Cover photo by Michael Kurgansky © 2012 
www.kurgansky.com 
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Past Issues
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   In This Issue 
  
 We have the latest in Blues Society news from around the globe. Terry 
 Mullins has our feature interview with Sugar Blue. Marilyn Stringer covered 
 the great star studded benefit show to raise money for Candye Kane for her 
 recent surgery. 
 We have six music reviews for you! Sheila Skilling reviews a new CD from 
 145th Street. Rex Bartholomew reviews a new release from 
 Microwave Dave and the Nukes. Greg “Bluesdog” Szalony reviews the new 
 album from The Michael Landau Group. Mark Thompson reviews the new DVD from 
 The Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise. James "Skyy Dobro" Walker reviews the new 
 Lurrie Bell CD. Rainey Wetnight reviews the new release 
 from Nathan James and the Rhythm Scratchers. All this and MORE! SCROLL DOWN!!!  
   From 
  The Editor's Desk  
  The 
  world lost another great Bluesman this week. This it the sad news from 
  Alligator Records: 
Michael 
  "Iron Man" Burks, July 30, 1957 - May 6, 2012  
"Guitarist, 
  vocalist, songwriter Michael "Iron Man" Burks died in Atlanta on Sunday, 
  May 6, 2012. He was 54 years old. He was returning from a tour of Europe 
  and collapsed at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. He 
  was rushed to South Fulton Medical Center where he could not be revived. 
  The preliminary diagnosis for cause of death was a heart attack.  
Michael "Iron Man" Burks earned his moniker by his hours-long, intensely physical performances, fearsome guitar attack, and tough, smoky vocals. Burks was a true modern blues hero whose music was driven by an intense, blue collar work ethic that had won him well-deserved national and international recognition. His instantly identifiable guitar sound and his live charisma earned him four Blues Music Award nominations. He won the 2004 Living Blues magazine Critics' Award for Best Guitarist. Burks received a nomination for the 2012 Blues Music Award for Best Guitarist. 
Born in 
  Milwaukee in 1957, Burks grew up immersed in the blues, and learned to 
  play guitar at an early age. His family moved to Camden, Arkansas in the 
  early 1970s.After self-releasing his first CD in 1997, Burks signed with 
  Chicago's Alligator Records in 2001 and released three critically 
  acclaimed albums. GuitarOne named his debut album, Make It Rain, one of 
  the Top 200 greatest guitar recordings of all time. He has toured the 
  world, headlining blues festivals, concert halls and clubs. His status 
  as an Arkansas musical hero was confirmed by his receipt of the 
  prestigious Sonny Payne Award for Blues Excellence in 2006, presented by 
  the Delta Cultural Center, and by his multiple headlining appearances at 
  The Arkansas Blues & Heritage Festival. Burks had just finished 
  recording his fourth Alligator CD, which is due for release at the end 
  of July 2012." 
I had the 
  pleasure of seeing Mr. Burks play many times in the last few years. In 
  2010, Michael even invited me to his wedding reception during the King 
  Biscuit Festival. Our sympathies got out to his wife and family. 
Wishing you 
  health, happiness and lots of Blues music! 
Bob Kieser  
   Blues 
  Wanderings  
Blues Blast 
  photographer Marilyn Stringer has been VERY busy. In addition  to 
  making it to California to cover the Candye Kane benefit, she followed 
  up by going to the New Orleans Jazz Fest the following week, before 
  heading to Memphis to cover the Blues Music Awards this week. 
   
At the Jazz 
  Fest, she went 
  down to the Rock’N Bowl where Tab Benoit traditionally closes out Jazz 
  Fest. The opening act was the Royal Southern Brotherhood with Mike Zito, 
  Cyril Neville,  Charlie Wooten (bass) (pictured below) plus Devon Allman and Yonrico Scott 
  (Drums) 
  Following was Sonny Landreth and closing the night was Tab Benoit with 
  Jumpin’ Johnny Sansone. 
 | 
 
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  Blues Blast Magazine Seeks Summer Festival Reviewers 
Blues 
  Blast Magazine is looking for a few good men (Or Women)! Over the 2012 
  summer season we are looking for folks who attend Blues Festivals and 
  take good photos for festival reviews. If you attend multiple Blues 
  Festivals or Blues shows and could volunteer to send us 500 to 1000 word 
  reviews and some good photos, please reply to  
    
    
 
Reviewers 
  are needed for the Southwest and Texas area, the Florida and Gulf area, 
  the Eastern coast area and also on the European, Asian and Australian 
  continents. A short sample of your writing, a sample photo and info on 
  your Blues background would be helpful. Please include your phone number 
  with the reply. 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Interview - 
  Sugar Blue 
 
