Cover photo by Bob Kieser © 2016
In This Issue
Terry Mullins has our feature interview with Chicago Blues harp master Billy Branch. We have 6 Blues music reviews for you including reviews of music from John Cee Stannard & Blues Horizon, Nick Fishman Blues Band, Aaron Curtis, Jimmy Burns, Rich Harper and Tomislav Goluban and Nebojša Buhin.
Arnie Goodman and Barry Fisch have photos and commentary from the Leadbelly Fest at Carnige Hall.
We have the latest in Blues society news. All this and MORE! SCROLL DOWN!!!
From The Editor’s Desk
Hey Blues Fans,
Get Ready!
Starting on March 1st, we we begin accepting submissions for the 2016 Blues Blast Music Awards.
Any Blues album released between May 1st, 2015 and April 30, 2016 is eligible. Categories for 2016 are:
Contemporary Blues Album
Traditional Blues Album
Soul Blues Album
Rock Blues Album
Acoustic Blues Album
Live Recording Of The Year
New Artist Debut Album
Historical or Vintage Recording
Male Blues Artist Of The Year
Female Blues Artist Of The Year
Blues Band Of The Year
Sean Costello Rising Star Award
Complete information on how to have your recording considered are at
www.bluesblastmagazine.com/2016-blues-blast-submission-information
Save The Date! The 2016 Blues Blast Music Awards ceremonies will be held on September 23, 2016 in Champaign, IL. Stay tuned for more info soon.
Wishing you health, happiness and lots of Blues music!
Bob Kieser
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Featured Blues Music Review – 1 of 6
John Cee Stannard & Blues Horizon – Stone Cold Sober
www.johnceestannard.co.uk
Cast Iron Recordings – CIRCD 025
12 songs – 56 minutes
Stone Cold Sober is John Cee Stannard & Blue Horizon’s third release, following The Doob Doo Album (positively reviewed in the 15 January 2014 Blues Blast issue) and Bus Depot Blues (also well received by Blues Blast in the 21 December 2014 issue). The new album however is perhaps the most impressive of the lot.
Recorded at Whitehouse Studios in Berkshire, England, Stone Cold Sober mines musical and lyrical seams similar to those visited previously by Stannard. So expect well-written songs heavily influenced by pre-war acoustic uptown blues, expertly played and sung, with a wide range of guest musicians to add spice to the basic gumbo laid down by Stannard’s resonator guitars and banjo, Mike Baker’s acoustic and electric guitars and Howard Birchmore’s harmonica. Guest musicians include Andy Crowdy on double bass, Julian Brown on drums, Simon Mayor on violin and mandolin, Matt Empson on piano, Roger Cotton on Hammond organ and Nicole Johnson on backing vocals. Mayor’s violin in particular adds delightful textures to three tracks: “This Rag Of Mine”, “So Long” and “The Story”.
Stannard wrote 11 of the tracks on the album, with the sole cover being a reworking of Blind Blake’s “Lead Hearted Blues”. Each song tells a specific story with Stannard assuming a variety of narrative personae to great effect. Displaying a particularly British sense of humor, Stannard’s lyrics often subtly subvert the expected lyrical tradition, for example on hilariously driven title track: “I’m stone cold sober when I get to my job. I’m stone cold sober when I get up. But on my home, I’ll have a bottle or two. I’d rather be out of my mind, than stone cold sober with you. You’re one in a million. You’re one of a kind. But you’re driving me out of my mind. And the way that you treat me, what else can I do? I’d rather be drunk as a skunk, than stone cold sober with you.” In every song he sings, however, Stannard retains sufficient emotional vulnerability to create an undercurrent of pain even when his narrator appears to be confident and in control.
He is not afraid to address current sociopolitical issues such as on the bleak, powerful strut of “Poverty Blues”, which was inspired by a BBC documentary about Americans who had lost their jobs and houses in the recession and found themselves living in tent cities in places like Detroit. Johnson’s superb backing vocals are a highlight here.
The vast majority of the songs however are upbeat and joyful, from “Rum Ol’ Do” – sounding like something Blind Blake might record if he were around today (and nodding warmly towards Blake’s great “Doo Wah Diddy” as Stannard sings “It was late at night, the lights were low. Another man’s wife? How was I to know?”) to the arm-around-the-shoulder of “Worse Off Than You” with its wise advice that “If you get started, you’d better not stop. It’s a long back from the bottom to the top. Exactly where you are depends upon your point of view, cos there’s always someone worse off than you.”
Stone Cold Sober is a great release. There is a sense that the musicians really enjoyed themselves in the studio and that feeling of joy translates to the album itself. Wonderful stuff.
