachubby.com  or  
  
  www.myspace.com/popachubbyband 
  
  
    
   Interviewer Ian McKenzie lives in England. He is the editor of Blues 
  In The South (www.bluesinthesouth.com) 
  a monthly flier providing news, reviews, a gig guide and all kinds of 
  other good stuff, for people living and going to gigs along the south 
  coast of England. Ian is also a blues performer (see
  
  www.myspace.com/ianmckenzieuk) and has two web-cast regular blues 
  radio shows. One on www.phonic.FM in 
  Exeter (Wednesdays: 1pm Eastern/ 12 noon Central), the second on KCOR – 
  Kansas City Online Radio (on Fridays at 1pm Eastern/ 12 noon Central)
  www.kconlineradio.com.  
  
  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
| 
   
 Blues Blast 
 Advertising Special - 
 Lowest Prices Of the 2012 Season 
 Blues Blast Magazine is offering a winter advertising special. This early bird 
 special for the 2012 season will be our lowest 
 pricing of the 2012 year. It offers an affordable & effective way to get the 
 Blues word out! This 6 week combo rate of only $300 allows you to affordably 
 add significant impact to your Blues advertising and promotion campaign. It is a great way to kick 
 up the visibility of your new CD release, 2012 Blues Festival or event! 
 Normal 
 2012 Advertising rates are $65 an issue for Blues Blast magazine ads and 
 $90 per month
 for website ads.
   
 BUT, for a limited time, you can advertise in six 
 issues of Blues Blast Magazine and on our website for a month and a half for 
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 This is a $525 value! 
 Blues Blast Magazine is a great way to promote the Blues. More than 21,000 
 Blues fans read our magazine each week. They are located in all 50 states 
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 MILLION) hits and more than 35,000 visitors a month on our website. 
   
 To get this special 
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 With this special rate your ad can be viewed more than 175,000 times by 
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 Ads must be reserved and paid for by February 15, 2012. To get more information 
 email
 info@thebluesblast.com  or call 309 267-4425 today! 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 1 of 6 
 
| 
   
  14 tracks/60:19 
  In the12/28/11 edition of the Chicago Tribune, one of the featured 
  articles was the last in a series by music writer Howard Reich on Blues 
  music in Chicago, a piece entitled “Is this the twilight of blues 
  music?”.  
  Reich identifies a number of serious issues including the continued loss 
  of legendary musicians like Pinetop Perkins, Hubert Sumlin and Willie 
  “Big Eyes” Smith as well as a suffocating lack of exposure in major 
  media outlets even in the city that claims the music as its own. The 
  writer also comments on the difficultly that newer musicians have in 
  gaining a foothold in the blues clubs, even though it makes sense for 
  the clubs to nurture new voices that might catch the ear of a new 
  generation of listeners. 
  If blues music is dying, you would never know it after you listen to the 
  first major label release by Toronzo Cannon. Schooled in southside clubs 
  like Theresa's Lounge, Cannon has been honing his craft in Chicago clubs 
  for over a decade as a leader and a sideman for artists like Wayne Baker 
  Brooks and Joanna Connor. Now his blistering guitar work, knock-out 
  songs and soul-wrenching vocals make it clear that Cannon has the 
  ability to help keep the blues tradition alive and vital. 
  Check out “Chico's Song”, Cannon's celebration for the late Chico Banks 
  with a foot-stomping rhythm, sweet guitar licks and Matthew Skoller's 
  superlative harp playing. On the opening cut, “She Loved Me”, Cannon 
  explores the darker side of life with a guitar tone that harks back to 
  Hound Dog Taylor. Special guest Carl Weathersby shares the spotlight 
  with Cannon on “Hard Luck”, both men laying down incendiary guitar 
  solos, with Weathersby breaking a string in the process.  
  Cannon gets first-class support from Roosevelt Purifoy on keyboards, 
  Larry Williams on bass and Marty Binder on drums. Rhythm guitarist 
  Lawrence Gladney co-wrote seven tunes with Cannon and contributed two 
  originals - “Come On” finds Cannon bemoaning his fate after the end of a 
  relationship and pleading his lover to return home while “Baby Girl” has 
  a funky, strutting beat that underscores Cannon's exuberant performance. 
  Weathersby returns on “Earnestine”, handling the lead guitar parts while 
  Cannon focuses on singing while Purifoy dazzles with a brief solo on the 
  organ.  
  On the title cut, Cannon slows the pace to describe a man losing control 
  of his life, taking the song to an unexpected conclusion. He avoids 
  making the vocal too strident, which adds to the sense of despair. 
  Another highlight is “Open Letter (To Whom it May Concern)” that finds 
  Cannon using a distorted vocal to comment to on the sometimes cutthroat 
  nature of the Chicago blues scene. The song features an insistent guitar 
  lick and more stellar harp accompaniment from Skoller. Cannon displays 
  his soul influences on “You're a Good Woman” with Purifoy on the Rhodes 
  electric keyboard. Another highlight is the smoldering rendition of Nina 
  Simone's “Do I Move You”, with Cannon's earnest vocal matched by his 
  impeccable guitar work  
  Delmark Records deserves praise for continuing their tradition of 
  releasing recordings by working Chicago blues musicians. While some fear 
  for the future, Toronzo Cannon uses vibrant material coupled with his 
  unbridled enthusiasm to provide ample evidence that the blues tradition 
  is safe in his hands. His energetic approach is sure to connect with 
  blues lovers all over the world. Expect to see this one on some of the 
  lists for top Blues recordings for the year!  
  
