Continue reading "Issue 10-17 April 28, 2016"

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2016-04-28



Cover photo by Ryan Nicholson © 2016

In This Issue

Henry L. Carrigan, Jr. has our feature interview with Rich DelGrosso. We have 5 Blues reviews for you this week including new music from Too Slim and the Taildraggers, Big Harp George, Jonn Del Toro Richardson, Scottie Miller Band and Benny Turner. Roger Stephenson has photos and commentary from the Juke Joint Festival in Clarksdale, MS. Our video of the week is Rich DelGrosso with The Ragpicker String Band.

We have the latest in Blues society news. All this and MORE! SCROLL DOWN!!!



Featured Blues Review – 1 of 5

Too Slim and the Taildraggers – Blood Moon

Underworld Records

www.tooslim.org

10 tracks / 44:37

If you have not heard of Too Slim and the Taildraggers it is not their fault, as they have done a great job of getting their music out to the masses over the past 30 years. Their efforts have included countless shows, 13 studio albums, 5 live albums, and 2 compilations, so there is plenty of their music out there for you to choose from.

Originally based in the Pacific Northwest, this trio now works out of Nashville, with Tim “Too Slim” Langford on guitar, Robert Kearns on bass, and Jeff Fowlkes on drums (Kearns and Fowlkes also contribute backing vocals). This group has a distinctively hard blues-rock vibe, and though there are some pretty obvious influences in play here, the sound they end up with is all their own.

By now these guys have figured out how to put together a solid record, and Blood Moon is a slick piece of work. All ten tracks are originals that were written by the band, and a few of the tunes fall into the album rock 7-minute range. This project is mixed and mastered well thanks to Michael Saint-Leon who took care of the recording at The Switchyard in Nashville, so all of the basic stuff is taken care of.

The band’s 45-minute set starts strong with “Evil Mind” which sets the tone for the rest of the CD. Though there are only three members in the group they do a great job of filling the stage with a sweet bass ostinato over heavy drums, and background vocal harmonies on the chorus. Langford is a searing guitar hero, and he tears off a couple of epic solo breaks. After this ends there is a neat bit of 1970s-inspired psychedelic AOR blues-rock, and Too Slim does a fine job of channeling his inner Robin Trower with the slow grinding “Blood Moon.” This blues jam has all the right components, including distinctive doubled guitar and bass and a healthy dose of heavy ride cymbal.

“Twisted Rails” brings a lot to the table. It is heavy funk with a touch of psychedelia and strategically placed harmonizing. The lead vocals dig a little deeper and are more aggravated, and Langford brings his wah pedal into play as he lays down more killer guitar leads. This is all good, but the real story is Fowlkes’ drum kit, as at times the final product is more like a drum solo that has a song written over it. After five minutes of this, the tune changes into a more traditional blue rocker for the final few minutes, which is a pretty cool change-up.

But there is more than British invasion blues rock and 1970s sounds going on here, as the Taildraggers also nail down a respectable country rocker with the highly contagious “Get Your Goin’ Out On.” Then there is the bluesy power rock ballad, “Gypsy,” with its heavy backbeat, and the hard-rocking “Good Guys Win” with its insane bass parts from Kearns. Then there is the final track, an instrumental reprise, and “Twisted Rails (Slight Return)” proves to be an interesting coda to an impressive collection of tunes.

These songs are all solid, but there are a few standouts on this disc. The first is “My Body” with its layers of acoustic and processed electric guitars. It has a softer feel with melodic Gary Moore-esque leads that contrast nicely with the raspy vocals. The other is “Letter,” which defies attempts to stick it into any one genre. It is a hard-driving tune with a raunchy intro over a 12-bar blues base and vintage rock do-wop backing vocals. Intermittent surf rock themes give it a fun vibe, which may seem weird on paper but it works marvelously through the speakers.

It should also be mentioned that the band has included liner notes complete with lyrics for the songs, which is almost unheard of these days. This is a nice touch that a lot of bands no longer bother to deal with, and the Taildraggers’ efforts are appreciated.

Too Slim and the Taildraggers’ Blood Moon is a hard set with blues, rock, and country influences, and the songs are well integrated into a single entity. It is some of their best studio work yet, and their live show is equally enthralling. Be sure to check out their website, as they have a lot of gigs coming up throughout the spring and summer, as this trio has to be seen to be believed!