| 
   
Instead, it 
  turned out to be a case of divine inspiration. 
A 
  well-known New York City street musician at the time, Whiting was 
  playing underneath the MacDougal Street window of a little old lady at 2 
  a.m. early one morning. 
A little 
  old lady who was not the least bit impressed, or amused, with Whiting 
  and his serenading skills, especially at that hour. 
“She didn’t appreciate it and reached for the nearest box she could find to throw at us. And out of the window came this old box of 78s – smash – on the sidewalk,” he said. “And every record in that box shattered, except for the one on the top, and that one was “Sugar Blues” by Sidney Bechet.” 
And thus, 
  James Whiting, who had been searching for a nickname that would help him 
  stand out from the crowd, was instantly re-christened as Sugar Blue. 
“Another 
  foot to the right and she would have creamed me,” he laughed. 
But as 
  history would have it, Sugar Blue, harpist extraordinaire, would remain 
  unscathed from that incident in the West Village and his remarkable 
  journey down the blues highway would continue on. 
The very 
  latest steps on that never-ending trip are Blue's follow-up to his 
  Code Blue CD, which will be a live disc, and is slated for a summer 
  2012 release. 
The 
  appropriately-titled Raw Sugar captures Blue and his band – 
  Ilaria on bass (“My beautiful wife plays bass and she’s in my face and I 
  like it, laughed Blue), Damiano Della Torre (“a magnificent player”) on 
  piano, Rico McFarland (“one of the great guitar players in blues today”) 
  on guitar and James Knowles (“one of the best drummers and he’s been on 
  every record I’ve done since the 1990s”) on drums, burning down stages 
  and thrilling audiences at a number of different venues, as only they 
  can. 
“My mother 
  was a singer and a dancer back in the days when the Apollo Theater had a 
  chorus line; she was one of the chorus girls. And Billie Holiday was a 
  good friend of hers, Ella Fitzgerald was also a friend of the family, 
  Big Maybelle was also a really close friend, along with a bunch of other 
  musicians and show-biz people,” Blue said. “And they were always around 
  the house, even after my mother got out of the business to raise her 
  kids. And by the time I was 6 or 7, I decided that I wanted to play 
  music for a living because the people were so exciting and they told 
  such great stories. 
While music 
  was all around him, it was the sounds of horn-driven jazz that young 
  Sugar Blue was smitten with, instead of the sounds of the blues. 
“There was 
  the big band stuff that I was listening to when I was a kid, people like 
  Dexter Gordon, Johnny Hodges … cats like that,” he said. “But see, I’m a 
  New Yorker and I grew up on the jazz scene during the Verve years. A lot 
  of that stuff was being played around my house so I heard a lot more of 
  that than I heard of Chicago blues.” 
Then Blue, 
  along with countless other impressionable youth at the time, was swept 
  up into the gale force winds that were blowing across the ocean from 
  England. 
“When I got 
  to be about 16 or 17, I started listening to rock-n-roll – which I 
  couldn’t do in my mother’s house because she wouldn’t have it – but my 
  God brother had just introduced me to the British Invasion and I was 
  listening to The Beatles and The Rolling Stones and the rest of those 
  guys,” Blue said. “And I really sort of ran into Wolf and Muddy Waters 
  and those guys by reading the backs of the records. I would find an 
  interesting tune that I liked and then I would look on the back of the 
  album to see who wrote it.” 
One 
  particular song may very well have been Sugar Blue’s gateway into the 
  world of the blues. 
While the 
  hallowed names of Dixon, Wolf and Muddy all played pivotal roles in the 
  formation of The Rolling Stones (even providing them with their name), 
  in turn, those young British musicians helped turn on young music lovers 
  in the United States onto what was happening right under their own 
  noses, in their own backyard. 
“It’s a 
  good thing those cats picked up on the music, because we seemed to have 
  missed it here at home,” Blue said. “And as Willie Dixon said – and no 
  one has said it better – 'The blues are the roots and the rest of the 
  music is the fruit.'” 
As 
  circumstance would have it, Sugar Blue would later go on to play with 
  Willie Dixon in the Chicago Blues All-Stars for a couple of years, the 
  very man responsible for helping lead him down the path of the blues to 
  begin with. 
“I met 
  Willie Dixon through Victoria Spivey. I went to a performance with him 
  and Victoria and it was really a strange evening,” said Blue. “Victoria 
  also introduced me to her quote-unquote ‘son’ who was sitting in a 
  corner hiding from everybody. I said, ‘Who is that?’ And she said, ‘Oh, 
  that’s Bob.’ And I looked over and it was Dylan! I’m like, ‘That’s your 
  son? Oh, this is going to be one of those nights!’ We had Willie Dixon 
  and Carey Bell on one side and Bob Dylan on the other and Victoria 
  Spivey in the middle, bringing it all together.” 
“That was 
  also the night that she told Bob that I was going to be on his next 
  record,” Blue said. “And he looked at her quite seriously and said, 
  ‘Yes, mam.’” 
And 
  although Sugar Blue did indeed play on the sessions that wound up being 
  Dylan’s Desire album, his work didn’t make it on the original 
  disc. However, “Catfish Blues” featuring Sugar Blue on harp, was finally 
  issued on Dylan’s Bootleg Series Vol. 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased) 
  1961-1991. 
Spivey also 
  turned out to indirectly play a role in what turned out to be a major 
  turning point for Sugar Blue - his decision to leave the United States 
  for Paris, France. 
“Victoria 
  introduced me to Memphis Slim, who was playing at a club in the West 
  Village called the Top of the Gate. I asked him if I could sit in with 
  him and he said, “Well son, you can sit in with me, but you’d better be 
  able to play.’ And we played and thank goodness, he liked it,” said 
  Blue. “And then I asked him how he thought they would accept me in 
  Paris. And he said, “Well, they like Sonny Boy and you can play pretty 
  good, so if you’ve got the temerity for it, come along and join me.” 
So with 
  those words of advice ringing in his ears, a mere three weeks later, in 
  the fall of 1977, Sugar Blue was in the City of Lights, doing his thing. 
Only thing 
  was, he wasn’t doing his thing with Memphis Slim, the cat that 
  encouraged him to come to Paris. 
Leaving the 
  comfort and familiarity of your home country to go overseas - to a place 
  you’ve never been - without a job or without many contacts, has to be a 
  gutsy and nerve-racking path in order to make a living playing the 
  blues. 
“I just 
  said, ‘I’m gone,’ you know? It was like it was time to pursue the 
  adventure of a lifetime,” said Blue. “I had known since I had gotten out 
  of the army that this was going to be my life and if I was going to make 
  it my life, I had to take the chances that were required to make it, you 
  know? If you’re not willing to risk everything, don’t mess around with 
  art because art is no place for the cowardly.” 
Blue's 
  Paris experience probably hit its zenith with his hook-up with The 
  Rolling Stones. 
“They had 
  heard me playing with the great Louisiana Red, God rest his soul, he was 
  one of my mentors when I was younger, and they heard me playing on a 
  record with him in ‘75 or ‘76, or something like that. And Keith heard 
  it and then heard about me playing around there (Paris) and said, 'Wait 
  a minute, let's get this kid.' And the rest is rock-n-roll history, as 
  they like to say,” said Blue. 
“It was 
  really incredible to be on a record (“Miss You) that was responsible for 
  the resurgence of that band,” Blue said. “And actually being an 
  important and intrinsic part of the song, one that was the biggest song 
  in the history of the band, really says something about how important 
  the blues is to the music and how important it is to them as a musical 
  entity.” 
Maybe the 
  most impressive thing about his studio sessions with The Stones was the 
  amount of freedom the notoriously stubborn group gave Blue. 
“Nobody 
  gives me my freedom. Either you like what I do or you don't,” he said. 
  “There are other guys out here if you don't like what I do. They gave me 
  my heading and then they got out of the way.” 
After his 
  time in Paris, Sugar Blue returned back home to the United States and 
  has not slowed down one bit since his arrival back on these shores. 
And 
  thankfully, these days, no one is throwing musty, dusty boxes of 78s out 
  of their window at him. 
“We’re 
  working and writing songs like crazy, man. We are writing some 
  wonderful, wonderful songs,” said Blue. “I’m so excited about the music 
  we’re making today. Not only do we have the Raw Sugar album we’re 
  getting ready to put in the can, but the (studio) record for next year 
  is on its feet and I’m about ready to throw the switch and the current’s 
  going to go through it and … it’s alive! It’s alive! Ha, ha! So that’s 
  what we’re doing right now. You know, you gotta’ live note-by-note, 
  day-by-day - and basically that’s what I’m doing.” 
Photos by 
  Michael Kurgansky and Bob Kieser as marked © 2012 
  
  
    
   Interviewer Terry Mullins is a journalist and former record store 
  owner whose personal taste in music is the sonic equivalent of Attention 
  Deficit Disorder. Works by the Bee Gees, Captain Beefheart, Black 
  Sabbath, Earth, Wind & Fire and Willie Nelson share equal space with 
  Muddy Waters, The Staples Singers and R.L. Burnside in his compact disc 
  collection. He's also been known to spend time hanging out on the street 
  corners of Clarksdale, Miss., eating copious amounts of barbecued 
  delicacies while listening to the wonderful sounds of the blues.  
  