  
  Reviewer
  Mark 
  Thompson is president of the
  Crossroads Blues 
  Society in Rockford. IL. He has been listening to music of all kinds 
  for fifty years. The first concert he attended was in Chicago with The 
  Mothers of Invention and Cream. Life has never been the same.  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website  
  CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 2 of 6 
 
| 
   
  Bolt Records 
  Time-66:47 
  From Columbus, Ohio here comes another in a long line of blues-rock 
  guitarists fronting a power trio. His first release displays that he has 
  guitar chops to spare and a commanding voice with a soulful edge to it 
  that is easy to listen to. His playing has evolved as the result of 
  being a band leader for ten years. A tight rhythm section follows his 
  every move. The one pitfall is the mostly mundane and commonplace lyrics 
  as well as the repetitiveness of them. 
  Patrick handles rhythm and lead guitar parts on most songs, giving them 
  a beefy quality. He leads right in with slide guitar that almost talks, 
  laid over a catchy rhythm guitar riff on “Working Hard”. Here as 
  throughout the record the sound is fresh, clean and full of tone. It 
  seems like the guitar playing stays close to the standard styles, until 
  you see him taking more chances from the half-way mark on. The guitar 
  tone and watching the turns they take are an adventure to behold. For 
  many of the songs, the lyrics are repeated too many times rather than 
  developed. “I’ve Got You” is a blues shuffle ala Stevie Ray Vaughn or 
  Melvin Taylor. He can sure build a liquid guitar solo. The underlying 
  riff that runs through “There’s More To Life Than This” provides a warm 
  cushion for the tune to ride upon. “Constructing A Guitar Solo 101” 
  should be the subtitle for “Motion Of Emotion” a tale of love’s 
  complications. The moody and soul-drenched vocal emotion is supported by 
  the bluesy guitar in “Ready Set Leave”, a tale of love gone wrong. The 
  lone instrumental “One More” closes out the cd. It begins life as a slow 
  blues underpinned by the crisp drumming of Darrell Jumper, then 
  Patrick’s guitar starts spewing out licks.  
  This is a display of a solid dose of blues-rock with a strong leaning 
  towards traditional blues. Patrick has an uncanny knack for a keen 
  interaction between his vocal and his guitar. They seem to follow each 
  other and at times intertwine. He gets able support from two different 
  drummers and the steady bass beat of Molly Young. Rather than firing off 
  mile-a-minute guitar barrages, he unleashes well thought out and 
  executed solos that practice tension and release along with nuance. All 
  songs are band efforts that reflect the best qualities of a well crafted 
  blues song. These guys and gal have the sturdy foundation to keep 
  building and growing upon. 
  
