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The Iowa Blues Showcase is on the AIR
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Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Blues Historian: Tweed Funk, Love Is
Tweed Funk's latest release, Love Is,  is more than just funky goodness.  This is truly an eclectic collection of songs.  Yes, Tweed Funk can play funk, and they are damn good at it, but they can also do what I like to call a Memphis shuffle like no other.  They have a great southern soul sound that can only be found south of Kansas City and Memphis.  The band is very tight, and I can guarantee that they probably fill the dance floors wherever they play live, cause if they don't then the people in the bar are dead.  These guys grove like some of the best southern soul bands I have ever seen years ago in KC.  For the most part they do original music.  however their versions of Real Mother For Ya, and Sex machine rock. To buy their CD from the band directly Click HERE.
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Blues Historian Review: Liz Mandeville, Clarksdale
Blues Historian Review: The 44s, Americana
The 44s from southern California has a new release called Americana.  The cd is produced and features Kid Ramos (who is no kid anymore:-)  I remember the first time I saw Kid Ramos playing with James Harmon, not sure if it was a full time gig, or if he was setting in, but the Kid was on fire.  In fact the 44s remind me of James Harmon from the bad old days. Tight band, playing a nice selection of songs, and styles, yet  sounding like themselves. Slow blues, shuffles, slide guitar, just about anything you want to hear.  All but two of the 13 songs are original.  The guitar playing is exceptional and seamless.  The harp playing by Tex Nakamra is exceptional.  Great collection of blues for any occasion. Their cd is available on both Amazon and Itunes.
Blues Historian Review: Li'L Ronnie and the Grand Dukes, Gotta Strange Feeling
Li'l Ronnie and the Grand Dukes are a classic harmonica blues band out of Virginia.  Ronnie is a great harp player who plays in the best tradition of Chicago bluesmen. However, their song selection is varied, so it is not the shuffle, shuffle, slowblues, that you find from a lot of contemporary harp bands in the Chicago style.  The majority of the songs are original material, which is always a positive thing.  Yet, they do perform a quality jump blues Buzz Me by Louis Jordan that any self respecting Kansas City jump blue band would love to have in their catalog of songs. Furthermore, their Bring Your Love Home, is an original jump blues that screams Kansas City, Texas Jump, or LA Swing take your pick.  
The CD is currently available on their website HERE. According to the website it will be available on Amazon and Itunes. However, I couldn't find the latest release online yet.
The CD is currently available on their website HERE. According to the website it will be available on Amazon and Itunes. However, I couldn't find the latest release online yet.
Sunday, June 3, 2012
John Hammer Blues News
| 
 | |||||||||||||||
John 'blueshammer' Hammer
Blue Monday Monthly Magazine
www.bluemondaymonthly.com
Hammered By The Blues Weekly Radio
KOWZ 1170am/ 100.9fm
510 West McKinley
Owatonna, MN 55060
One Shot Deal: Crosscut Saw
One Shot Deal featuring the Tone King John Lukehart on guitar playing at a benefit in Marshalltown Iowa. They raised a lot of money for a couple musicians who are having some health problems.  These guys don't play very often anymore, so it was great to see them.  I even played a set earlier with John.  Cool show!!!
Bob Dorr and The Blue Band Update
I no sooner get the dandelions under control and next, I get rampant 
clover all over and not a single 4-leaf to be found! What is clover good
 for? Can you make...you know it's coming...CAKE out of it?...    
This evening (Fri) 7:30-10pm we are part of the monthly First Friday Art Walk, on the downtown square in Fairfield. Artists' wares, musician buskers, food venders, dancing in the streets, and the very cool vibe of a very artistically aware town. It's an all ages event, bring the kids and grandkids. Plus it's the kick-off for my wife's birthday weekend! Need I say it? Bring CAKE!...
Saturday night, I'm doing the Backtracks rock 'n' roll history radio show LIVE! The live shows always turn into requestfests. Half of Saturday's show has already been picked out by my Facebook Friends! If you have suggestions, just reply to this note or call during the show (Sat. night 7-10p) 800-772-2440 ext. 5. The nine o'clock hour of the program starts with about 20 minutes of Iowa R & R history, including Bo Ramsey's first single after leaving The Mother Blues Band in 1979 and a song that The Blue Band's Jeff Petersen wrote and played guitar on in the mid 70s for that "other" band that Jeff is also in the Iowa R & R Hall of Fame for, Headstone. (I know that is grammatically incorrect, Lucinda, but I do it that way just to bring out the grammarian in you!) More info on all the radio shows this weekend: http://iowapublicradio.org/studio-one/backtracks/ and http://iowapublicradio.org/studio-one/blue-avenue/
Sunday marks our return to The Troll Capitol of THE WORLD!! We are again part of Summer Frolic in Mount Horeb Wisconsin. http://www.thedailypage.com/theguide/details.php?event=283745 As you can see we're the final act of a four day weekend blowout. Fortunately, we'll be in Wisconsin, where people really know how to party. The night is always capped off by one-time Stebite and now one of the Summer Frolic's organizers, Mark Webber, singing Not Me with the band. You gotta see that to believe it! (viral YouTube possibilities) Plus it's my wife's ACTUAL birthday. I'm thinkin' cheese-beer-brats for a birthday present, whadya think, eh?) Grab yer troll and get frolicking! (frolic is a word I seldom use, but there it is, FOUR TIMES in this paragraph)...
And speaking of frolicking, got yer boat tickets yet? These days we only do one riverboat Blues Cruise a year. It's a week from today, Fri. June 8 on The Spirit of Dubuque Riverboat. Advance tx only $15/day of show $20. There are only 300 spaces on the boat. All tickets and reservations are being handled by The Spirit of Dubuque http://dubuqueriverrides.com/cms-view-page.php?page=rates-schedule DON'T MISS THE BOAT!...
Next Saturday (6/9) marks our return to the 503 in Iowa Falls, more info on that next week...