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 Interview – Billy Branch
Hello, my name is Little Mack Simmons. I’m the world’s greatest harmonica player. I challenge anyone that can beat me to come down to the Green Bunny Lounge and if they can beat me, I will pay them $500.
- Radio advertisement that ran on Chicago’s WVON (1690 AM) radio station back in 1975
When it came to harmonica-fueled head-cutting on the bandstand back in the mid-70s, Little Mack Simmons was Chicago’s self-proclaimed ‘king of all kings.’
Simmons’ reputation certainly preceded him, and as evidenced by the above commercial that plastered the Windy City airwaves, the man did not lack for self-confidence.
Billy Branch, now a legendary harmonica blower and Chicago bluesman in his own right – but back then just an unheralded up-and-comer – remembers hearing those ads and being called into action by his friends.
“I heard that commercial and I asked some of my buddies if I should go down there. They was like, ‘Yeah, man!’ So it was my friends that urged me to go, because I wasn’t sure that I really wanted to. So the story is, that I won the contest (that night), but Mack was the judge!” laughed Branch. “This was a popular club back then and the place was packed – probably three hundred or so people in there. Well, as soon as I finished playing, people started yelling, ‘Give him the money!’ But then Mack runs out and says that the boss says it’s closing time. That’s when the place turned into complete pandemonium, with people shoutin’ and cussin.’ It was wild, but I just stood there, it really didn’t faze me.”
Despite the ‘judge’s’ lack of acknowledgement at his victory – and despite leaving without the promised $500 stuffed in his pockets – Branch still came out on the winning side of things that night at the Green Bunny Lounge in 1975.
“Yeah, that was the day that I was ‘discovered.’ All of the Chicago blues intelligentsia were there – Jim and Amy O’Neal (Living Blues founders), Bruce Iglauer (Alligator Records founder) and Dick Shurman (noted producer), along with other various members of the media and record companies, as well as a lot of the old-timers (Chicago blues musicians). I say old-timers, but they were probably in their 40s then. But when you’re in your 20s, that seems old,” he laughed. ” I was on the scene (back then), but I wasn’t known. I was just out of college and I’d go to the clubs and hang for a while and then I’d disappear for a couple of weeks. So only a handful of people really knew who I was (before his showdown with Simmons). I was also painfully shy in my youth and I think that the blues – and becoming a musician – helped me to overcome that shyness.”
Branch -who was the recipient of the 33rd Chicago Music Award’s Little Walter Foundation’s Lifetime Achievement Award – says that he was not intimidated or scared by the prospects of entering a bandstand battle with Simmons, but still, he had to be coerced into going.
“That’s right. I had to be talked into going by my friends … I almost didn’t go. That just shows you how fate is. If I hadn’t gone, I’m sure eventually I would have found my way into the recording studio – but immediately after that – I was in the recording studio,” he said.
Fans that had been salivating and anxiously awaiting a brand-new Billy Branch and The Sons of the Blues disc were finally rewarded for their patience with last year’s excellent Blues Shock (Blind Pig Records). Looking back now, it’s hard to believe that a full decade passed between Don’t Mess With The Bluesmen (2004) and Blues Shock. Branch certainly kept busy – way busy, as a matter of fact – during the time between albums with his name emblazoned on the cover, but why the long wait?
“The only reason that I was able to come up with that somewhat made sense was, that I was just going through a period of knowing what I didn’t want to do, but was not sure exactly what it was that I did want to do,” he said. “I had multiple recording offers over the years, but I just didn’t … I don’t know … sometimes as an artist, you just go through those periods, you know?”
Inspiration seems to move in mysterious ways for artists, which can ultimately turn into a stumbling block when it comes time to bring a new work of art to the light of day. But the way that Branch sees it, inspiration is sometimes not all its hyped up to be.
“My family and myself was in South Africa and the Poet Laurette of South Africa (Keorapetse Kgositsile) said that inspiration is over-rated. But sometimes you find yourself feeling that way, you know? You’re waiting for inspiration or looking for the ideal song or the ideal melody or the ideal lyric,” he said. “Sometimes, it’s just better to take a stab at it and given your ability and professionalism, you can probably come out better than expected anyway.”
Looking at it from the outside in, it sure seems that Blues Shock is one of Branch’s more personal albums. And although a song title like “Song For My Mother” suggests that it belongs to the author alone, Branch insists that’s not the case and sees it as more of a universal ownership of the cut.
“Yeah, “Song For My Mother,” which is an instrumental, has universal appeal to everyone; especially to those of us that have lost our mothers,” he said. “That was just a piece that we came up with and the title came later, but it seemed appropriate.”