Reviewer Rex Bartholomew is a Los Angeles-based writer and musician; his blog can be found at rexbass.blogspot.com.

Video Of The Week – Rich DelGrosso

Here is a video of Rich playing some acoustic country Blues from his latest CD, The Ragpicker String Band.

The Ragpicker String Band features Rich DelGrosso, Guitarist Mary Flower and multi-instrumentalist Martin Grosswendt. The CD is nominated as Best Acoustic Blues Album in the 37th Blues Music Awards. Click on the image above to see the video.

Featured Blues Interview – Rich DelGrosso

When we think of the blues, our thoughts often conjure up the scratchy acoustic blues of Mississippi John Hurt or Reverend Gary Davis, the scorching electric lead riffs of Freddie King and screechy leads of Sister Rosetta Tharpe, the juicy harp of Sonny Boy Williamson, or the rollicking piano rolls of Otis Spann and Ivory Joe Hunter.

But mandolin? Blues on the mandolin? Isn’t the mandolin the instrument that stands front and center in bluegrass bands, made famous not by bluesmen but by such famous high and lonesome crooners as Bill Monroe, Ralph Stanley, Ricky Skaggs, and Sam Bush? Or by musicians who started in jug bands—David Grisman—or in bluegrass—Chris Thile—but who’ve created innovative styles that feature the mandolin in jazz (Grisman) or classical (Thile, who has an entire album devoted to playing Bach on mandolin).

Well, Rich DelGrosso joins a long and distinguished line of mandolin blues players, showing us through his own innovative acoustic runs and rippling riffs that the mandolin was born to play the blues. As a matter of fact, he joins a long line of mandolin bluesmen such as Yank Rachell, Howard Armstrong, Johnny Young, and others whose careers he has been instrumental in recovering for us not only by recording his own versions of their songs on his records but also by writing about them as a music journalist and as the author of Mandolin Blues: From Memphis to Maxwell Street (Hal Leonard), where he traces the history and music of American mandolin blues.

Like many young bluesmen, though, DelGrosso first came to the blues through his love of guitar. “My folks really encouraged me to play, and eventually I got together with friends in the neighborhood [in Detroit where he grew up], and we were all into the Amboy Dukes, Cream, the Rolling Stones.” DelGrosso recalls that his journey into the blues really started when he looked at the credits on the Stones albums and saw that their songs were written by people like Howlin’ Wolf and Muddy Waters. “I really learned how to play guitar listening to Son House, Muddy, and the Wolf,” he says; “their music was far more powerful to me than the Stones, who were trying to copy them.”

“Then I got to see John Hammond live at a folk festival, and, man, I really wanted to do what John Hammond was doing; as a solo performer, Hammond has no equal.”

It wasn’t until David Siglin, the then-manager of the famous Ann Arbor folk club, The Ark, asked DelGrosso if he’d ever heard Johnny Young doing blues mandolin. “He turned me on to a recording of Otis Spann and Young playing this duet on piano and mandolin, and I started looking up people who were playing blues on mandolin.”

Hearing that one recording led DelGrosso on a journey he’s still traveling today. When he started doing some research into the mandolin, he found out that individuals in the land of his ancestry—Italy—firs produced the instrument in the eighteenth century and carried it to American shores in the nineteenth century. “By 1890,” he says, “colleges had mandolin clubs and shop girls even carried empty mandolin cases to convince people that they were society ladies.” The mandolin became huge again in the 1920s. “It was a parlor instrument, and it was a popular instrument in both the black and white community. Gibson produced a whole family of mandolins during those years.”

He calls the 1920s an invention-rich era. “Once records were created,” he points out, “you started to lose the regional aspect of the music; New Yorkers could easily listen to Southern blues.” During that time the resonator guitar—”National Resonator became known as the ‘Jaminator”—became a big instrument. Mandolins had to compete with the loudness and richness of Resonators, but the unique quality about mandolins, DelGrosso points out, is the rich tremolo technique and sound developed especially among Memphis jug bands. “The mandolin stood out because of what the jug bands could do with it to develop a very different tempo and rhythm from the emerging electric sound. Of course, Gibson also added a resonator to its mandolins, and that gave the instrument even more nuance and passionate sound.”