Most of the clover take over in my yard has been fueled by the much needed rains of the last week (I wonder how many millions of dollars that water was worth to the Iowa economy) Thursday's kinda cold rain forced our nightly walk inside the local mall, where I just happened to notice (!) that bras, panties, and sleepwear is 40% off at Vicky's Place (Victoria's Secret) What? Modesty has stricken Vicky? Didn't she take 50-75% off just last Christmas time? And sleepwear? I didn't think Vicky's girls even WORE sleepwear! How do you take 40% off your birthday suit? I lead such a sheltered life...
Well, I wish the TMers in Fairfield could just levitate me down there, but I think it's gonna take close to 3 hours on the Blue Highway to get there so I gotta go. Rub yer washboard to the tune of the Happy Birthday Blues for Carolyn (CAKE would be nice too) Be sure and stop at the merch table for your copy of the Sex-A-Generaian CD (Sex me, baby) watch out for trolls (I hear they like to hide in tall clover) and always know that we love you. Bob Dorr & The Blue Band.
This evening (Fri) 7:30-10pm we are part of the monthly First Friday Art Walk, on the downtown square in Fairfield. Artists' wares, musician buskers, food venders, dancing in the streets, and the very cool vibe of a very artistically aware town. It's an all ages event, bring the kids and grandkids. Plus it's the kick-off for my wife's birthday weekend! Need I say it? Bring CAKE!...
Saturday night, I'm doing the Backtracks rock 'n' roll history radio show LIVE! The live shows always turn into requestfests. Half of Saturday's show has already been picked out by my Facebook Friends! If you have suggestions, just reply to this note or call during the show (Sat. night 7-10p) 800-772-2440 ext. 5. The nine o'clock hour of the program starts with about 20 minutes of Iowa R & R history, including Bo Ramsey's first single after leaving The Mother Blues Band in 1979 and a song that The Blue Band's Jeff Petersen wrote and played guitar on in the mid 70s for that "other" band that Jeff is also in the Iowa R & R Hall of Fame for, Headstone. (I know that is grammatically incorrect, Lucinda, but I do it that way just to bring out the grammarian in you!) More info on all the radio shows this weekend: http://iowapublicradio.org/studio-one/backtracks/ and http://iowapublicradio.org/studio-one/blue-avenue/
Sunday marks our return to The Troll Capitol of THE WORLD!! We are again part of Summer Frolic in Mount Horeb Wisconsin. http://www.thedailypage.com/theguide/details.php?event=283745 As you can see we're the final act of a four day weekend blowout. Fortunately, we'll be in Wisconsin, where people really know how to party. The night is always capped off by one-time Stebite and now one of the Summer Frolic's organizers, Mark Webber, singing Not Me with the band. You gotta see that to believe it! (viral YouTube possibilities) Plus it's my wife's ACTUAL birthday. I'm thinkin' cheese-beer-brats for a birthday present, whadya think, eh?) Grab yer troll and get frolicking! (frolic is a word I seldom use, but there it is, FOUR TIMES in this paragraph)...
And speaking of frolicking, got yer boat tickets yet? These days we only do one riverboat Blues Cruise a year. It's a week from today, Fri. June 8 on The Spirit of Dubuque Riverboat. Advance tx only $15/day of show $20. There are only 300 spaces on the boat. All tickets and reservations are being handled by The Spirit of Dubuque http://dubuqueriverrides.com/cms-view-page.php?page=rates-schedule DON'T MISS THE BOAT!...
Next Saturday (6/9) marks our return to the 503 in Iowa Falls, more info on that next week...
Most of the clover take over in my yard has been fueled by the much needed rains of the last week (I wonder how many millions of dollars that water was worth to the Iowa economy) Thursday's kinda cold rain forced our nightly walk inside the local mall, where I just happened to notice (!) that bras, panties, and sleepwear is 40% off at Vicky's Place (Victoria's Secret) What? Modesty has stricken Vicky? Didn't she take 50-75% off just last Christmas time? And sleepwear? I didn't think Vicky's girls even WORE sleepwear! How do you take 40% off your birthday suit? I lead such a sheltered life...
Well, I wish the TMers in Fairfield could just levitate me down there, but I think it's gonna take close to 3 hours on the Blue Highway to get there so I gotta go. Rub yer washboard to the tune of the Happy Birthday Blues for Carolyn (CAKE would be nice too) Be sure and stop at the merch table for your copy of the Sex-A-Generaian CD (Sex me, baby) watch out for trolls (I hear they like to hide in tall clover) and always know that we love you. Bob Dorr & The Blue Band.
Carrie Smith RIP
From Bob Corritore
- 
RIP Carrie Smith - August 25, 1925 to May 20, 2012. Jazz / blues singer Carrie Smith will be warmly remembered for her work on the Broadway musical revue, Black & Blue. Se died of cancer in Englewood, N.J on May 20th. She was 86. She possessed a beautiful, husky voice and a kind stage persona. Born in Fort Gaines, Georgia she started her career as a gospel singer, appearing at the 1957 Newport Jazz Festival with the Back Home Choir of the Greater Harvest Baptist Church in Newark. In the 1960s Carrie Smith began working in various jazz settings in which she would often perform the blues. Carrie became internationally known in 1974 playing Bessie Smith (no relation) in Dick Hyman's Satchimo Remembered at Carnegie Hall. She starred in the Broadway musical Black And Blue Broadway musical from 1989 to 1991 and would also find popularity touring in Europe. Carrie Smith recorded a number of albums in both jazz and blues. To hear an example of Carrie Smith's beautiful voice singing "In The Dark" click here.
Bob Corritore Blues News
Thursday, May 31, 2012
- Rhythm Room All-Stars with special guest Dave Riley appear this Friday and Saturday at the Rhythm Room! Back at their home base, the Rhythm Room All-Stars play tonight and tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday, June 1 and 2 at the Rhythm Room. The Rhythm Room All-Stars feature Bob Corritore, Chris James, Patrick Rynn, and Brian Fahey. Just added will be a guest appearance by Dave Riley! Look for a couple nights of houserocking down home blues!
- 