   
   
   Reviewer Greg “Bluesdog” Szalony hails 
  from the New Jersey Delta. 
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 3 of 6 
 
| 
   
  10 tracks; 30.52 minutes 
  This is the third CD from Steve Gerard and his band The National 
  Debonaires, but this one has something special about it. Steve had 
  relocated to Jackson MS in search of the roots of the real blues and 
  there heard a local blues singer, James “Rock” Gray. Now in his 
  seventies and a former friend of Sam Myers and Elmore James, James had 
  never been recorded. In addition to that discovery, Steve managed to get 
  Doug “Mr. Low” James to produce the horn parts in between his touring 
  commitments with Jimmie Vaughan, so this recording has two former 
  members of Roomful Of Blues on it, as Preston Hubbard is on bass. The 
  rest of the band is Dwight Ross Jr. on drums, Mike “Shinetop Jr.” 
  Sedovic on keys (recently with Trampled Under Foot on the LRBC), James 
  on vocals and Steve on guitar. Greg Demchuk adds harmonica to one track. 
  The CD features three songs written by James and the remaining seven 
  cuts were selected to suit his voice and style. The three originals are 
  all soulful ballads. “One Of These Days” has swirling organ and plucked 
  guitar underpinning James’ vocal. “Please Stay With Me”, a love song 
  pleading for the girl to stay, adds saxes to the mix, a beautifully 
  balanced tenor solo gracing the break. “Sweet Little Woman” opens with 
  slow piano before the whole band joins in under James’ warm vocal 
  extolling how wonderful his woman is. The horns are again spot on in 
  support and another sax solo, this time on baritone, is the main solo 
  feature. 
  The other seven tracks come from seven different authors. “Voodoo Workin’” 
  comes from the pen of Charles Sheffield and is a lively opening track 
  with strong organ and guitar accompaniment. “Michelle” is perhaps not 
  the most frequently heard song by Willie Mabon and here comes across 
  with more than a touch of New Orleans rhythm. In similar vein Fats 
  Domino and Dave Bartholomew’s “My Girl Josephine” mines that NO groove, 
  both tracks featuring Doug James’ excellent horn arrangements. Big Joe 
  Turner is the source for “TV Mama” and is an opportunity for Steve to 
  offer us his version of the Elmore James 12 bar riff as well as some 
  fine piano playing from Mike Sedovic; plus, of course, that wonderful 
  lyric about “my TV Mama, the one with the big wide screen”! 
  Ain’t Gonna Let Her Go” comes from the pen of Jimmy Anderson and 
  features the harp playing of Greg Demchuk and the piano and organ, the 
  horns sitting this one out. Big Jay McNeeley’s “There Is Something On 
  Your Mind” particularly suits James’ voice, the horn arrangement acting 
  like a comforting warm blanket wrapped around his vocals as he pleads 
  with his girl to think of him. Steve Gerard also offers us a fine solo 
  on guitar here. Nappy Brown’s “My Baby”, with its refrain of “Is you is, 
  is you still my baby?” has something of a somber arrangement to close 
  the CD. 
  James has an excellent voice, with a ‘lived-in’ quality that reflects 
  his advanced age, but he remains clear and communicates all the material 
  superbly. The CD is therefore essentially about James’ vocals, but the 
  accompaniment is excellent and supportive, notably the horn arrangements 
  from Doug James. My only complaint was that the CD was not longer – I 
  can listen to this sort of music all day and night!  
  