  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Live Blues Review - Candye Kane Benefit 
| 
   
  Candye 
  Kane Benefit – 4/30/2012 -
  Belly Up Tavern – Solana Beach, CA 
  
  
As fans & friends of Candye Kane know, she had her second pancreatic 
  surgery on May 2nd. To quote Candye’s update: I underwent a whipple 
  revision surgery on May 2 for a recurrence of the neuroendocrine 
  pancreatic cancer that first appeared in 2008 on my pancreatic head. The 
  results of the surgery are still not complete but so far, it looks like 
  they were able to remove all or most of the cancer and if things go 
  according to plan, my life should resume normalcy very soon. Cross your 
  fingers! 
There have been a few different benefits for Candye across the country 
  and I made a special trip to cover the one held at The Belly Up in 
  Solana Beach, CA, on April 30th. The event was a rousing success and 
  over $25,000 was raised that night from donations and raffles. And as we 
  all know that will barely cover medical expenses, living costs, and help 
  for the band while Candye recovers. So, if you can donate to Candye 
  please visit the site being held open for more donations: 
  http://concertforcandye.com/. 
The event was produced by Michael Kinsman (below), Janiva Magness, 
  Barbara Hammerman, Amanda Gresham & Henri Musselwhite. Good job!! 
The lineup 
  consisted of all of Candye’s life-long friends who came together to 
  support Candye. MC’s for the night were Evan Caleb Yearsley (Candye’s 
  son & previous drummer) and Rick Estrin (Rick Estrin & The Nightcats). 
  Laura Chavez, Candye’s best friend and guitar player was in attendance 
  and Debbie Davies flew all the way from Connecticut just to play for 
  Candye. 
The show 
  started at 7pm and without a single break, lasted until midnight. 
  Opening the show was Candye’s band and friends: Billy Watson 
  (harmonica), Evan Yearsley (drums), Johnny Viau (Sax), Kennan Shaw 
  (bass), Laura Chavez (guitar), Michele Lundeen (vocals), Ruby (vocals), 
  Steve Wilcox (guitar), and Thomas Yearsley (stand-up bass).  
  Next up was the Beat Farmers, a popular Southern California band. From 
  their website “The Beat Farmers were a band that stayed true to what 
  they believed, which is good, honest, and straight ahead rock and roll 
  music. Their sound is difficult to describe--too rock for country, too 
  country for rock. They were an influential and unusual band insomuch as 
  they had two lead guitarists and three lead vocalists.” They were 
  definitely indescribable, fun, and as with the rest of the performers, 
  have known Candye for decades. Shown are Jerry Raney (guitar), Joey 
  Harris (guitar), Rolle Love (bass) and Joey Harris (guitar).  
During 
  the set change we were entertained by raffles, Rick Estrin’s humor, or 
  Jack Tempchin, a writer of many songs for the Eagles, including Sweet 
  Easy Feeling, one of the songs he performed. Wonderful! 
In between 
  his MC duties, Rick Estrin & The Nightcats gave us a full taste of his 
  band, which of course is always fun with Rick playing his harmonica, Kid 
  Andersen bending his guitar, Lorenzo Farrell switching from bass to 
  keyboards, and J. Hansen on the drums. 
After 
  they completed their set, they backed up Debbie Davies for her set. What 
  a treat for the west coast blues fans who don’t get many opportunities 
  to see the Legendary Debbie Davies who is from Connecticut and flew out 
  just to play for Candye!! That is BIG LOVE!!  
Next up was Kim Wilson (harmonica – as if you didn’t know), Anson 
  Funderburgh (guitar), Larry Taylor (guitar & bass), Carl Sonny Leland 
  (keyboards), and Scottie Blim (bass). Needless to say the music talent 
  just kept on coming – with no breaks! The house was packed-one dare not 
  leave their “spot”!! Kim & the band “blew us away!” 
  When Kim completed his set, the band remained as Janiva Magness stepped 
  out on stage and sang her heart out for Candye. Kid Anderson & Lorenzo 
  Farrell also joined the band and added more healing energy to the set. 
  Kid Anderson stayed, Tommy Castro and Randy McDonald (bass) and the band 
  played on. 
  Waiting patiently in the wings all evening and being his particularly 
  humorous self while playing off his brother, Dave Alvin finally came on 
  stage. And because it was getting late and was a work night, a lot of 
  the crowd had left. Dave was right when he said “For those who had to 
  leave, they don’t know what they are missing! Let me bring out my 
  brother Phil!” And so the fun just intensified with about 15 minutes of 
  Dave & Phil Alvin. All I can say is Candye has some marvelous friends!! 
  Dave Alvin & The Guilty Ones with guest Phil Alvin were another “treat” 
  for us all. Band: Lisa Pankratz (drums) Chris Miller (guitar).  
And yes, there was a finale!! And yes, it was fantastic!!  
  Please support live music and the musicians, especially in their time of 
  need. Please click on the link and donate if you can to help Candye get 
  through this healing time: http://concertforcandye.com/. You can also 
  keep up with her progress and recovery on Facebook. And thanks to all of 
  those who donated whether they made it not – it was a night to 
  remember!! 
Photos & 
  Comments By 
  Marilyn Stringer © 2012 
  MJStringerPhoto.com 
  