Chicago Blues Festival next week! Simply put, this is a major blues event. Each June the city of Chicago honors its rich blues heritage with the Chicago Blues Festival, combining the cities rich musical talent with carefully chosen out of town acts. The festival is free, and takes place right on the beautiful lakeshore of downtown Chicago at Grant Park. It features numerous stages, panels, vendors, and satellite events around town. Chicago and its great blues scene is extra-alive during this time, as people from all over the world pour into town to embrace this festival and the rich blues history of the city that hosts it. Bob returns to his hometown each year to visit during the festival, as it gathers many of Bob's friends in one spot, and allows many enjoyable performance opportunities. The festival happens next weekend on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, June 8, 9 and 10. The spectacular lineup can be seen in great detail by clicking here.
- Bob Corritore's gig schedule for the Chicago Blues Festival! Bob Corritore will keep very busy this year at the Chicago Blues Festival and at clubs around town in an array of performance settings with top notch artists. Here is Bob's schedule:
06/07/12
Chicago, IL -
BLUES on
Halsted, Tail Dragger &
Bob Corritore CD Release Party
with
Chris James,
Patrick Rynn,
Kevin Shanahan and Rob Lorenz.
9pm show.
06/08/12
Chicago, IL -
Smoke Daddy. Guest
appearance on
Billy Flynn's show
which also includes Jimmi Mayes,
Jody Williams, and Milwaukee
Slim. 9:30 p,m show. 
06/09/12
Chicago. IL
- 
Chicago Blues Festival, Windy
City Blues Society Street Stage,
1pm - Appearing with
Bob Riedy
Blues Band
featuring
Sam Lay.
06/09/12
Chicago. IL -
Chicago Blues Festival, Front Porch Stage,
4:30pm - Appearing as part of a
Hubert Sumlin Tribute with
Eddie
Shaw,
Bob Margolin,
Dave
Specter, 
Kenny "Beedy
Eyes" Smith,
Bob Stroger, and
Johnny Iguana. 
06/09/12
Chicago. IL -
Chicago Blues Festival, Petrillo Bandshell,
6:30 to 8pm Guest appearance on
the
Muddy Waters' Disciples set
honoring
Pinetop Perkins,
Willie "Big Eyes" Smith &
Mojo Buford.
This set features
Bob Margolin,
Mud Morganfield, 
Kenny "Beedy
Eyes" Smith,
Barrelhouse Chuck,
Little
Frank ,
Bob Stroger,
Joe Filisko &
Bob Corritore. 
06/09/12
Willowbrook, IL - Blue Rooster
Lounge at
Dell
Rhea's Chicken Basket
- Appearing with
Bob Riedy
Blues Band
featuring
Sam Lay.
Bob appears at approximately
9pm. 
6/10/12
Chicago, IL -
Smoke Daddy.
Appearing as part of
Morry
Sochat & The Special 20s "Half
Chicken Special Show" with
special guests
Billy Flynn, 
Kenny "Beedy
Eyes" Smith,
Bob Corritore and
Ted Beranis. This
show serves as a close to the
Chicago Blues Festival. 9:30pm
show.
- 
New Kenny "Beedy Eyes" Smith website! Kenny "Beedy Eyes" Smith is the son of the late Willie "Big Eyes" Smith. He learned blues drumming from his father at an early age and over the years has established himself as one of the nation's greatest blues drummers. Though in his early 30s, Kenny is is an old soul in the blues, and is Chicago's first call drummer for gigs, sessions, festivals and tours. He has recently launched a beautiful website that includes bios, photos, (see the photo of Lightnin' Hopkins holding Kenny as a young child), testimonials and more. You can enjoy this website at www.beedyeyes.com
- 
Thank You Simi Valley Blues Festival! Last weekend, the Simi Valley Cajun & Blues Music Festival delivered the goods! A spectacular festival lineup was intricately set up with top bands, special guests and many revue sets that treated the audience to the a non-stop blues ride. That this festival has come into its own was apparent from the many blues organizations and publications who came from far-away places to attend. I am personally appreciative of being included on the Muddy Waters Tribute set which was a symbolic career highpoint for me. It was great to see the amazing reaction that Mud Morganfield received, as he summoned the spirit of his father in a breathtaking way. Thanks to festival organizers Randy Chortkoff and Delta Groove Productions for a job well done. To see the festival posters click here, and here. (BC)
- 
Mud Morganfield on the cover of Living Blues Magazine! With the release of Mud Morganfield's lastest CD Son Of The Seventh Son on Severn Records, Mud has been thrust into the international limelight. The latest in Mud's many high profile achievements is the beautiful cover of Living Blues magazine and an in-depth article featuring some never before seen vintage photos of Muddy Waters provided by Mud's mother, Mildred McGhee. To see this article online and enjoy this wonderful magazine click here.
- 
Tail Dragger, Bob Corritore garner Living Blues Awards nominations! The latest issue of Living Blues Magazine also unveils the nominees of the 2012 Living Blues Awards! Among the 10 award categories we find Tail Dragger receiving nominations as both "Most Outstanding Blues Singer", and "Best Live Performer". Bob Corritore is nominated in the category of "Most Outstanding Musician (Harmonica) and shares this nomination with Sugar Blue, Harmonica Hinds, Billy Branch and Rod Piazza. Thanks for this wonderful recognition! To see the full list of nominees click here and go to page 71. Congratulations to all the Living Blues Award nominees!
- 
RIP Carrie Smith - August 25, 1925 to May 20, 2012. Jazz / blues singer Carrie Smith will be warmly remembered for her work on the Broadway musical revue, Black & Blue. Se died of cancer in Englewood, N.J on May 20th. She was 86. She possessed a beautiful, husky voice and a kind stage persona. Born in Fort Gaines, Georgia she started her career as a gospel singer, appearing at the 1957 Newport Jazz Festival with the Back Home Choir of the Greater Harvest Baptist Church in Newark. In the 1960s Carrie Smith began working in various jazz settings in which she would often perform the blues. Carrie became internationally known in 1974 playing Bessie Smith (no relation) in Dick Hyman's Satchimo Remembered at Carnegie Hall. She starred in the Broadway musical Black And Blue Broadway musical from 1989 to 1991 and would also find popularity touring in Europe. Carrie Smith recorded a number of albums in both jazz and blues. To hear an example of Carrie Smith's beautiful voice singing "In The Dark" click here.
- 
Elmo Williams & Hezekiah Early on YouTube! Here is a 2009 clip of the Delta duo of Elmo Williams & Hezekiah Early playing some extra-raw down home blues on the song "Natchez Burning". Note that Hezekiah plays both drums and harmonica simultaneously. This song recalls the tragic fire of 1940 which devastated the town of Natchez, Mississippi (to find out more about the fire click here). To watch the video clip, click here.
Illinois Blues Blast
Cover photo by Marilyn Stringer © 2012 
MJStringerPhoto.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 slide guitar master, Sonny Landreth.  
 We have six music reviews for you! Mark Thompson reviews a new release 
 from Dave Keller. 
  