  
    
  Reviewer John Mitchell is a blues enthusiast based in the UK. He also 
  travels to the States most years to see live blues music. 
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 4 of 6 
 
| 
   
  9 Tracks 
  British blues fans across the United Kingdom nominated Big Mamma’s Door 
  in six categories for 2011 British Blues Awards. While none of the 
  nominees were honored with an award at this past September’s third 
  annual Newark Blues Festival in Nottinghamshire, this London-based five 
  piece blues band is a welcome new blues discovery for me. Big Mamma’s 
  Door received the following well-deserved nods: Best Album (Handbagged), 
  Best Original Blues Song (“Handbagged”), Best Female Vocals (Fiona 
  McElroy), Best Keyboard (Henri Herbert), Best Drums (Rob Pokorny), and 
  Best Bass (John Culleton).  
  Hanbagged features nine songs that range from 
  the rollicking “We Got a Good Thing Going” and “Another Night” to the 
  sad and contemplative love song “Letting You Go.” Mal Barclay’s 
  exceptional guitar paired with Henri Herbert’s nuanced piano playing 
  ushers in “A Little Mad About You,” and I particularly like the way John 
  Culleton and Rob Pokorny lay a strong bass and drum foundation to “Give 
  It to Me” (and the song ends with a tasteful and short drum solo). I 
  hear a lot of Professor Longhair, Roosevelt Sykes and Henry Gray in 
  Henri Herbert’s piano playing, and it’s a consistent bright spot on a 
  consistently satisfying blues album. When not working with Big Mamma’s 
  Door, Mel and Henri play with The Cadillac Kings, a popular British 
  six-piece swing band.  
  I hope that British blues fans continue to support 
  Big Mamma’s Door as they look forward to the 2012 British Blues Awards 
  next September. In the meantime, visit
  www.bigmammasdoor.com and listen 
  to several professionally-produced videos from their performance at the 
  High Barn on St. Patrick’s Day, including “Handbagged,” “Letting You 
  Go,” and “A Little Mad About You.”  
  
  
    
  Reviewer Eric Steiner is president of the
  Washington Blues Society Washington 
  Blues Society in Seattle, Washington, and a member of the Board of 
  Directors of The Blues Foundation in Memphis, Tennessee. 
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Blues Society News 
 
| 
    
    Send your Blues Society's BIG news or Press Release 
   about your 
    
   
   Submissions must be a maximum of 175 words or less in a Text or MS Word document 
 format. 
   Minnesota Blues Society - 
   Minneapolis, MN 
   In celebration of the Society's 10 year anniversary, Greater Twin 
   Cities Blues Music Society (GTCBMS) has changed their name to: 
   Minnesota Blues Society, to better reflect their constituency. Get 
   Out of Town" (GOOT) Fundraiser, Sun., Jan 22, 3:00pm, Minnesota 
   Music Cafe, 499 Payne Ave., St. Paul, MN, 651-776-4699. Suggested 
   donation: $10, Come support Minnesota's 2012 IBC representatives, 
   Annie Mack and Tom Kochie; and Javier and the Innocent Sons. Music 
   by former IBC representatives: Steve Vonderharr, John Franken, Good 
   Time Willy, Davina and the Vagabonds, Scottie Miller, Papa John 
   Kolstad, Jeff Ray, and Harold Tremblay. Visit our new website at
   www.mnbs.org for more information. 
   Capital Region 
   Blues Network - Albany, NY 
   The Capital Region Blues Network is proud to announce The Mid-Winter 
   Blues Bash on Friday, January 27th at The Roadhouse Grille (27 
   Fuller Road, Albany) at 8PM. Tom Townsley and Seth Rochfort will be 
   coming in from Syracuse to open the night, followed by The Matt 
   Mirabile Band with special guests Tom Healey and Tas Cru. Tickets 
   are $10.00 at the door and $5.00 for Capital Region Blues Network 
   members. For more info see our website @
   