  
  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 1 of 6 
 
| 
   
  Self-release 
10 
  tracks; Runtime: 57:32 minutes 
Anybody 
  know where the Blues lives? Surprise! Evidently, it’s in San Diego. 
  Where The Blues Lives is the second CD offering from 145th Street, a 
  five-man San Diego blues band, led by Steve (Stevie B) Bulger on vocals 
  and harp, and Marc (the Wonder Boy) Marrewa on guitar.  
According 
  to a December 2011 article in the San Diego Reader, this band is named 
  for the 1-4-5 chord progression of your standard 12-bar blues; and they 
  added the word “Street” because, well, “that’s where it all happens.” 
  But don’t let the name fool you. This is no standard blues band, doing 
  the same old blues songs in the usual style, and 145th Street is proud 
  of that fact. Nine of the ten tracks on this CD are originals, written 
  by Bulger and Marrewa, who strive to bring you what they call an “urban 
  blues experience.” Even the one cover tune, the Willie Dixon classic, 
  “Make Love To You,” gets a very original, contemporary-sounding 
  arrangement, featuring a catchy riff and a bit of dueling harp and sax. 
Every track 
  leaves ample time to spotlight solos on harp, guitar and sax (with the 
  sax skillfully played by Walter Gentry). All three musicians can run the 
  gamut from down & dirty to sophisticated, bordering on jazz. Check out 
  the CD cover photo and you’ll see an abundance of confidence and 
  attitude, and what you see is what you get. This band’s playing is so 
  tight that you’d think they must have been playing together for decades 
  – while, in reality, most of these guys only joined 145th Street since 
  the previous (2005) CD. It’s like they have a mind-meld going and never 
  get out of synch. 
This CD 
  opens strong and just keeps getting better. The first (title) track 
  serves as an anthem to this band and their San Diego-style, party-time 
  blues. It cranks up the energy right away, and gives you a good sampling 
  of what these musicians can do – not to mention, fixes their name, 145th 
  Street, firmly in your mind by well-placed repetition. The 4th cut, 
  “Your Little Show,” has almost a Latin beat, with a little funky wah-wah 
  thrown in. The 6th and longest track, “What Am I S’posed To Do,” is a 
  fairly slow blues tune with an amazing guitar solo – heavy on the pedal.  
One of my 
  favorite songs on the CD is the last cut, “Give Her What She Wants.” A 
  section of this one borrows Buddy Guy’s technique of grabbing your 
  attention by singing and playing very softly, then suddenly and 
  strategically cranking the volume back up. It is also one of several 
  cuts on this CD where you’ll hear the harp, guitar and/or sax playing 
  together either in tandem or in tight harmony – just a little different 
  version of what the Allman Brothers do so well with two guitars.  
If you’re 
  looking for a band whose blues can make you cry, with a vocalist who 
  seems genuinely heartbroken, then 145th Street is probably not the band 
  for you. But if high energy is more your style, you might want to give 
  Where The Blues Lives a shot. In terms of pure enthusiasm, this studio 
  album can beat many live performances. Bulger’s vocals, in particular, 
  will convince you this was taped before a live audience, and the mood is 
  pure party.  
Where does 
  the Blues live? Besides those other great blues cities we all know and 
  love, you just might find it in San Diego. Just ask the locals where you 
  can find145th Street. And hopefully they’ll soon be taking their party 
  on the road, to a blues club near you. 
  
  
  Reviewer Sheila Skilling is a self-professed “blues fan by marriage,” 
  who was hooked by her husband’s musical preferences, but reeled in by 
  the live performances of Stevie Ray Vaughan, Buddy Guy and others. She 
  lives in the Minneapolis area. 
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website  
  CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 2 of 6 
 
| 
   
Self 
  Released 
13 
  tracks / 53:20 
I am a 
  sucker for clever band names and Microwave Dave and the Nukes is a 
  winning handle that gives a hint of the good times music they play. Good 
  times abound on their seventh album which is mostly blues-based music, 
  but ends up having a little bit of everything in it. Don’t worry though, 
  because all of these songs groove.  
There are 
  ten original tracks, along with two cover tunes and a bonus track of 
  mechanical noise (an automotive winch, or so I have been told). Much of 
  the original material is written by guitarist and vocalist “Microwave” 
  Dave Gallaher, who founded this group in 1989. The Nukes consist of 
  James Irvin on drums and Rick Godfrey on the bass and harp, completing 
  this Alabama-based trio; all three are all accomplished bluesmen and 
  first-rate musicians.  
The album 
  kicks off with “Drinkin’ Wine Since Nine”, which grinds but (like all 
  liquor-themed songs) does not have the most intellectual lyrics. If you 
  were not previously familiar with the band, this delta-inspired track 
  provides a perfect introduction for Dave’s growly voice and dirty slide 
  guitar work, as well as the tight and adventuresome duo of Irvin and 
  Godfrey. 
As I said 
  earlier, there is a little bit of everything here and the second track 
  “Jesus was Smart”, shifts into a countrified shuffle and provides the 
  listeners with some clever and smart-alecky lyrics.  
And the 
  surprises just keep on coming. I have been listening to blues for a 
  while now, and cannot remember the last time I heard a full-fledged 
  lengthy bass solo on a blues album, but “I’ve got a Bet with Myself” 
  delivers one, along with a fine selection of AC/DC to ZZ Top up-tempo 
  rock riffs. 
The journey 
  through the album finally slows down for a lovely blues ballad, “The 
  Worst Thing” which provides Dave with the opportunity to show off some 
  truly soulful guitar work. His voice and guitar work magically together. 
I cannot 
  resist the Billy C. Farlow cover tune, “Alabama Saturday Night”, which 
  has a tough Bo Diddley beat to it, thanks in no small part to the 
  thumping drums laid down by James Irvin and some pretty sweet harp work 
  by Godfrey. 
“All Night 
  Boogie” is indeed a boogie, and features impressive Keith Moon-esque 
  drumming throughout, almost like a drum solo that happens to have a 
  blues song happening on top of it. James Irvin is very talented, and his 
  playing throughout is considerably more complicated than what is found 
  on more conventional blues albums. This song has really stuck with me 
  and is my favorite on the album, so kudos for doing something a little 
  bit differently, gentlemen. 
Heading 
  into the final half of this CD, there are twists and turns through the 
  influences of the Appalachians, and possibly Memphis, before things get 
  decidedly weird (in a good way). 
You will 
  see what I mean, because as the album ends, it takes a couple of 
  unexpected turns, first with “Vagabundos”, a surf tune with Gallaher 
  providing Spanish vocals in his distinctive baritone, and then with 
  “Rafferty”, a 7-minute AOR instrumental that is amazingly melodic . 
  Microwave Dave and the Nukes have provided a little something for 
  everybody on this album, and it is quite a trip! 
By now you 
  probably realize that this is not strictly a blues album, but overall is 
  great entertainment and a lot of these songs have made it onto the 
  playlist I am putting together for my next party. I think Last Time I 
  Saw You will appeal to most blues followers, and I think you should 
  give it a listen.  
  
  
    
   Reviewer Rex Bartholomew is a Los Angeles-based writer and musician; 
  his blog can be found at rexbass.blogspot.com.  
  