    
   James "Skyy Dobro" Walker reviews a new release from 
 Anthony Gomes. Steve Jones reviews the new CD from Lady Bianca and also a 
 new CD from Hurricane Ruth. John Mitchell reviews the new Melvin Taylor CD 
 and also a new album from Colin Linden. All this and MORE! SCROLL DOWN!!! 
   
  Blues 
 Wanderings 
   
 We caught a great set by Matthew Curry & The Fury at a show put on by the River City Blues 
 Society in our hometown of Pekin, IL this week. His debut CD, If I Don't 
 Got You, has gotten favorable reviews in several major Blues 
 publications. 
 Matthew is starting to get some serious attention in the Blues festival 
 world too. He is already booked to play the Mississippi Valley Blues Fest in 
 Iowa, The Prairie Dog Blue Fest in Wisconsin and the Telluride Blues fest in 
 Colorado this summer. Not bad for a kid who just turned 17 last week! | 
   Free 
  Blues Want Ads 
| 
   Blues 
  Musicians - Place YOUR Want Ad Here for FREE  
  Musician looking for gigs  
   Musician looking for gigs at festivals and 
  clubs. Will play my original blues songs or songs by my father, the late 
  great Junior Kimbrough. Looking for gigs for late 2012 and all of 2013. 
  Can play with my band or solo. Band was winner to IBC in Memphis for Ar. 
  River Blues Society. Contact me, David Kimbrough Jr at
  davidkimbroughjr@yahoo.com 
  or my manager Aaron Crowder, at
  aaron_crowder2000@yahoo.com 
  or 870-833-3498.  
  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 - 
  Sonny Landreth 
 