   www.capitalregionbluesnetwork.org   
   Grafton Blues Association 
   - Grafton, WI 
   The Grafton Blues Association (GBA) and State of Wisconsin will be 
   represented at the International Blues Challenge in Memphis, 
   Tennessee for the 4th consecutive year. The GBA will be sending a 
   band (Tweed Funk) and solo/duo act (John Stano) this year. A 
   Send-Off Party/Fundraiser will be held January 20th at the Black 
   Swan Room in Grafton.  
   The Send-Off Party/Fundraiser starts at 7 pm and will feature music 
   from both John Stano and Tweed Funk. Friday, January 20th, 2012; 
   7:00 pm to 10:00 pm; Black Swan Room; 1218 13th Ave, Grafton, WI 
   53024; Suggested Donation - $10; Drinks, Raffles, and Door Prizes.
   www.graftonblues.org  
   The Diamond State Blues 
   Society - Wilmington, Delaware 
   The Diamond State Blues Society in Wilmington, Delaware has two 
   great events coming up. The first is Saturday, January 14th for our 
   "Goin' to Memphis Fundraiser Party" on behalf of the DSBS IBC 
   entrant for this year, The Blue Cat Blues Band. The show is from 3 
   to 10pm and will feature 8 great regional blues bands: at 3pm- 
   Scoville Blues; at 3:45pm- April Mae & the June Bugs; at 4:30pm- 
   Johnny Never & the Solar Pimps; at 5:15pm- Alicia Maxwell & the 
   Diamond Dawgz; at 6pm- Mikey Jr. & the Stone Cold Blues; at 6:45pm- 
   The Billy Pierce Blues Band; at 7:30pm- Venom Blues; at 8:15pm- 
   Nuthin' But Trouble; and at 9pm- The Blue Cat Blues Band. It will be 
   a day of HOT Regional Blues and to raise some funds to get our IBC 
   entrant to Memphis!  
   And on Saturday, March 3rd it's the Diamond State Blues Society's 
   15th Annual House Rockin' Party. Opening the show at 3pm will be 
   Nuthin' But Trouble, followed by Florida's great Blues Guitarist, 
   Albert Castiglia, and headlining the show is the ironman himself, 
   the phenomenal Michael Burks! Full details can be found at
   www.DiamondStateBlues.com  
   Dayton Blues Society 
   – Dayton, Ohio 
   The Dayton Blues Society presents the 4th Annual “Winter Blues 
   Showcase” on January 21st 2012, The event spotlights this year’s IBC 
   representatives Gregg “GC” Clark & Brian Lee (Solo/Duo) and The Noah 
   Wotherspoon Band (Band) opening for this year’s headliner Big Bill 
   Morganfield, son of blues legend Muddy Waters. Gilly’s 132 S. 
   Jefferson St. 6pm—Meet & Greet w/ Big Bill Morganfield ($5), 8pm— 
   Gregg Clark & Brian Lee, 9pm— Noah Wotherspoon Band, 10pm— Big Bill 
   Morganfield (Muddy Water’s Son), DBS Members—$20 / Non DBS Members— 
   $25, For more info go to 
   www.daytonbluessociety.com . 
   Prairie Crossroads 
   Blues Society – Champaign-Urbana, IL 
   Prairie Crossroads Blues Society shows: Friday January 6th, 1st 
   Friday Blues, Hurricane Ruth, winner of the Prairie Crossroads Blues 
   Society IBC Challenge, 8pm studio visit to WEFT 90.1FM during the 
   Blues Live show, 10pm, performance at Memphis on Main, Champaign. $5 
   non-members, $3 members. Friday April 6, 1st Friday Blues, Johnny 
   Rawls. For more info:
   