DelGrosso was so hooked on mandolin that he started writing for Mandolin World News, which David Grisman started. “I wrote a regular column for Mandolin Magazine from its beginning and covered folks like Young and Rachell.” One day Grisman called him and asked DelGrosso if he could find Yank Rachell, who was then supposed to be living in Indianapolis. “I found his name in the phone book and called him up; he was very gracious. We started jamming, and he showed me many of his secrets, including various tunings to give my mandolin some richer, stronger sounds. Of all blues mandolin players, Yank has the biggest discography of mandolin blues players that stretches from the 1920s to the 1990s.”

DelGrosso discovered the enduring power of blues mandolin when he saw Howard Armstrong at the Mariposa Folk Festival. Armstrong acquired the name “Louie Bluie,” says DelGrosso, a nod to his exuberant style. In fact, The Armstrongs—which included Armstrong, Carl Martin, Ted Hogan, and Martin Hogan—were billed as the last of the black string bands, according to DelGrosso. “They turned any gig into a party,” he laughs, with songs like “State Street Rag.”

Back then, and even now, acoustic blues bands were the perfect setting for blues mandolin players. “Memphis jug bands were the key. You can hear that mandolin tremolo technique that rises above the sound of the resonator guitar. The Dallas String Band—almost nobody has ever heard of them—and the Mississippi Sheiks—they did the original ‘Sitting on Top of the World,’ which Robert Johnson used as the basis for his own ‘Come on in My Kitchen.’ I love introducing those bands to folks because they’re so important to hearing where this music comes from.”

DelGrosso teaches both through his records and through classes and workshops all around the country. In February he taught in the camp program at the annual Folk Alliance International Conference in Kansas City, as well as entertaining one evening in an official showcase among five other acts. “I love to teach mandolin blues not only because I get paid well but because I get to meet other mandolin players, and I’m keeping the mandolin blues alive. I teach different approaches to the music, so I get to teach classes on Rachell, Armstrong, and Johnny Young.”

DelGrosso also offers lessons online through his website, and he offers a variety of instructional books through his website that include CDs and that can be used to master mandolin. His Mandolin Method: Book 1 (Hal Leonard) has introduced new players to the instrument for over thirty years now. “At gigs, people still come up and tell me that they learned how to play using my book,” he laughs.

On his newest album, The Ragpicker String Band (Yellow Dog), DelGrosso, Mary Flower, and Martin Grosswendt return to that model of acoustic string bands of which DelGrosso has grown so fond. “I decided to record an acoustic record and the other albums were a bit more electric and band oriented. I’ve got to get back to my roots. I had been working at the Centrum in Port Townsend with Mary Flower and Martin Grosswendt. We only had a short time together, so we went over to Austin to record with some of my favorite people.”

Featured on the album are tunes by the great blues mandolin player Sleepy John Estes—”Clean Up at Home,” “Black Mattie,” and “Milk Cow Blues”—the Mississippi Sheiks’ “Lonely One in the Town,” and the traditional tune, often attributed to the Reverend Gary Davis, “Trimmed and Burning.” The album’s rootsy flavor has earned it a nomination for a 2016 Blues Music Award as Acoustic Album of the Year.

DelGrosso pens two songs on the new album—”By Your Side” and “Street Doctor Blues”—and Mary Flower pens a pair, too—”Bruno’s Dream” and Baby Where You Been.” “I don’t think of myself as a very good songwriter,” DelGrosso says, “though I do want to get better at it.” As a songwriter, DelGrosso does write on mandolin. He starts with a groove and often asks himself what kind of groove he can do solo, since he’s often playing on my own. Then a lyric might emerge and give more to the groove.

“You know, the key to the success of country music today is that those songs tell stories; the blues tells the same old story, and I look for certain ideas that come up over and over again in that story: ‘Hard to Live With, Easy to Love’, ‘A Gig is a Gig’.” When John Del Toro Richardson and I were making Time Slips By, we wrote our own songs because getting royalties is one of the driving forces for writing and performing your own songs. We also realized that women buy records, so when I am writing I often think about what a woman would want to hear,” he laughs.