| 
And the 
  results are understandably mind-blowing. 
Joe 
  Satriani soloing over the top of a Sonny Landreth track. 
Let that 
  sink in for a second. 
“Gaia 
  Tribe,” the opening cut on Sonny Landreth's 11th album, the 
  fittingly-titled Elemental Journey (Landfall), chugs right along as the 
  Louisiana slide guitar maestro breathlessly rips off line after line of 
  exquisite phrasing, moving things from zero to 60 in a thrilling flash. 
And just as 
  you think the lively instrumental song has reached its apex, Satriani 
  jumps in with all six strings blazing, knocking out a frenzied solo that 
  sends “Gaia Tribe” straight into the stratosphere, helplessly headed for 
  the heart of the sun. 
Of course, 
  that's probably just the jaw-dropping performance that most guitar 
  aficionados would expect between a pairing of Landreth and Satch. 
However, 
  they might be a bit surprised to find out that at one time, 
Landreth 
  had some serious doubts about that tune ever making the final cut for 
  Elemental Journey, his follow-up to 2008’s From the Reach. 
“His solo 
  just came out of nowhere. And that really raised the bar and inspired me 
  to go back in and make a transition from his solo back to the verse. So 
  me and my friend Sam Broussard (guitarist for Steve Riley & the Mamou 
  Playboys), who had already written the string parts for the song, wrote 
  the transitional section and added it to the other part of the song, as 
  well. And then we ended up using an outro I had improvised on and used 
  strings on, as well. So the next thing I know, what had started out as a 
  fairly simple instrumental song – one that I wasn't sure was good enough 
  for the album – became something much bigger. And I love that. And that 
  never would have happened without his input. That's what I love about 
  working with great artists – the things that they bring to the table.” 
“My 
  engineer (Tony Daigle) called me and said, 'I got the track back from 
  Joe and you're not going to believe this, but he just sent the solo.' I 
  said, 'Wow. Really?' But when I talked to Joe, he said that he thought 
  anything else he added to it would take away from what I'd already done. 
  And I really respected that,” said Landreth. 
Satriani, 
  along with fellow virttuoso Eric Johnson, who also guests on Elemental 
  Journey, have long been heralded for their all-instrumental affairs. 
But for the 
  king of the slide guitar from Breaux Bridge, La., this marked a first. 
“That was a 
  decision I made quite awhile back. It was something that I'd been 
  wanting to do,” he said. “I think what even pointed me more in that 
  direction was a show I had done with the Acadiana Symphony Orchestra.” 
Landreth 
  played Bach's Cantata 140 at a Christmas show in 2005 with the 
  Lafayette-based orchestra. 
“My 
  experience with that made me want to use strings on the next album I 
  made. And I think that, along with the bonus tracks that we put on the 
  expanded edition of Levee Town – tracks that I had for nine years and 
  going back to listen to them and finding out they still held up– was all 
  kind of part of the process in deciding to make this an instrumental 
  album. But you know in the past, I've always had instrumentals (songs) 
  on all my albums. And I wondered what if we did the whole project like 
  that? But I go way back with instrumental albums. As a kid, I listened 
  to groups like The Ventures and the instrumental songs of the day. It 
  was a concept I wanted to embrace and this felt like the right time to 
  do it.” 
The fact 
  that he had never cut an entire record without vocals didn't slow down 
  Landreth one bit, even though the creative process was a tad different 
  this time around. 
The 
  soundtrack forged on Elemental Journey is one awash in the invocative 
  slide guitar that no one but Landreth could pull off, but there's also 
  something totally different than anything he has authored before – with 
  strings on five cuts and even flourishes of classical music making its 
  presence felt. 
And with 
  all those diverse pieces coming together to make up a cohesive unit of 
  work, even the title of the album has special significance. “I looked at this project as a journey and there were a lot of different elements that came together – different styles of music that have influenced me in the past – along with the elements of different musicians from different genres of music, as well,” he said. “And looking at it philosophically, as in all of our experiences being existential in life, that's certainly been the case with me - especially when it comes to music.” 
A good 
  chunk of those 'existential musical experiences' no doubt came from 
  Landreth's tour of duty with The Goners, master songwriting force John 
  Hiatt's sometimes backing band. 
And 
  naturally, being around Hiatt on a daily basis was bound to rub off on 
  Landreth's own songwriting skills. 
“I sure 
  hope so. I always felt like it was such a great opportunity to work with 
  John and he's constantly writing. He'd be in a (hotel) room next to mine 
  and I'd hear him working on songs,” Landreth said. “And then, the next 
  phase would be us working that song up in the studio, or at soundcheck. 
  He was constantly doing that. I mean, I've been writing ever since I was 
  a little kid – it's what I've always wanted to do – but to be up close 
  with him was really special. And yeah, you always hope some of the 
  cosmic dust rubs off on you.” Another huge influence on the music that ultimately ends up on a Sonny Landreth album is the guitarist's home stomping grounds of Louisiana. 
“I think at 
  one point a long time ago, that was by choice, just because of how rich 
  the culture is here and how important the music is here,” he said. “I 
  was very fortunate to grow up in this environment, because this is not 
  everywhere. And after I traveled around a little bit, that made me 
  appreciate it even more. But even though it’s still a source of 
  inspiration, I don't think about it as much now. It's probably more of a 
  case of osmosis, or the gumbo or the humidity these days, I'm not sure. 
  But you really can't help but feel it living here. It permeates 
  everything in a good way.” 
And as 
  anyone who knows anything about Louisiana can attest to – even though 
  the state is a huge melting pot of music, zydeco is still king. 
And 
  Landreth served an apprenticeship at the side of one of the undisputed 
  kings of feel-good zydeco, the legendary Clifton Chenier. 
And if you 
  were going to be on the bandstand with Clifton and the Red Hot Louisiana 
  Band, you'd better be on your toes at all times. 
“He would 
  interpret a song in the heat of the moment. I've never known anyone that 
  had the catalog of songs in their head that Clifton did. Every night we 
  would play at least one song that we had never – that I had never – 
  played before,” said Landreth. “And then, he would change the keys up. 
  So really, it pushed me in a great way to really let loose and be ready 
  for anything. It tests your mettle in a way that you just can't pull out 
  by sitting on your couch at home.” 
  Improvisation may have been an ever-changing part of the buffet at a 
  Clifton Chenier show, but no matter what tune was played on what night, 
  one thing about the menu never changed. 
To have 
  been tutored by one of the true masters is something that Landreth will 
  never forget. 
It’s also a 
  lesson that no amount of money could ever come close to purchasing. 
“I always 
  tell people that for me, if I had been raised in Chicago, it would have 
  been like Muddy Waters taking me under his wing. That’s how important 
  Clifton and the Creole world, along with zydeco music, was to me,” said 
  Landreth. 
That 
  tradition of Louisiana’s rich, musical heritage continues today and 
  refuses to be swayed or pushed aside by the often soulless sounds coming 
  out of today's top 40 radio stations, regardless of locale. 
“I think 
  it’s because it’s true to the source of the roots, coming from culture. 
  It’s also the nature of creativity,” Landreth said. “I think regardless 
  of what’s playing on the radio, or what’s mainstream, there’s always 
  going to be the other side of it, fortunately, where people are being 
  creative and are pursuing their own boundaries. I see it here with these 
  kids coming up in whole families of Cajun and Creole, and these kids are 
  in their late teens and they’re incorporating all kinds of different 
  styles into their music. And I’m really happy about that. It’s really 
  encouraging when you let the influences inside you inspire yourself to 
  take things somewhere else to develop and grow it.” Born in 1951, Landreth was just the right age, along with a host of other budding musicians, to become influenced by Elvis’ guitar player, the fantastic Scotty Moore. 
However, 
  the guitar was not the first music-maker that young Sonny Landreth first 
  became inseparable from. It was a decidedly less bluesy thing that he 
  first learned to make noise on. 
And much 
  like the way his surroundings would eventually find their way into his 
  songs, Landreth's time playing the trumpet had a huge impact on the way 
  he learned to play the guitar. 
“It really 
  did, because I came at it (the guitar) more from the mentality of a wind 
  instrument player, which means when it comes to phrasing, you have to 
  take a breath. And that really changes everything,” he said. “And 
  there's a vocal quality to that, too. And looking back on it, my blues 
  heroes – especially the delta blues – and then my jazz heroes that 
  played trumpet, wanted to emulate the human voice with their instrument. 
  And in the case of the delta blues, they would sing a line and then do 
  the call-and-response with the guitar and that became like the other 
  voice. And I think playing the trumpet really helped me come at the 
  guitar from another angle, so to speak. It also (the trumpet) brought to 
  me a discipline I might not have had otherwise. And I'm grateful for 
  that.” 
That angle 
  has developed into one of the most recognizable sounds in modern music. 
  When Landreth starts attacking the guitar with a slide on his left hand 
  -fretting in behind the slide as he works his way up and down the neck – 
  while at the same time picking out notes and hammering the strings with 
  his right hand, the end result is one distinctive and unforgettable 
  sound. 
So just how 
  did his legendary style, especially his right-hand technique, take 
  shape? 
“Well, what 
  set me on the path was learning the Chet Atkins right-hand approach. I 
  was a kid working in a music store and there was an older kid who worked 
  there and he sat down and played “Yankee Doodle Dixie” and “Windy and 
  Warm” and all these classic Chet pieces and it blew my mind. It never 
  occurred to me that multiple parts – melody, rhythm and bass line – 
  could be going at the same time,” Landreth said. “I'd heard it in 
  classical music, but not like that. And that in a way opened a door for 
  me, because it got me to thinking differently about sounds, too. And as 
  I progressed with it and started playing slide, putting the two together 
  was a huge step in that direction for me. I realized I could create 
  different kinds of sounds by using the slide with it (right-hand 
  technique). I always tell people you learn to trust your instinct and 
  let one thing lead to another. You hit on something and that inspires 
  you and opens up into something else. I just kept discovering new 
  sounds.” 
“It's that 
  time of year for us and we're getting back to playing some shows. Really 
  we haven't played much since November, because I've been in the studio 
  finishing up the album. But we're getting back at it and it feels good,” 
  said Landreth. “Feels real good to be able to crank it up again.” 
And as 
  always, if Sonny Landreth is on stage, wailing away, bass player Dave 
  Ranson won't be far from the epicenter. The two have been friends on and 
  off the bandstand for over three decades. 
“We go way 
  back, to when we were teenagers. He's got a great sense of rhythm that 
  goes really deep. Nobody plays like him. He's the anchor,” Landreth 
  said. “We know each other so well that we know what the other one is 
  going to do from one moment to the next on stage. And we really trust 
  each other. I know I can depend on him in ways that I couldn't 
  otherwise. We've survived this many years together and that says a lot. 
  It's hard to keep a band together with all the changes and challenges 
  and the nature of the business.” 
With 
  Elemental Journey yet to hit the street, naturally, Landreth has no firm 
  plans at the ready for what would be album number 12 in his arsenal. 
It is 
  probably a safe bet, however, to figure on at least one guest star 
  popping up to lend their talents. 
With 
  stalwarts like Mark Knopfler, Bonnie Raitt, Eric Clapton and Vince Gill, 
  along with Joe Satriani and Eric Johnson, showing up on his past 
  long-players, Sonny Landreth has amassed one amazing list of top-flight 
  pickers to jam with. 
But there 
  is one superstar that he has yet to hook up with on an album. 
“Jeff Beck. 
  I would really like to work with him sometime. I've been a big fan of 
  his for a long time and he's someone I'd like to do something with, for 
  sure,” Landreth said. 
  Photos by Marilyn Stringer © 2012 
  MJStringerPhoto.com 
  