   prairiecrossroadsblues.org. 
   River City Blues Society 
   - Pekin, IL 
   River City Blues Society presents: Bringing The Blues To You with 
   the following shows - Jan 11th at 
   7PM - Brandon Santini. Location Goodfellas 1414 N. 8th St, Pekin, Illinois 7:00 pm - 10:00 pm $5.00 
   non-members $3.00 members. For more info visit:
   www.rivercityblues.com 
   Illinois Central Blues Club - 
 Springfield, IL 
   The Illinois Central Blues Club presents "Blue Monday" every Monday 
   night for the last 25 years - BLUE MONDAY SHOWS - Held at the Alamo 
   115 N 5th St, Springfield, IL (217) 523-1455 every Monday 8:30pm $3 
   cover. Jan 9 - The 
   Brandon Santini Blues Band, Jan 16 - The Groove Daddies, Jan 23 - 
   Mike Zito, Jan 30 - Tombstone Bullet, Feb 6 - Matt O'Ree, Feb 13 - 
   Hurrican Ruth, Feb 20 - The Distillery, Feb 27 - The Blues Deacons. icbluesclub.org  
 | 
  
  
   Featured Blues Review 5 of 6 
 
| 
   
Time: 
  54:34 
Where can 
  you find some good time blues? You might just hit the mother lode with 
  Big Daddy D And The Dynamites’ Down, Boy!  
You would 
  think guitarist Duke Robillard had his hand in the production. While the 
  spirit of Roomful of Blues lurks behind the scenes, the band themselves 
  produced this work and it aims on capturing a live vibe that could set 
  crowds on fire. 
The biggest 
  strength is in the songwriting by primary writers Drew Hall and Big 
  Daddy Darryl Porras. Bonus points have to be given to these guys for 
  coming up with material that doesn’t steal too much from musical clichés 
  we have been accustomed with for too long. 
Saxophonist 
  Gary Regina’s playing colors the songs to push them into smoky 
  after-hours club jazz territories. Hall and Porras’ guitar work together 
  recalls the precision of B.B. King and the ferocity of Michael 
  Bloomfield. There is no sparring off between the two men that would have 
  the effect of a cat fight. Make no mistake about it. This music would be 
  embraced at a club or at a blues festival anywhere in the world. It’s 
  intoxicating enough to make you forget about all your worldly troubles. 
If you want 
  to jump-start a blues party, just put this cd on and see the results. 
  Porras original “I Thought I Heard” is a pure house rocker with such a 
  giddy musical take that will wake you up from an eternal sleep. Regina’s 
  sax playing emerges front and center with drummer Carlos B. Jones adding 
  his slithering grooves.  
While band 
  members are given enough solo space to strut their stuff, there is no 
  overabundance of solos to take the material beyond time marks it doesn’t 
  need to be.  
To guide 
  your ship on your personal oceans of blues, set your sails on the track 
  “I Ain’t Puttin Up with What You’re Putting Down” that draws from the 
  wellspring of deep Chicago Blues. While the song intro somewhat recalls 
  Stevie Ray’s “Riviera Paradise,” it wisely steers clear from any Lone 
  Star state shading. 
Safe to say 
  this might be the type of music to look for when everything else is a 
  tired hand. There’s the easy going groove in the slippery greased 
  instrumental “Are You Feeling Me?” Drew Hall’s “Next Train” is aptly 
  titled because the speed it moves on is moderate enough with its bare 
  –bones guitar work. But it’s not too quick-paced to give you a heart 
  attack.  
While “Soul 
  Power” in ways can live up to its moniker, it doesn’t become too much a 
  candidate for American Hit Parade. Jones’ quirky time-signature beats 
  might be difficult for a normal blues-rock drummer to grasp. And the 
  guitar playing takes this number into a jam-band spirit that even their 
  contemporaries would find hard to tackle. 
Imagine Bo 
  Diddley meeting the Allman Brothers and you wind up with “Welcome Sweet 
  Sunshine” which with its free-wheeling style would go down like hotcakes 
  with the Bonaroo audience wanting to shake it on down. Only the fun 
  doesn’t stop there at this halfway point. In the instrumental “BroomHilda,” 
  you get to catch a breath after moving your tail feather for so long. 
  And “Hip-Deep In The Blues” seems to be the illegitimate son to Muddy 
  Waters’ “Got My Mojo Workin.” 
Kudos are 
  to be given to these guys for turning their backs on the too-often blues 
  rock used to get their message across. The biggest compliment the blues 
  can receive is that some individuals are interested in taking elements 
  from the past but are able to modernize them in a way with the best 
  results possible.  
  