These days DelGrosso spends more time in the folk world than in the blues world, even though neither of the worlds understands the other very well. “Folk people don’t know about the blues world, and the blues world doesn’t know about the folk world. What’s different about the folk scene now is that there’s a huge percentage of singer-songwriters; that’s different from the 1970s when there was more emphasis on diversity—blues people, fiddlers, you name it. Now the folk clubs aren’t interested in blues artists and blues festivals seldom hire acoustic acts and are notorious for not hiring women acts. If John Hammond were starting out today, there would be very few opportunities for him to do what he did.”

When he reflect on the current state of the blues, DelGrosso expresses some bewilderment about today’s sounds and about the future of the music. “Seems like we’re losing a definition of what the blues is,” he says, “and I’m disappointed that there is a blurring of the lines between blues and rock and roll.”

He says that he has no idea where the blues is going. “You know, Elijah Wald said that the blues is alive today in the music of kids banging on their trash cans and doing hip hop. People don’t know what it is any more. I’m not hearing what I think of as the blues; for example, I don’t think blues radio is playing Brad Vickers anymore,” DelGrosso declares.

In spite of his uncertainty about the future of the blues, DelGrosso plans to stay busy. “I have thought about some other writing projects,” he says; “I should probably do some more method books.” DelGrosso has a big dream: “it would be the highlight of my life if I could be in that stage at the Mariposa Folk Festival in front of which I first sat to see John Hammond and where this all started.” DelGrosso “would love to get together contemporary blues mandolin players like Gerry Hundt and Billy Flynn to do another mandolin blues album,” and more and more he “wants to write a lot of songs and do an album of my own again like the one that John Del Toro Richardson and I did together, Time Slips By.”

Yet, for DelGrosso, there’s something about those jug bands and string bands, and the acoustic blues of Rachell, Young, Armstrong, and others that calls him more and more to the roots world. “I’m a roots person. I’m lost in the roots and I don’t want to leave it. I’m a 1920s blues mandolin player who got caught in the wrong time.”

We’re wise to accompany DelGrosso on his journey back down to his roots.

Visit Rich’s website at: www.mandolinblues.com

Interviewer Henry L. Carrigan, Jr. writes about music and music books for No Depression, American Songwriter, Country Standard Time, and Wide Open Country.

Featured Blues Review – 2 of 5

Big Harp George – Wash My Horse In Champagne

Blues Mountain Records BMR CD 02

13 songs – 56 minutes

www.BigHarpGeorge.com

It took an eternity for Big Harp George to emerge from the shadows to put his prodigious talents on the chromatic harmonica on display for the world to see, but it was definitely worth the wait.

His well-received 2014 release, Chromaticism, a nominee for last year’s Blues Blast Awards for best New Artist Debut Album, clearly demonstrated, he’s a player of the first order. With the release of the equally satisfying, all-original Wash My Horse In Champagne, it’s clear that he wasn’t a one-trick pony.

Now in his early 60s and a longtime law professor at the University of California-San Francisco, George Bisharat developed his talent as a hobby, making his recording debut on one cut of the Otis Grand-Joe Louis Walker album, Guitar Brothers, in 2002. Grand called him back into the studio again in 2006 for his Hipster Blues CD, George’s only other release before exploding out of the blocks as a front man.

In a world where anyone who picks up a harmonica thinks he can play the blues, Big Harp George is a rarity, eschewing the diatonic — with its simple 10-hole, 20 reed set-up – for the chromatic, which uses a button to switch between the double set of reeds that exist for both blow and draw notes, something akin to having an entire piano keyboard in your mouth with the ability to play all keys without changing instruments. His playing style – playing in front of a microphone instead of holding it against the instrument – has more of an acoustic than electric feel.

Like his first release, this album was engineered by Kid Andersen at Greaseland Studios. Produced by Chris Burns, who doubles on keyboards, it features Raja Kawa on drums with Andersen sharing guitar duties with Little Charlie Baty and bass lines with Kedar Roy. J Hansen adds percussion while Michael Peloquin (sax) and Mike Rinta (trombone) comprise the horn section and Loralee Christensen and several of the musicians provide backing vocals.

While all of the material here was written by George, it comes across with a warm, familiar feel. “Home Stretch” opens the action as it borrows from the Nat King Cole classic, “Straighten Up And Fly Right,” and promises his lady to quit drinking and other vices on the home stretch of his life. “Road Kill” is a call-and-response rocker about being run over by a lover even though the singer saw the car approaching. Andersen’s guitar work is stellar, and the tune has the feel of a number that could have been produced with his regular unit, Rick Estrin And The Nightcats, with whom Baty and Hansen have featured prominently.