  
    
   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 | 
  
   Featured Blues Review 1 of 6 
 
| 
Tastee-Tone 
  Records 
12 
  tracks/40:48 
Writing a 
  review is always a tough task. If the disc fails to move you, one still 
  needs to find some positive attributes to counter your remarks about 
  perceived shortcomings. If you are really excited about a recording, it 
  can be challenging to find the right phrases that clearly communicate 
  what makes the record great. But what do you say when the album under 
  consideration has already been named the Best-Self Produced CD of the 
  year by the Blues Foundation? 
In the case 
  of Dave Keller's award-winning project, you start by acknowledging that 
  producer Bob Perry has put together a fine sounding disc. He surrounds 
  Keller's emphatic vocals with expert backing from the Revelations – Wes 
  Mingus on guitar & lap-steel, Gintas Janusonis on drums & percussion, 
  Josh Werner on bass and Ethan White on keyboards. The horn section of 
  David Steinberg on sax, Geoff Countryman on baritone sax and Joe 
  Ancowitz on trumpet also make strong contributions. Keller plays guitar, 
  taking the majority of solos. 
You would 
  expect a disc honored by the Blues Foundation to offer to honor or 
  extend the blues tradition. In this case, you would be wrong. Keller and 
  Perry selected an impressive batch of tunes from the soul genre – songs 
  that pack a punch and, for the most part, are none too familiar. 
Keller 
  easily fills the role of the blue-eyed soulster, his voice crying out in 
  anguish on “You Hurt Me For the Last Time” or soaring as he pleads for 
  understanding on Phillip Mitchell's “That's The Way I Want to Live My 
  Life”. 
“Are You 
  Going Where I'm Coming From” establishes a tougher groove. Keller gets 
  vocal support from his brother Todd and Harley Hiatt. The lead singer 
  for the Revelations, Tre Williams, joins Keller for a stirring vocal 
  duet on “The Things We Have to Do”. 
With the 
  horn section riffing behind him, Keller sounds convincing as a man 
  trapped by the love of a woman on “Too Weak to Fight”. The cheating song 
  “Steppin' Out” finds Keller vowing to answer his lover's treachery with 
  some of his own. His expressive singing on Robert Ward's “Strictly 
  Reserved For You” highlights the positive aspects of love. The only weak 
  moment occurs on “Pouring Water On a Drowning Man”. Keller fails to 
  generate the emotional impact found on other versions of this classic 
  tune. 
This 
  recording succeeds on several levels – strong material, sympathetic 
  backing musicians, fine production, great sound and a singer who can get 
  to the heart of a song. It may not be blues but it sure is some damn 
  fine music!  
  
  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 | 
  
   Featured Blues Review 2 of 6 
 
| 
Up 2 
  Zero Entertainment 
11 
  songs; 39:29 minutes; Suggested 
Styles: 
  Blues Rock 
In 1997, I 
  attended a show by Too Slim and the Taildraggers in the Chicago suburbs. 
  An opening act played on stage while Tim “Too Slim” Langford and I 
  chatted out back on the open-air patio. Trying to concentrate on our 
  conversation, I kept getting distracted by the great music coming 
  through the open door. I finally mentioned how good the guitar was, and 
  Too Slim agreed, telling me he was well aware of the talented young 
  Canadian as an up and comer. The opening act: Anthony Gomes. 
Since that 
  time 15 years ago, Anthony Gomes has reached stellar heights playing 
  shows world-wide and earning a reputation for great music. He has 
  ventured into Rock and recorded an intimate acoustic offering, but his 
  seventh and latest album represents a full-circle return to the style of 
  Blues Rock music that originally caught my ears. “Up 2 Zero” contains 
  eleven tracks of which Anthony Gomes is credited either as writer or 
  co-writer on all of them. Co-writing credits also go out to Tom 
  Hambridge (1 Track), and Jim Peterik (5 Tracks). Here is Gomes’s love of 
  high energy, guitar-driven Blues Rock combining straight ahead Power 
  Blues compositions with tracks that incorporate soul-injected melodic 
  moments.  
Sending 
  that message plainly is the opening tune “Back To the Start.” Gomes 
  comments from his website, “I wanted to begin the CD with a powerhouse 
  shuffle to set the tone of where we are at musically. Lyrically, the 
  song says it all. As simple as it sounds, you have to follow your heart 
  and I had to get back to where I started. For me, it’s the blues. I can 
  always try different things, but I always find myself going back to 
  where the music started.” The meaning of the album’s title, “Up 2 
  Zero,” is going back to the beginning touchstone for today’s 
  performing.  
Born in 
  Toronto, Canada, to a Portuguese father and a French-Canadian mother, 
  Gomes began playing guitar in his early teens and was drawn to Blues 
  sounds from B.B. King to Stevie Ray Vaughan. While he honed his skills 
  in Blues bars at night, Gomes earned a Master’s Degree in history from 
  the University of Toronto focusing on the “Racial Evolution of Blues 
  Music.” He relocated to Chicago in the late ’90s to learn from the Blues 
  masters and to establish himself as a musician and artist. During his 
  brief stint as a sideman for Magic Slim and the Teardrops, Gomes put 
  together his own group and won the first annual Buddy Guy’s Legends 
  “Best Unsigned Blues Band” competition in 1998. Three years later, he 
  moved to Nashville to sharpen his skills as a songwriter. 
After the 
  opening track, our next spin on the Friends of the Blues Radio Show will 
  be Track 5, “Room 414.” Gomes explained the meaning: “... what’s the 
  significance is of that room?” Anthony laughs, “It is actually the room 
  number at the Gunter Hotel in San Antonio where Robert Johnson recorded 
  all his material.” Strong with Blues influences and growling vocals, 
  this up tempo shuffle will bring both smiles and dancing feet. By 
  overdubbing, Gomes gets to play call and response with himself in some 
  killer guitar work. 
Next up, 
  some slower Blues in “Voodoo Moon” featuring deep Blues imagery. In the 
  song, Gomes claims he saw “the ghosts of Clarksdale” with his own eyes. 
  It’s a wonderful track with tasty guitar work and unearthly vocals.  
“Up 2 Zero” 
  is expertly paced with a nice mix of hard-rocking Blues and easier 
  numbers. For example, try the slow burner “One Last Time.” “Love Sweet 
  Love” is reminiscent to what you’d expect of something from the 1970s 
  Southern Rock scene. And, “Darkest before the Dawn,” which updates Gomes 
  original version on 2002’s “Unity” album, is a ballad with tender vocals 
  ala his love of Soul and Gospel music.  
Yes, 
  Anthony Gomes is “back,” although I’m not sure he ever “left.” Talent 
  that good does not just go away. But, in the ebb and flow of careers, 
  Gomes is definitely back on an upswing! 
  