  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 3 of 6 
 
| 
   
  Shrapnel Records 
  Time-55:26 
  This Los Angeles native blends his early influences of sixties rock and 
  traditional and electric jazz and processes it through his creative mind 
  to arrive at a quirky and interesting display of guitar based 
  instrumentals. His guitar playing is at times jagged, melodic and 
  includes obvious nods to Jimi Hendrix, Robin Trower and most notably 
  fusion-era Jeff Beck, while still achieving his own personal style and 
  sound. Most songs see him accompanied by drums, bass and Hammond organ. 
  The rhythm section is right on his tail during every turn in the road. 
  Mike has much professional experience to draw from as he has done 
  session work for Pink Floyd, Miles Davis, Joni Mitchell, Rod Stewart and 
  Ray Charles, among others. He has also put in his touring dues with the 
  likes of Boz Scaggs, James Taylor, Joni Mitchell and Robben Ford.  
  The record starts off with gentle acoustic strumming over a spare drum 
  beat, and is then picked up by soft electric guitar in “Delano”. Organ, 
  bass and full kit drums, building momentum slightly, attaining a 
  bubbling cauldron of instrumental interplay. His guitar soars and bends 
  just enough without going over the top. Next up is “Sneaker Wave”, which 
  sounds like electric-Irish Jig-meets-Jeff Beck. While the jaunty 
  jig-like riff plays underneath, Michael sounds like Jeff Beck ripping 
  off squealing and tasty licks.  
  “Spider Time” is a moody song were the Hendrix-Trower influence goes 
  back and forth, until Beck-like squeezed notes shoot out like beautiful 
  sparks, propelling a lilting melody. Larry Goldings contributes a 
  gorgeous organ solo along the way. “The Big Black Bear” owes a lot to 
  Robin Trower’s melancholy and soaring-through-the-heavens style. It’s 
  Trower’s tone channeled through another guitar master. The flugel horn 
  playing of Walt Fowler on “Big Sur Howl” gives it a “Sunday 
  afternoon”-jazz vibe. Organs and carillon (bells) are the sole 
  accompaniment to acoustic and electric guitar provided in “Smoke”. The 
  record closes out with Michael trading off of acoustic and electric 
  guitars with no backing musicians, on the melancholy “The Family Tree”. 
  There is much here for “guitar freaks”, as new things pop up to your 
  ears at every listening. This music sure holds your attention. A mellow 
  guitar interlude might just turn into what sounds like Godzilla on a bad 
  day. Although the guitar sound is his, fans will have fun spotting the 
  influences that pop up. The assorted drummers assembled here provide 
  that bombastic sound, when needed, to propel the songs along. All-in-all 
  this is music for the musically adventurous. You surely won’t find 
  yourself nodding off to this stuff. 
  
  
    
  Reviewer Greg “Bluesdog” Szalony hails from the New Jersey Delta.  
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 4 of 6 
 
| 
   
  Mug-Shot Production 
  Robert Mugge – Director & Editor 
  DVD – 96 minutes 
  16x9 widescreen 
  What do you get when you mix over a thousand blues fans, more than 
  thirty of the best blues musicians or bands - and the warm Caribbean 
  sun? You have one of Roger Naber's floating blues parties, better known 
  as the Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise. Naber's genius was to make it 
  possible for blues lovers and musicians to spend a week sailing the high 
  seas together, where the relaxed atmosphere and laid-back attitudes 
  remove the barriers between fans and musicians.  
  Director Robert Mugge has built his career documenting various music 
  genres and the artists that make the music special. With more than 
  thirty films to his credit, Mugge has garnered praise for his work like 
  his documentaries about Al Green, Sonny Rollins and the effects of 
  Hurricane Katrina on the New Orleans musical community (New Orleans 
  Music in Exile). His second DVD to take a look at the Blues Cruise 
  phenomenon focuses on one of the many aspects that make the cruise so 
  unique – the nightly Pro Jam sessions, held outdoors with a 1 am start 
  time on the aft pool deck. There is a different artist designated to 
  host each session during the week. 
  The disc starts with Tommy Castro and Elvin Bishop discussing the 
  genesis of the nightly gathering of the professional musicians where 
  they get the rare opportunity to play together, sometimes for the first 
  time. These sessions are always intriguing for the audience as they get 
  to witness these once-in-a-lifetime combinations, like one film segment 
  that features Johnny Winter and Elvin Bishop trading guitar licks with 
  Edgar Winter on keyboards.  
  Another sequence has Marcia Ball leading the jam backed by an eight 
  piece horn section and Jimmy Thackery on guitar for Bobby “Blue” Bland's 
  “I Woke Up Screaming”. Ball later comments that having all of the horns 
  made the song sound just like she imagined it in her dreams. Another 
  highlight is the frenzied boogie-woogie jam in the Piano Bar featuring 
  Eden Brent, Commander Cody and Kellye Hunt. A second segment showcases 
  host Leon Blue with Hunt and the Commander. Guitarist Vasti Jackson 
  joins Coco Montoya and ends up walking through the theater, his 
  high-energy performance delighting the audience. 
  The film includes commentary on the art of jamming and the inherent 
  issues of leading a session from Thackery, Coco Montoya, Larry McCray, 
  Kim Wilson and Lee Oskar. The Rev. Billy C. Wirtz and Cody explain some 
  of the finer points of piano players working together in two enjoyable 
  segments. Bill Wax of the SiriusXM BB King Bluesville program and noted 
  music producer & historian Bob Porter lend some historical perspective 
  to the history of jamming, with its roots in jazz music. Vasti Jackson 
  and Laith Al-Saadi provide an enlightening demonstration on the finer 
  points of guitar players working together in the jam format. 
  Other musical highlights include a run-through of “Fooled Around and 
  Fell in Love” by Elvin Bishop's Raisin' Hell Revue with Kid Andersen on 
  guitar and John Nemeth adding an electrifying vocal. Castro's “A Good 
  Woman is Hard to Find” features a sizzling solo from guitarist Mighty 
  Mike Schermer and some tantalizing piano from Commander Cody. Sista 
  Monica Parker's powerful voice sounds right at home with Lee Oskar and 
  the Lowrider Band behind her, with Larry McCray stealing a bit of the 
  spotlight with his red-hot guitar licks. The final jam is a 
  dream-come-true for harmonica fans with Rick Estrin, Oskar and Nemeth 
  joining Kim Wilson. 
  The disc closes with a harmonica duet featuring Wilson and Oskar, a 
  quiet little number that provides a sharp contrast to all of the other 
  musical fireworks in the film. Mugge and his partner, Diana Zelman, have 
  managed to create a work that suceeds on several levels. It educates 
  viewers on the art of jamming while providing actual performances that 
  illustrates the points under discussion. You get exciting combinations 
  of great musicians playing for their own enjoyment as well as the fans 
  who manage to stay up that late! And it provides a close-up view of what 
  the Blues Cruise is all about. You will certainly play this disc more 
  than a time or two. 
  
  
    
  Reviewer Mark Thompson retired after twelve 
  years as president of the Crossroads Blues Society in Rockford. IL. and 
  moved to Florida. He has been listening to music of all kinds for over 
  fifty years. Favorite musicians include Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, 
  Little Walter, Magic Slim, Magic Sam, Charles Mingus and Count Basie.  
  