The cover tune, “Wash My Horse In Champagne,” is a major change of pace, a minor-key, Latin-flavored complaint about being educated well, but have learned nothing. It features a stunning guitar solo from Baty. The upbeat jump blues “Cool Mistake” swings from the get-go as it describes the joy of stumbling on treasures of one sort or the other. The equine references continue with “never look a gift horse in the mouth.” Next up, “My Bright Future” is a slow blues ballad about the realization that the title is really in the singer’s past.

The horns are in play in concert with the harp for the jazzy “I Ain’t The Judge Of You” before the action slows for “I Wasn’t Ready,” a bluesy ballad with a ‘60s feel about not being ready to say goodbye. It’s dedicated to George’s mother. The theme of remorse in other areas of life continues in the New Orleans-flavored rocker “If Only” before the funky “Light From Darkness” sings praise for inner strength against adversity.

The instrumental “Mojo Waltz” features horns and another nice Baty solo. It precedes the blues “What’s Big?” a lesson dedicated to George’s son that stresses “big” doesn’t involve muscles, it’s more about having a heart of gold. Another swinging instrumental, “Size Matters,” follows before “Justice In My Time,” concludes the set.

The world is full of skilled diatonic players, but chromatic players are a rare commodity, and Big Harp George is a master, lilting over the comb of his instrument with an uncompromising ability to produce big, sweet tone as he runs his progressions, seemingly with no effort. And his lyrics are a treasure throughout. Pick this one up. Available through most major marketers, and strongly recommended.

Reviewer Marty Gunther has lived a blessed life. His first experience with live music came at the feet of the first generation of blues legends at the Newport Folk Festivals in the 1960s. A former member of the Chicago blues community, he’s a professional journalist and blues harmonica player who co-founded the Nucklebusters, one of the hardest working bands in South Florida.

Live Blues Review – Juke Joint Festival

Music Maker Relief artists Albert White left who played with Piano Red and Sam Frazier Jr. entertain the crowd on Yazoo Ave.

Austin “Walking Cane” “Damn Fine Blues!” Original & classic delta blues featuring slide guitar and baritone vocals.

Mississippi’s Bill “Howlin Mad” Perry sings with daughter Shy on keys and Jesse Cotton Stone on second guitar outside the Rock and Blues museum.

Butch Mudbone (L) on the Quapaw Canoe stage with the legendary chess recording artist Cash McCall (R) on bass dish out some funky R&B influenced blues.

Clarksdales 17 year old phenomenal guitar sensation Christone “Kingfish” Ingram dishes out electric blues on the Delta Blues Museum stage.

Country bluesman Davis Coen performs original songs outside the Rock and Blues Museum.

Singer, songwriter and bassist Heather Crosse played to a packed house at Ground Zero.

One of Nashville’s best known bluesmen Stacy Mitchhart filled the air at Ground Zero with hard driving electric blues.

95 year old Henry “Gip” Gipson owner of Gip’s juke Joint in Bessemer, Alabama sang old style Delta blues skillfully plating the melody and keeping the bass beat going at the same time.

Robert Lee “Lil Poochie” Watson hailing from Natchez Mississippi deserved a larger audience for his soul tinged blues.

Jimmy “Duck” Holmes proprietor of Bentonia’s Blue Front Cafe on the Mississippi Blues Trail and a true country bluesman played to a large crowd outside civil rights leader the late Wade Walton’s barbers shop.

John Paul Keith (L) plays some blistering rocking guitar riffs and performs original songs.

Multiple BMA nominee Johnny Rawls sang his smooth soul blues with passion to a large crowd in front of the Rock and Blues Museum.

Lightnin’ Malcolm duo played his Mississippi Hill Country blues at full volume to a full house at the Old Roxy: his new drummer Trina Raimey keeping a perfect beat.

Earl “Little Joe” Ayres from Holly Springs, Mississippi played with Junior Kimbrough for 30 years playing old school songs including Please Baby Don’t Leave Me Baby to the early crowd outside Cathead Delta Blues & Folk Art store.

Singer songwriter Liz Mandeville (L) sang blues with some raunchy lyrics to the delight of the crowd.