  
    
   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 3 of 6 
 
| 
  Magic-O Records 
  12 tracks 
  Lady Bianca (AKA Bianca Thornton) is a dynamic and talented singer. With 
  this, her seventh album, we get to hear her and her band deep into soul 
  and the blues. Her vocals are expressive and range from soft and sultry 
  to big and powerful. Her backing band is tight and focused, making each 
  cut a nice little package of soulful blues goodness. 10 of the 11 cuts 
  are Bianca's own originals, and she has done a great job with them.  
  The title of the CD indicates that Lady B is serving notice that she is 
  here, on the scene and is a force to be reckoned with. Her performances 
  starts out strong on "He Told Me The Same Thing Too" where she 
  commiserates with another woman that their lover told her the same lies. 
  This is a full up and well-orchestrated number with a big sound, backing 
  vocals and prominent lead guitar riffs. Slower cuts like "You Got Me 
  Drinkin'" and "What Am I Gonna Do With You" and" Another Woman's 
Man" 
  are quite intriguing and focused. "What Am I Gonna Do with You" is 
  especially sultry with super guitar and organ work along with the guitar 
  and vocals. "For Real" is jazzy and funky, with sax and organ complimenting Lady B's vocals. "It Hurts to Be In Love" is a bouncy harmonic vocal duet while "Wake Up Baby" offers some rocking guitar riffs to open it and as solos within it. Bianca wails on Blues In The Bedroom", with all sorts of emotions pouring out. "Cold Side of Love" gives us a little Bianca funk, too. She closes the set with "Down Like Rain", which is another long down tempo piece. 
  It's all good stuff. If I had to offer some sort of criticism it would 
  be to have Lady Bianca let it all hang out more. I would like to see her 
  go out and blast away; she's got the vocal prowess to do so and it would 
  really be impressive to here her in that mode.  Accompanying Bianca are Steve Gannon on guitar, Carl Green on sax for two cuts, Dave K. Matthews on organ, Michael Skinner on drums/percussion, Oshim O. Oden on bass, and Tovia Bradley on drums for the opening cut. Stanley Lipett join Bianca for the vocal duet on "It Hurts To Be In Love". 
  I enjoyed this album and also noted it is getting some airplay on 
  Sirius/XM Radio Bluesville. Bianca's talents are getting some notice. 
  She will also be featured at this year's Mississippi Valley Blues 
  Festival in Davenport and I am looking forward to the opportunity to see 
  and hear her live! I think it's worth picking up a copy of this CD to 
  hear her on your own, too- I think her funky style of blues is a great 
  change up from some of the new stuff passing our way. 
  
    
  Reviewer Steve 
  Jones is president of the
  Crossroads Blues 
  Society and is a long standing blues lover. He is a retired Navy 
  commander who served his entire career in nuclear submarines. In 
  addition to working in his civilian career since 1996, he writes for and 
  publishes the bi-monthly newsletter for Crossroads, chairs their music 
  festival and work with their Blues In The Schools program. He resides in 
  Byron, IL.  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website 
  
   CLICK HERE | 
  
   Featured Blues Review 4 of 6 
 
| 
  Self-released 
  8 tracks 
  Hurricane Ruth blows in as a force 5 hurricane with her power blues and 
  support by a trio of musicians who are ready to keep the hurricane 
  moving. Hurricane Ruth is Ruth LaMaster and she is joined by David 
  Lumsden on guitar, Gary Davis on bass and Jim Engel on drums. Ruth 
  provides the powerful vocals that match up with the band's big rock and 
  blues sound. Recorded mostly live in the studio in the Windy City, the 
  band is filled with energy and is ably led by the dynamic LaMaster. 
  The CD begins with "Roll Little Sister", a rocker built on the Stones 
  "Dance Little Sister" theme. After the opener I felt this could be an 
  80's hair band led by a blues woman. It's a jumping tune we've heard in 
  other places but it's a lot of fun and the delivery is big and bold. No 
  pun intended, but LaMaster is apparently a master of this stuff. A 
  stinging slow rocking blues follows; "I'm Gonna Get Evil" has a great 
  big, stinging guitar solo and Hurricane Ruth testifying as to the bad 
  things she is going to do to her man. 
  "The Power of the Blues...Feels Like a Hurricane" begins with the big 
  guitar intro and Ruth then gets into it with the guitar, she trading her 
  vocals licks off with Lumsden's axe. More big 80's rocking guitar solos 
  abound here once again. Slow blues is up again next with "Let Me Change 
  Your Mind" and Ruth is more than up to the task. She gets down and 
  dirty, really breathy and lustful- well done. But then we get 
  "Mississippi Queen" and it sounds like just another cover band who can't 
  hold a flame to the original. I was hoping Ruth would give it a new and 
  different spin, but it's not much of a change up. "No Worries" returns 
  the set list to the blues and Hurricane Ruth is again in her element. 
  Dirty guitar licks, a nice beat and her gritty vocals meld well together 
  here. 
  Next up is Sly Stones' "I Want To Take You Higher". I love the 
  minute-plus long guitar intro and later solos that are excellent and 
  Ruth handles the vocals a lot better than the Mountain song; she comes 
  off as a lot more real here than in the other cover. "Shouting" through 
  late 70's and 80's rock song is in her wheelhouse. Lastly we have "The 
  Lesson" which is an in-your-face sort of slow blues with a poignant 
  guitar lead. I like this track a lot, too. Great power guitar and gutsy 
  vocals. 
  It's got some 80's rock sound to some of it and the "Mississippi Queen" 
  cover seems a little misplaced, but the real criticism I have is that we 
  only get 8 songs to listen to here. I know that was all albums had in 
  the old days, but it seems to be done just as the band is getting 
  started. But it's powerful and has a lot of energy. Ruth's vocals are 
  really good and so is Lumsden on lead guitar. Hard rocking blues fans 
  will find some great tidbits to enjoy here. 
  