  
  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 
   not-for-profit event with 
   the subject line "Blues Society News" to: 
    
   
   Maximum of 175 words in a Text or MS Word document 
 format. 
   Crossroads Blues 
   Society - Rockford, IL 
   Billy Flyn will be conducting two Blues in the Schools (BITS) 
   programs for Crossroads on Tuesday, May 15th. The AM session is at 
   Harlem Middle School in Loves Park, IL (just north of Rockford) at 
   9:30 AM and the afternoon will be with K thru 3 at Mary Morgan 
   Elementary School in Byron, IL at 2:00 PM. We expect about 300 
   students at each program! we will have reached out with 104 programs 
   for 31,000 students and over 2,200 teachersnad staff members after 
   completing these programs. 
   That night, Billy will be appearing solo at Leombruni's Italian 
   Village in the bar at 7:00 PM. The show is free for students with an 
   adult and for Crossroads members; cover is $5 for others. This is a 
   great opportunity to hear this Grammy Award winning guitar wizard! 
   Billy appeared in Byron at the inaugural 2010 blues festival there, 
   where he and the Cashbox Kings tore the place up! Come on down to 
   Byron for a great night of blues, pizza and beer. Leombruni's has 
   been a supporter, member, and sponsor of Crossroads since 2005, and 
   we thank them for helping us keep the blues alive! Please call 
   779-537-4006 if you have any questions. Crossroads is excited to 
   present this great show! 
   Also, two hot June shows coming up in Rockford!!! Walter Trout is 
   appearing at the Adriatic at 327 W.Jefferson St in Rockford, IL on 
   Tuesday, June 5th at 8 PM. Advanced tickets are only $15, with 
   admission $20 atthe door. Tickets are available at the club, online 
   at 
   http://crossroadsbluessociety.blogspot.com/. Get tickets early 
   as this may sell out!  
   Bryan Lee appears at Mary's Place at 602 N Madison St in Rockford, 
   IL on Wednesday June 13th. Admission is $10; advanced tickets get 
   reserved seating. Tickets at Mary's place or through Crossroads 
   Blues Society. Call 779-537-4006 or email
   sub_insignia@yahoo.com 
   for more info on either show. 
   The Blues Kids Foundation - Chicago, IL 
   The Blues Kids Foundation presents Fernando Jones’ Annual Blues 
   Camp. This fun-filled experience awards scholarships to over 120 
   Blues Kids (ages 12 to 18), affording them a “priceless” fun-filled 
   experience. They will learn and perform America’s root music in a 
   fully funded, weeklong program with like minded others under the 
   tutelage of national and international instructors. Blues Camp is in 
   residence at: Columbia College Chicago, Huston-Tillotson University 
   (Austin, TX) and the Fender Center (Corona, CA). This series is 
   designed for America’s youth and educators.  To be a sponsor 
   call us at 312-369-3229. 
   AUDITION DATES & CITIES 
Saturday, April 21, 2012 10am - noon, Columbia College Music Center, 1014 S, Michigan Chicago, IL Saturday, May 12, 2012 10am - noon, The Fender Center, Corona, CA Saturday, May 26 Time TBA at Maria Maria's, Austin, TX CAMP DATES & CITIES July 15 - 21 / Columbia College, Chicago, IL June 17 - 23 / Fender Center, Corona, CA June 13 - 16 / Huston-Tillotson University, Austin, TX 
   The Ventura 
   County Blues Society - Ventura County, CA  
   The Ventura County (Calif) Blues Society has tapped bluesman Tommy 
   Marsh and Bad Dog to host their weekly "BluesJam" series at The 
   Tavern in Ventura, launching Wednesday, May 2 and happening every 
   Wednesday thereafter. The Ventura County Blues Society's Sunday 
   Blues Matinee Concert Series kicks off Sunday, July 8 with Chris 
   Cain, Tommy Marsh and Bad Dog, and Kelly's Lot, at the High Street 
   Arts Center, in Moorpark, Calif. Info:
   
   http://www.venturacountybluessociety.org/. 
   Prairie Crossroads 
   Blues Society – Champaign-Urbana, IL 
   Prairie Crossroads Blues Society shows: Friday, June 1, 1st 
   Friday Blues, Tee Dee Young, WEFT and Memphis on Main, Champaign. 
   For more info: 
   http://prairiecrossroadsblues.org. 
   The West Virginia Blues 
   Society - Charleston, W.V.  
   The Charlie West Blues Festival is a FREE event, held on May 18,19 & 
   20, 2012 on the beautiful banks of the Kanawha River in Charleston, 
   WVa .A tribute to our military, an opportunity to show patriotism 
   and loving support for our troops and their families. The Charlie 
   West Blues Fest is produced by the West Virginia Blues Society.  
   This years lineup includes Kenny Wayne Shepherd, on Saturday, 
   brought to you by Charleston CVB, Ruthie Foster, Rod Piazza and the 
   Mighty Flyers, Johnny Rawls, Fiona Boyes, Slim Fatz,Jill West & The 
   Blues Attack,Six Kinds of Crazy,Mel Melton & The Wicked Mojos, 
   Mahajibee,Dennis McClung Blues Band,Ms. Freddye,The Carpenter 
   Ants,Diddly Squatt, Lascivious Deacons and the Shaune Booker Band. 
   Our second stage will feature the best in local and regional music 
   for your enjoyment. After Jams to be held at the Sound Factory on 
   Friday and Saturday. Music starts at 6 o'clock on Friday and runs to 
   11 pm. Saturday will be noon to 11 pm and Sunday is 1 pm to 9 pm. 
   More details can be found at,
   