Blues Man McKinney Williams was selected as Blues Artist of the Year for 2015 on the Mississippi BBQ Trail. Here he plays on the street at Clarksdale’s Juke Joint Festival.

Songwriter Ray Cashman playing some lively Texassippi roots music at Hambones.

Como, Mississippi authentic bluesman RL Boyce gets the folks up dancing at the Bluesberry Café.

Robert Kimbrough Sr. keeps up the family music tradition playing the Hill Country music of his father RL Burnside to a packed house at the Dreamboat.

Birmingham’s Sam Frazier Jr. and Music Maker Relief foundation recording artist plays his harp Slim Harpo style sitting out on Yazoo Avenue.

Sean “Bad” Apple playing some mean slide in front of the Delta furniture store.

Young Stud Ford is T-Model Fords grandson. He drummed with Lightnin’ Malcolm for a couple of years but has now branched out forming his own Stud Ford Experience. Here outside the Delta Blues Alley he is accompanied by guitarist and vocalist Jesse Cotton Stone.

The flamboyant multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Tullie Brae from Memphis held a large crowd captivated in front of the wade Walton stage as she switched from keys to vocals to guitar and back to keys while dancing!

Vauthier Ghalia from Belgium may perhaps have travelled the farthest to the Juke joint festival. Bright and energetic at 10am on the Delta Furniture stage she sang mostly originals taking the time to describe often in a lighthearted way how she came to pen the lyrics.

Photos and commentary by Roger Stephenson © 2016

Featured Blues Review – 3 of 5

Jonn Del Toro Richardson – Tengo Blues

www.deltoroblues.com

VizzTone Label Group

13 songs – 49 minutes

Well, this is a treat. Houston native Jonn Del Toro Richardson seems to have been around for a while, winning the Albert King Award for most promising guitarist at the 2005 Blues Foundation’s International Blues Challenge, working as a sideman to the likes of Otis Taylor and mandolinist Rich DelGrosso as well as performing on Pinetop Perkins’ Grammy winning record, Last Of The Mississippi Bluesmen with Robert Jr. Lockwood, Henry Townsend and Honeyboy Edwards. Tengo Blues, however, is Richardson’s first solo CD and it is an absolute ripper.

Richardson wrote all 13 songs on the album as well as singing and playing guitar. Backed by a crack band of Wes Starr on drums, Nathan Rowe on bass, keyboardist Nick Connoly, and Lawrence Del Toro (Richardson’s uncle) on percussion, together with Anson Funderburgh on guitar for two tracks and the always-bang-on Texas Horns on seven tracks, he has produced a first class slab of smoking modern Texas blues that contains more than a hint of swinging Latin influence.

Opening with the horn-driven soul-blues of “Behind the Curtain”, Richardson sings with warmth and passion, while his guitar solo perfectly echoes the uplifting message of the lyrics, initially sounding uncertain but growing in confidence and purpose to reach a place of strength and comfort. Likewise, on the upbeat blues of “I’m Her Man”, Richardson’s muscular yet punchy soloing style perfectly reflects the lyrical content of the track. Indeed, his guitar playing is a joy throughout, never over-playing but always playing with beautiful tone, melody and emotion. Check out “Wild Ride”, a song into which most guitarists would cram as many notes as possible but on which Richardson displays admirable restraint whilst still sounding as if he is flying by the seat of his pants (which, given the lyrics, is particularly apt).

But Richardson is not just about the guitar playing. His songs are equally impressive. He dips his toes into some light jazz-influenced swing on the instrumental “Triple Lindig”, which also contains some tasty organ from Connoly, and goes back to his ancestral roots on the Latin groove of “The Moment” with some typically stellar horn work from Messrs Kazanoff, Mills and Gomez. He even combines hints of both jazz and Latin on the instrumental title track. Tracks such as “Can’t Run From Love” and “Tell Me Do You Love Me” straddle the line between soul, blues, pop and rock. But the foundation stone and heartbeat of the album is modern Texas-style blues, as exemplified by the likes of “Get Me Back To Texas”, “Love If You Want It”, “Tall Pretty Baby” and “This I Know”.

Tengo Blues is produced by Anson Funderburgh, who achieves a wonderfully warm, spacious feel on every track. Funderburgh’s contribution is worth commenting upon, given that his involvement in a project seems to carry with it the imprimatur of quality, from his own recordings to his recent work with Mark Hummel’s Golden State Lone Star Review or the Andy T-Nick Nixon Band’s last two unmissable releases. Tengo Blues sits comfortably alongside such lauded company.