    
  Reviewer 
  Steve 
  Jones is president of the
  Crossroads Blues 
  Society and is a long standing blues lover. He is a retired Navy 
  commander who served his entire career in nuclear submarines. In 
  addition to working in his civilian career since 1996, he writes for and 
  publishes the bi-monthly newsletter for Crossroads, chairs their music 
  festival and work with their Blues In The Schools program. He resides in 
  Byron, IL. 
  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 
   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. 
   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 their weekly "BluesJam" series at The 
   Tavern in Ventura every 
   Wednesday. 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 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 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 
   - 2011 International Blues Challenge winner Lionel Young Band with 
   opening act The Governor on 
   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. 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: 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 | 
  Featured Blues Review 5 of 6 
 
| 
Self 
  Release 2012 
10 
  tracks – 40.18 minutes 
This album 
  came as a real surprise. I saw Melvin many years ago at the now defunct 
  San Francisco Blues Festival and subsequently bought a couple of his 
  CDs. Those CDs struck me as OK but lacking in original material, but I 
  retained fond memories of his live performance. I know that he has 
  played regularly in Chicago for years and I was expecting some Chicago 
  blues with a touch of rock. However, this CD (his first for some years) 
  is not that at all. 
First of 
  all this CD is entirely Melvin who plays all the instruments; second it 
  is all instrumental; and third we are in jazz rock territory with barely 
  any blues in sight. Opening track “Back In Action” sets the tone with a 
  pleasant but repetitive riff played over some routine backing. It sounds 
  a little like Al Di Meola in the mid-70s but with less going on 
  musically. Several tracks follow a similar pattern. “Spanish Flavor” 
  sounds like it should offer something different but is very similar 
  except that the guitar refrain is played on a Spanish acoustic rather 
  than an electric guitar. 
Three songs 
  contain the word blues in the title. “Remembering The Blues” has a 
  pleasant guitar refrain but the background wah-wah effect did nothing 
  for me. The immediate next track is “So Long Blues” but this one seemed 
  to differ very little from earlier material. “That’s My Blues” gets the 
  closest to what I would call blues and is a decent track. The final 
  track is entitled “Smooth Situation” which sums up the album nicely. 
  This CD will get some play on smooth jazz stations. Throughout the album 
  Melvin Taylor demonstrates that he is a clean picker of notes and can 
  play in a blues and jazz style. I would like to see Melvin return to 
  real blues; perhaps that will be his next project, having got this one 
  out of his head.. Reviewer John Mitchell is a Blues enthusiast based in the 
  UK. He also travels to the States most years to see live blues music and 
  recently enjoyed the Tampa Bay Blues Festival. 
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website  
  CLICK HERE | 
  
   Featured Blues Review 6 of 
  6 
 
| 
  CrossCut Records 
  12 tracks – 56.16 minutes 
  Colin Linden is Canadian by birth but is now resident in the USA. He has 
  recorded many CDs over the years and has also produced for a variety of 
  acts well known to the blues fraternity, including Janiva Magness and 
  Colin James. As well as writing and producing he continues to record and 
  tour solo, in a small band format and as part of Blackie And The Rodeo 
  Kings. This CD was recorded live in his adopted home town of Nashville 
  with a small ensemble: Colin on guitars and vocals, John Dymond on bass 
  and harmony vocals, Gary Craig on drums and Spooner Oldham on organ. 
  Apart from a lone cover of Howling Wolf’s “Who’s Been Talking” Colin 
  wrote all the material either alone or in collaboration: two with his 
  wife, Janice Powers, two with Jim Weider and one each with Tom Hambridge 
  and Jim Lauderdale. 
  The album is beautifully recorded and engineered. The audience is 
  respectfully silent throughout the music and the applause at the end of 
  each track is the only reminder that this is a live recording. The 
  material is generally quiet and thoughtful though there are a couple of 
  more upbeat tracks where Colin can unleash some strong electric guitar. 
  “Who’s Been Talking” which features Spooner Oldham’s organ and Colin on 
  slide is the most obvious blues track but there is plenty to enjoy 
  throughout the album. “Smoke ‘Em All” is dedicated to Colin’s late 
  friend, pianist Richard Bell who passed away in 2007. Colin is alone on 
  this one, a jaunty tribute to his friend “A mighty boy with a left hand 
  like thunder, right hand like gold – that mighty boy, he’d smoke ‘em 
  all”. “Remedy” is a rocker with an insistent backbeat, chugging guitar 
  and highlight organ and makes a nice pairing lyrically with “Dark Night 
  Of The Soul”. The songs are played in completely different styles but I 
  found myself linking them: the former is a song about love and desire 
  whereas the latter comes from the other end of the spectrum, the singer 
  offering safe passage in troubled times.  
  “Too Late To Holler” is another bluesy tune with more of Colin’s 
  distinctive slide guitar and closing track “I Give Up” is a semi-comic 
  song which recounts how the singer has failed on so many aspects of life 
  that he is ready to quit altogether! “Sorry about the too much money I 
  have spent, all the times that I was late with my rent, every dollar 
  that I turned to 50 cents.” Another track I liked a lot was “Between The 
  Darkness And The Light Of Day” with its lyric about finding personal 
  salvation through the power of music. “Sugar Mine” covers salvation in 
  more traditional manner, namely the sweetness of love. The shimmering 
  guitar on this track is a real highlight, recalling Ry Cooder in his 
  prime. 
  Overall this CD features superb musicianship and lyrics that make you 
  think (not always the case in the blues!). The music here is more 
  Americana than blues but it is a CD I can easily recommend. The final 
  word should go to the US Immigration Service who (according to the 
  sleevenotes) classed Colin Linden as “an alien of extraordinary ability” 
  – that says it all, I think. 
  
  Reviewer 
  John Mitchell is a Blues enthusiast based in the UK. He also travels to 
  the States most years to see live blues music and recently enjoyed the 
  Tampa Bay Blues Festival. 
  
  For other reviews and interviews on our website  
  CLICK HERE | 
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