   www.charliewestbluesfest.com For more info contact Jack L. Rice, 
   West Virginia Blues Society, 304-389-1439,
   Bkravenhawk@hotmail.com 
   or visit 
   www.wvbluessociety.org  
   The Diamond State Blues 
   Society - Middletown , Delaware 
   The 1st St. Georges Blues Fest sponsored by The Diamond State Blues 
   Society is Saturday, June 16th, 2012, Noon to 8pm rain or shine, on 
   the grounds of The Commodore Center, 1701 N. DuPont Hwy., St. 
   Georges, Delaware. Featured are Garry Cogdell & the Complainers; 
   lower case blues with special guest Johnny Neel; Dave Fields, 
   Brandon Santini & his Band; J.P. Soars & the Red Hots; and 
   headlining is The Bernard Allison Group. Details and links to 
   tickets at 
   www.DiamondStateBlues.com.  
   Mississippi Valley Blues Society - Davenport, IA 
  The Mississippi Valley Blues Society presents its annual Fundraiser on 
  Saturday May 12 at Martinis on the Rock (4619 - 34th Street, Rock 
  Island, just south of Blackhawk Road). Admission is $20, which will get 
  you in the door, a ticket for door prizes and a trip through the buffet 
  line. A silent auction, begins at 6:00 p.m., with the music starting at 
  7:00 p.m. Proceeds benefit the 2012 Blues Festival. 
  Music will be provided by three bands who have won the Iowa Blues 
  Challenge, the Steady Rollin’ Blues Band, The Candymakers, and The 
  Mercury Brothers will each take the stage in Martinis’ brand new outdoor 
  music pavilion, situated in back with a stunning view of the scenic Rock 
  River. After the three sets, the MVBS will host a jam session. The 
  non-profit Mississippi Valley Blues Society depends heavily on 
  fundraisers such as this to keep our musical standards as high, and our 
  Festival admission prices ridiculously low, as they’ve been in the past. 
  The Mississippi Valley Blues Festival 
  in Davenport, Iowa is June 29th & 30th, and July1st. Scheduled 
  performers include Mathew Curry and The Fury, Earnest ‘’Guitar’’ Roy, 
  Sugar Ray and the Bluetones, Liz Mandeville and Donna Herula, Kenny Neal 
  and Super Chikan Johnson on June 29th, Terry Quiett, Bryce Janey, Ray 
  Fuller and the Blues Rockers, Doug MacLeod, Preston Shannon, Ernest 
  Dawkins Quartet, Guitar Shorty, Moreland and Arbuckle, Coco Montoya and 
  Kelley Hunt on June 30th. Lady Bianca, Paul Geremia, Johnny Rawls, 
  Trampled Under Foot and the Brooks Family Blues Dynasty featuring Lonnie 
  Brooks, Ronnie Baker Brooks and Wayne Baker Brooks, plus Bobby Rush with 
  “The Double Rush Revue” on Sunday July 1st.
   
   http://www.mvbs.org 
   River City Blues Society 
   - Pekin, IL 
   River City Blues Society presents: Bringing The Blues To You with 
   the following shows at  Goodfellas 1414 N. 8th St, Pekin, Illinois 
   - Matthew Curry & the Fury, Friday May 25th 7:30 
   pm – 11:00 pm.  Admission for these shows is $5.00 non-members 
   $3.00 members. A special show featuring the 2011 International Blues 
   Challenge winner Lionel Young Band with opening act The Governor is 
   Friday, June 22 From 7:00 pm – 11:00 pm Admission: $5.00  For more info visit:
   www.rivercityblues.com 
   or call 309-648-8510  
   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 8:00pm $3 
   cover. May 14 – Diddley Squat, May 21 
   – Rev. Raven & the Chain Smokin’ Alterboys, May 28 – Lionel Young 
   Band, Jun 4 – Big Jeff Chapman Blues Band , Jun 11 – Deb Callahan, 
   Jun 18 – Sugar Ray & The Bluetones Jun 25 – TBA.  Other ICBC 
   sponsored events at the K of C Hall, Casey’s Pub, 2200 Meadowbrook 
   Rd., Springfield, IL from 7:30pm - Midnight - May 12 – Eddie Turner 
   Band, , - Jun 30 – Matt Hill . icbluesclub.org 
   The Friends Of The Blues - Watseka, IL 
   Friends of the Blues present 2012 shows: 
Thur, May 17, Reverend Raven & C.S.A.B., 7 pm, Kankakee Valley Boat Club Tues, June 19, Sugar Ray Norcia & Bluetones, 7 pm, Kankakee Valley Boat Club Tues, June 26, Tom Holland & Shuffle Kings, 7 pm, Bradley Bourbonnais Sportsmen’s Club July – Sugarcane Collins - details TBA July - Dave Riley – details TBA Tues, July 24, Laurie Morvan Band, 7 pm, Bradley Bourbonnais Sportsmen’s Club Wed, August 22, Smokin’ Joe Kubek w/ Bnois King, 7 pm, Kankakee Valley Boat Club Thur, Sept 6, Ivas John Band, 7 pm, venue TBA Tues, Sept 18, Smilin’ Bobby, 7 pm, venue TBA Thursday, Oct 18, Morry Sochat & The Special 20s, 7 pm, TBA 
   Rosedale Crossroads Blues Society - Rosedale, MS 
   Rosedale Crossroads Blues Society presents The Crossroads Blues and 
   Heritage Festival, Saturday, May 12, 2012 at the River Resort at 
   Highway 1 South in historic Rosedale, MS featuring Bill Abel, 
   Cadillac John, Big Joe Shelton, DSU Ol’ Skool Revue and other area 
   artists. 
   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  
    | 
  