Tengo Blues is a thrillingly enjoyable debut from Richardson, who is clearly a serious talent. This is one of this reviewer’s favourite albums of the year.

Reviewer Rhys Williams lives in Cambridge, England, where he plays blues guitar when not holding down a day job as a technology lawyer or running around after his children. He is married to an American, and speaks the language fluently, if with an accent.

Featured Blues Review – 4 of 5

Scottie Miller Band – Reciprocation

Self-produced CD

13 songs –54 minutes

www.scottiemiller.com

Festival-goers are probably most familiar with Scottie Miller thorough his work on the keyboards as a touring member of Grammy winner Ruthie Foster’s band for the past nine years, but he’s also an outstanding singer and songwriter, too, as this intense and incendiary all-original blues-rock effort clearly shows.

A former International Blues Challenge finalist and Minnesota Blues Hall Of Fame inductee with eight previous solo albums to his credit, Miller is a Minneapolis native who attended Boston’s prestigious Berklee College Of Music. As a member of Big John Dickerson’s band, he was invited to play at a memorial service in St. Louis for legendary keyboard player Johnnie Johnson. A chance meeting with Bo Diddley at that event led to an invitation to become a member of what was Diddley’s last touring band. When not working with Foster, he tours the world with his own ensemble.

Despite being a gifted blues player, Scottie’s originals are difficult to peg because they incorporate everything from rock and classical to New Orleans funk, gospel and Latin jazz, too. The mélange of sounds blend together in a powerful stew of emotions that further enhanced here by his equally skilled vocals. His tight, electric backing unit consists of new members Patrick Allen on guitar and Dik Shopteau on bass as well as the familiar Mark O’Day on drums.

Miller uses Wurlitzer or Hammond organ as he delivers a succession of tunes with references to hope and preservation. The funky “Where You Been Hiding?” kicks off the disc as it questions the previous whereabouts of the woman of the singer’s dreams. It introduces the consistent use of rhythm patterns throughout that propel each song intensely as Scottie and Patrick rip and run through their solos. A reggae rhythm drives “Bring It On” as it describes someone who’s coming on “like a shining star.”

The bluesy “Nothing Can Stop Us” details a search for answers to solve ethnic killing as it attempts to find a way to tear down the walls before “Selfish” describes someone who “won’t do what your mama told you/Won’t do what your daddy said” as it drives home the message: What we need is more love. “Keep On Walking,” the first solo to emerge from the disc, is a powerful number with the message: “There are times, when you are hurting/…and the bottom is where you fall/ Well keep on walkin’./Cut through hatred and heavy stones/Heal these wounded, broken bones.”

“Wreckage” starts off as a ballad but evolves into a rocker as it uses seafaring imagery as it seeks salvation from the shards of a damaged relationship. A tasty drum pattern kicks off “Reciprocation” with Miller and O’Day exchanging instrumental phrases before an extended, minor-key number that about the interaction between a band and the audience on one level and between human beings on another that results in emotional healing.

Two blues numbers follow. “Too Far Gone” is an autobiography that includes lessons about the effects of drinking that Miller learned from Big John and Henry Townsend before “Get Some” is a warning that the singer’s had a bad day and is looking for trouble. “I’ve Been Made” comes across with a country feel before the blues-rocker “Walk A Mile” suggests that folks need to stroll in the singer’s shoes before passing judgment about him. The Spanish flavored “Gold Dust” precedes the rocker “Revelation,” about finally being able to find your way after getting help, which concludes the set.

Available through most major outlets, Reciprocation is an excellent effort full of modern, original material. Pick it up today if your taste runs to blues-rock. One warning, though: It’s pretty intense. You might need a nap after its played its course.

Reviewer Marty Gunther has lived a blessed life. His first experience with live music came at the feet of the first generation of blues legends at the Newport Folk Festivals in the 1960s. A former member of the Chicago blues community, he’s a professional journalist and blues harmonica player who co-founded the Nucklebusters, one of the hardest working bands in South Florida.

Featured Blues Review – 5 of 5

Benny Turner – When She’s Gone

Nola Blue – 2016

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