While also steeped in personal recollections, “Going To See Miss Geri One More Time” is more of a historical account about an undervalued – but essentially important – member of the Windy City’s rich and storied musical culture.
“That song was based on a personal experience, but it also is a historical narrative and a tribute to someone (Miss Geri Oliver, who owned the iconic Palm Tavern for over 50 years) I felt got short-changed, given the fact that her legacy was not treated with more reverence and respect. That was my humble way of acknowledging a woman who is a very revered figure on Chicago’s south side,” he said. “That was a very difficult song to write and I say that it’s the best song, lyrically, that I’ve ever written – and perhaps also one of the most challenging. I had to make sure it was factually and historically accurate. I also had some challenges like rhyming this list of luminaries (like Miles Davis, Joe Louis, Frank Sinatra, to name a few of the mentioned in the song). I had Chicago’s’ foremost African American historian, Dr. Timuel Black, who is also a friend of Miss Geri Oliver’s, make sure I had historically accurate information. Miss Geri is about 95 years old and Dr. Black is maybe a year or two younger than her.”
It’s not easy to pigeon-hole Branch’s music into just one category, because it has a lot going on, featuring a number of twists and turns (sometimes even within the same song) that keep it from being predictable. That being said, there’s no doubt that the traditional Chicago blues is the chewy center of Branch’s music. Considering who helped to mentor his approach to playing the harmonica, that should be no surprise.
“Coming up when I did and immersing myself in the scene back then – learning from guys like Big Walter and Carey Bell and Junior Wells and James Cotton – I never thought of myself as practicing, but I really was. I made sure every moment that I got, I was in these clubs, some of which might be described as ‘bucket of blood clubs.’ But I never gave that a second thought; I was just drawn to the music and to the guys that played it,” he said. “I think by having the association and learning from such great players and having the chance to play with guys like Louis Myers and Dave Myers and Fred Below – Little Walter’s band – I was able to have the ability to play at a high level.”
As stated before, the Chicago blues is not where Branch’s music ends; it’s merely it’s springboard.
“Even though I was learning the style of these masters, I was still in the process of developing my own style. Most real musicians – even though they may be known for one style or genre – they listen to everything … to a variety of different things,” he said. “Personally, I listen to every type of music. If I’m in a meditative mood or want to read, I’ll put on some classical music. And when I came up in my teenage years, I was listening to what everybody else was listening to. Stuff like Motown and to The Beatles and The Stones and Hendrix … the whole gamut. I think ultimately, my style is a result of all those influences, as well as the traditional Chicago blues. It’s not really a conscious thing; it just develops once you reach a certain stage or level with your playing.”
Branch has been nominated for Best Instrumentalist – Harmonica, at this year’s Blues Music Awards (BMAs). That should certainly come to no great shock or surprise to the legion of Branch fans all across the globe. He’s also been nominated for three Grammy Awards over the course of his career and Branch tends to view such awards and accolades with a bit of a cautious eye.
“I’ve been nominated for three Grammy awards and that does look good on your resume. But the truth is, a lot of times, these awards are so politically-charged, so you take them with a grain of salt,” he said. “And that’s whether you win or whether you lose. A few years back, the (Grammy nominated) Chicago Blues: A Living History (Raisin’ Music) – not just because I’m on it – was really Grammy-worthy. Not to take anything away from anybody, but when we got beat out, it was by a country-folk singer. We were all at the Grammys (ceremonies) and we were all like, ‘What?’ So a lot of times, the process is flawed, for lack of a better term. Don’t get me wrong – I’m not trying to express myself as a sore loser – it’s just that so many times you see these awards given and you realize that there are people that have been doing this for four, five and six decades that have not really been afforded that honor or that accolade.”
He then takes things a step further with another Grammy-related observance.
“When we were up for the Grammy for Chicago Blues: A Living History, we were there and watched the show – you know, all the big stars. The most spectacular thing that night was when one of these young stars was performing on a trapeze with all the pyrotechnics,” he said. “And we sat there and watched that and we all agreed that a good blues band would blow practically every act there that night right off the stage. A decent blues band would have smoked that place. I mean, everyone relates to the blues … it’s universal.”
He knows of what he speaks, since Branch served two consecutive terms on the Grammy Board of Governors and also founded the Grammy Blues Committee.
Maybe one of Branch’s most passionate endeavors over the past four decades has been his association with the Blues in the Schools program. He was one of the first performers to step on board that long-running project and was in fact the very first artist to involve his whole band in the process. He has mentored more young musicians than he could ever count and it’s hard to tell just where and when they will turn up.