  Featured Blues Review 5 of 6 
 
| 
   
Aria B.G. 
  Records 
12 
  songs; 47:36 minutes; Splendid 
Styles: 
  Spiritual Lyrics set to Traditional Blues music; Gospel 
Lurrie 
  Bell: a book chapter has already been written about him. Next, an entire 
  book could be written which would probably be followed by the movie. 
  It’s about a tortured artist. It is a character study rich and real, 
  gritty, sometimes incredibly sad yet ultimately uplifting, a survivor 
  story – Lurrie’s story.  
On the 
  surface, his new CD is propelled by Bell’s legendary guitar work – equal 
  parts emotion and creativity. A deeper understanding of Lurrie’s history 
  will allow the listener to begin to understand the depth of from where 
  he is coming. For those interested, start with David Whiteis’ “Chicago 
  Blues: Portraits and Stories.” Son of famed Chicago harp master Carey 
  Bell, Lurrie was born December 13, 1958 into both Blues music and chaos. 
  A natural prodigy, Bell took up guitar at an early age. But, from the 
  time he was seven years old until his early teens, he lived in 
  Mississippi and Alabama with his grandparents. Bell’s Chicago music was 
  married to their church music, which gave him a chance to learn Gospel 
  beside his Blues. Upon returning to Chicago, he played with industry 
  tops, like Koko Taylor, and was in the Sons of Blues with Billy Branch. 
  His life and career have seen the highest of highs and the lowest of 
  lows. For example, most of the 1980s were a lost decade of mental 
  instability and drug abuse. Since 1989, he has released ten critically 
  acclaimed solo CDs while dealing with the death of twin babies, his life 
  partner, and his father, Carey. A lesser person would have succumbed, 
  but it is Lurrie’s inner faith and music, both Gospel and Blues, that 
  maintained him. Today, Bell is a steadily employed, highly in demand 
  bluesman, playing several festivals this summer, touring the world, and 
  touring with the “Chicago Blues: A Living History” band. Bell really had 
  no choice; this CD had to come out.  
Most of the 
  CD consists of traditional Gospel songs and spirituals, and there are 
  songs by Muddy Waters, Joe Louis Walker, Tom Waits, James Taylor, and 
  producer Matthew Skoller, the title track. The album is neither pure 
  Gospel nor is it a pure Blues record. It is a bare bones set which 
  mainly features the amazing Bell on both vocals and acoustic guitar. 
  Featured guests include Billy Branch, Kenny Smith, Bill Sims, Jr., 
  Matthew Skoller, and Joe Louis Walker. “It’s blues, but it’s more 
  gospel. I’m singing about the Lord,” Bell said in a recent Blues Blast 
  Magazine cover story interview. “I’m singing some of the spirituals that 
  I learned when I was living in the south with my grandparents down in 
  Alabama. I wanted to revisit that whole scene on this new CD. ... to be 
  able to do something for the Lord after all these years of playing the 
  blues and going to all those countries and recording all this music … I 
  just wanted to spend a little time and thank God for what he gave me.” 
Album 
  opener “Swing Low” may be a traditional song, but, typical of the entire 
  CD, it doesn’t sound that way in Bell’s hands. With accompaniment from 
  only Kenny “Beedy Eyes” Smith’s percussion and handclaps by Bill Sims 
  Jr., Bell’s vocals are simultaneously ragged and confident. Joe Louis 
  Walker appears on three songs with sweet acoustic slide licks, solos, 
  and support behind Bell’s finger picking on “It’s A Blessing,” “Peace In 
  The Valley,” and Walker’s original, “I’ll Get To Heaven On My Own.” 
Muddy 
  Waters’ Gospelized “Why Don’t You Live So God Can Use You” features Bell 
  on forcefully convincing solo vocal and guitar – both strumming and 
  tapping on the wooden body. There is a Chicago Blues feel to “Trouble In 
  My Way” with a full band: Smith on drums, Billy Branch on harp, Josef 
  Ben Israel on upright bass, and Mike Avery and James Teague on backing 
  vocals.  
To end the 
  record, Bell recorded “Death Don’t Have No Mercy (A Meditation)” written 
  by the legendary Reverend Gary Davis, both a Bluesman and a believer 
  himself. This number is performed with just Bell on vocals and guitar. 
  Here we find the essence of the entire album: this sad expression of 
  inevitable demise is transformed by Bell into hearts for hope for our 
  temporary days of living. His wrenched and wrought notes from his guitar 
  are themselves a simply wonderful testimonial to the soul and creativity 
  of this faithful survivor. 
The 
  Devil Ain’t Got No Music is a formidable achievement. Bell has been 
  redeemed, and he may just bring a few close listeners with him. 
  
  Reviewer James "Skyy Dobro" Walker is a noted Blues writer, 
  DJ, Master of Ceremonies, and Blues Blast contributor. His weekly radio 
  show "Friends of the Blues" can be heard Saturdays 8 pm - Midnight on 
  WKCC 91.1 FM and at www.wkccradio.org in Kankakee, IL.
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website  
  CLICK HERE 
 | 
 
  
   Featured Blues Review 6 of 
  6 
 
| 
   
  Delta Groove Music 
  14 songs; 59:50 minutes 
  Styles: “1920s acoustic blues, amplified juke joint hill country, 
  1950s uptown blues w/1960s soulful R&B” 
  Upon viewing the cover photograph of Southern California native Nathan 
  James’ latest release, one might wonder: “Is that a guitar or a 
  washboard?” Remarkably, it’s both, a homemade instrument dubbed the 
  “Washtar Gitboard”! 2007 International Blues Challenge winner in the 
  Solo/duo category with Ben Hernandez, James has never been one to follow 
  convention. Neither have the Rhythm Scratchers (bassist Troy Sandow and 
  drummer Marty Dodson). As Nathan reveals in the liner notes to “What You 
  Make of It”, “[we recorded this album] setting up very few microphones 
  and playing together in the same room without any isolation, or even 
  headphones, to capture as much of our live sound as possible.” Each of 
  the fourteen selections on this album, whether a cover or original song, 
  is worthy of an analysis paragraph! Lacking space, however, here are 
  three that exemplify “Washtar Soul”: 
  Track 01: “Chosen Kind”--“This is often our grand finale song at shows,” 
  comments Nathan, “and never fails to grab everyone’s attention and raise 
  the roof!” Truer words were never spoken. Through “Chosen Kind”, 
  listeners will scratch their itch to dance as much as James scratches 
  another of his creations, the “Tri-tar.” Troy Sandow’s harmonica in this 
  hill country trance groove is addicting here, pulling out all the stops 
  alongside James’ lead guitar.  
  Track 03: “Black Snakin’ Jiver”--Even though Nathan James says he took 
  this traditional melody from an old Blind Boy Fuller song, “Jiver” is 
  unique in its own right. The most noticeable instrument here is the one 
  James plays with his mouth instead of his fast fingers: a kazoo! Rarely 
  has its signature sound possessed such panache, especially in 
  contemporary blues music. It’s endearing instead of annoying, and so is 
  the solo breakdown in the middle of this jug-band/ragtime song, “always 
  completely improvised every time, including on this recorded version,” 
  James explains. For more amusing kazoo fun, check out Track 08: “Pretty 
  Baby Don’t Be Late”.  
  Track 10: “Pain Inside Waltz”--Sometimes, the best numbers on a blues 
  album are the most poignant. Case in point: “Pain Inside Waltz,” which 
  Nathan says was inspired by Cajun waltz fiddle songs. “I fell for her 
  charms,” he tells an ex-lover regretfully, “let another woman fall back 
  in my arms, where you used to be…” What kind of “pain inside” is “not 
  supposed to hurt?” It’s the bittersweet ache of love lost, and every 
  couple dancing to this number will be compelled to remember it.  
  James Harman had taken 19-year-old Nathan James into his band; Harman 
  guests here on vocals and harmonica on track 7. Over the years, Nathan 
  James has played alongside such other legends as Kim Wilson, Pinetop 
  Perkins and Billy Boy Arnold. In 2007, he and harp-er Ben Hernandez 
  conquered the Memphis crowd at the International Blues Challenge, 
  winning first place. Five years later, they’re still going strong. In 
  their hearts, they know modern blues music is “What You Make of It!” 
  
  
  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 
 | 
 
 Live Blues Calendar
  YOU can submit your Blues performances for 
 FREE at:  
http://www.thebluesblast.com/submitnews.htm 
 Performance dates were submitted by Musicians, Club Owners, Blues Societies 
 and Blues festivals. 
 TheBluesBlast.com is not responsible for errors or omissions. 
 
 or click a state to see Blues shows by State 
 Alabama  
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 Florida  Georgia   
Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Other Countries 
 Performance dates submitted by Musicians, Clubs, Blues Societies and Blues 
 festivals. 
 TheBluesBlast.com is not responsible for errors or omissions. 
 | 
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