  
  Reviewer Gary Weeks is 
  a contributing writer. He resides in Marietta, GA.  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website  
  CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 6 of 6 
 
| 
   
11 
  songs; 52 minutes 
Styles: 
  Blues Rock, Jazz-Influenced Blues, Ballads 
For a 
  moment, imagine digging through moist sand at the beach. Its tiny 
  granules mostly do one of two things: adhere to one’s palm, or slip 
  through one’s fingers entirely. More often than not, however, a fragment 
  glistens, reflecting the sunlight at just the right moment and making 
  one gasp! This is exactly what happens with the eleven “grains” of song 
  on singer, songwriter, guitarist, and humanitarian Dani Wilde’s third 
  release, “Shine.” Each one of the nine originals and two covers is 
  distinctive if one takes a close-enough look. Produced by legendary 
  British bluesman Mike Vernon, this album is nothing less than a huge 
  achievement. The young Wilde, according to her website, was “brought up 
  in Wiltshire, England on everything from Stax and Motown, to Folk, Rock 
  ‘n’ Roll and Chicago Blues.”  
Which 
  tracks Shine the most? Most certainly these three: 
Track 4: “How Do You Do It”--This torch number showcases Dani’s lovely high-pitched vocals like no other song on the album. Simply, the girl sounds like a girl -- here accompanying herself on background vocal harmony. Despite the Rolling Stones’ hit “Miss You” preceding it, this is Shine’s first earworm. Every phrase emerges flawlessly, not only from the lead singer’s lips but also from Pete Wingfield’s caressing piano and Laura Chavez’s guitar on a sizzling mid-song solo! The theme is familiar: unrequited love (“Darling, don’t you look at me that way. You know I can’t belong to you…”). However, Wilde’s fresh interpretation of this theme will make listeners hold their partners on the dance floor before it’s too late! 
Track 5: 
  “Red-Blooded Woman”--If some blues fans consider themselves purists, 
  they should take heed as Dani proves she’s got more than ice water in 
  her veins! She minces no words, and misses no nearly-operatic notes, as 
  her brother Will “Harmonica” Wilde and guitarist Ben Poole back her up. 
  As the song concludes, listen closely. One might feel a noticeable chill 
  rush down one’s spine as Wilde whispers the final word: “you.” The 
  effect is absolutely magnificent, especially considering her repeated 
  requests beforehand! 
Track 7: “I 
  Don’t Even Care”--Another, and perhaps better, title for this song would 
  have been “Fifteen Dollars in my Pocket,” because that’s all that the 
  narrator has left after fleeing from a bad marriage. “You never believed 
  in me. I’m sure you take me for some kind of fool, but you want me to be 
  your wife, clean hospital floors for the rest of my life. You act like 
  you don’t love me at all!” “I Don’t Even Care” reflects not only the 
  blues played or sung, but the blues lived. This reviewer wonders: is it 
  autobiographical? One thing’s sure: it feels more authentic than the 
  next track, “Abandoned Child,” though the latter is sadder.  
Mike 
  Vernon, the album’s producer, gives these props to “the artiste 
  herself”: [Dani] has a very individual guitar technique that echoes past 
  ages,” and “Dani gave absolutely everything to these sessions. I was 
  really impressed, and I believe it shows in the final results.” One 
  thing’s for sure: in the blues world, Dani Wilde knows how to Shine!  
  
  
  Reviewer Rainey 
  Wetnight is a 32 year old female Blues fan. She brings the perspective 
  of a younger blues fan to reviews. A child of 1980s music, she was 
  strongly influenced by her father’s blues music collection.  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website  
  CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
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