“I played on Demetria Taylor’s – who is one of Eddie Taylor’s daughters – album on Delmark (Bad Girl). Well, I walk into the studio (for the session) and she says, ‘Who am I?’ I said, ‘I guess you must be Demetria.’ She said, ‘OK. When did you first meet me?’ I say, ‘I don’t know.’ She goes, ‘It was when you came to my school doing Blues in the Schools and I was in fourth grade.’ So that’s how long I’ve been doing that. The summer before last, I ran into three students – on three separate occasions – from my very first residency back in 1978. Each one of them told me they still listen to the blues and a couple of them said they still had their harmonica (from the classes). I’ve even had a handful of students that have went on to have professional careers; some of them bigger than what I’ve had,” he laughed.
Majoring in political science in college, Branch had thoughts at becoming a lawyer for his primary vocation. Luckily for blues fans, he instead decided to focus on blowing the harp on the bandstand, instead of focusing on arguing cases in front of a jury stand.
“Well, by all accounts, my wife and friends say I would have been a good one (lawyer). I’m sure it’s nice to have a big, hefty payday, because lawyers generally don’t do too bad,” laughed Branch. “But then again, they may not have as much as us bluesmen do. That’s why they call it playing (music). They ask where you’re going and you say, ‘I’m going to play.’”
Playing is just what Branch does today – and it’s what he has done for decades now. He’s played with everyone who is anyone and has played on well over 150 recordings (heck, probably a lot more than that). Over the course of those years and all those albums, a couple of things that Branch has never failed to do is to be himself and to fit into whatever surroundings he’s in.
“I just love recording in the studio and doing session work. I’m real relaxed when it comes to that. Part of my style and my musical approach is to be able to adapt to all musical situations,” he said. “Recently, I’ve been doing a lot of collaborative work with African groups, like Tinariwen … I play with them when they come to Chicago. And I’ve worked with a group called El Tri, who are like the Mexican Rolling Stones. They had me on their 40th anniversary concert as a special guest in Los Angeles back five or six years ago. And I’ve done work with (Malian artist) Vieux Farka Toure. I love being in different musical environments.”
Being able to fit seamlessly into all those ‘different musical environments’ has as much to do with the way that Branch approaches his instrument as it does with his willingness to step outside his normal comfort zone.
“A lot of guys learn how to solo on the harmonica fairly well. But for me, when I was developing my style, I learned how to compliment and augment the person that I’m accompaning, as well. When my band is playing, normally I’m playing throughout the entire song. I’m not just sitting out until my solo comes,” he said. “I’m always creatively trying to think like a rhythm guitarist, but I’m playing rhythmic harp. Or I’m hearing horn lines or hearing strings and I’m using that to enhance the music. The key to being a good session man is to be able to enhance what the artist that you’re recording with is doing. The challenge, then, in a solo is to play something consistent with the mood of the song. That’s something that I’ve become fairly adept at.”
The old saying ‘time flies when you’re having fun’ seems to be apropos in Branch’s case. He’s gone from playing the role of up-and-coming savior of the blues back in the late 1970s to now being rightfully recognized as one of the last of his generation carrying on the traditions and ways of some of the cats that he played with and learned from back in the day.
“Recently, I was playing at this club called Fitzgerald’s in Berwyn (a suburb of Chicago) and this photographer – who had shot pictures of me before – came to the show and he presented me with some very nostalgic photos from over 30 years ago. There was photos of me playing with Carey Bell and pictures of when I played with Son Seals in the Cook County jail,” Branch said. “We were reflecting about all the great guys that we were privileged to have been around and had been befriended by and associated with. And you know, they’re all but gone. When I first came on the scene, there were hundreds of musicians. I mean, you can still hear blues seven nights a week in Chicago, but not like you could back then. There was just so many more places back in the day to play and there were just so many great, great musicians.”
Branch may not have had some kind of grand scheme on how to further along the cause of the blues when he founded the Sons of the Blues, but that’s just what he’s done some four-plus decades after the fact. Part of that is because for many years now, the music has flowed through his veins with great purpose. Another part of that is because he understands the major – and historical – impact that blues music has had on society over the decades since it was first played and first heard.
“I don’t know that when I entered the fray that I was on any kind of mission, other than to just play this instrument the best that I could,” he said. “And then subsequently, I respected the men and woman that were so good at this and I came to understand the value of the blues and its role in the world. It’s bigger than just the United States, you know? I always say it’s the most powerful music on the planet, it just transcends so many barriers and so many categories. Embarking on a role as an educator with Blues in the Schools for all these decades, I’ve been acutely aware of how important it is to disseminate this information to these young minds, with the hope that they’ll spread it their children or to their friends. It’s important that we remember where this music came from. It did come from hard times and from struggles and it was the soundtrack of the Jim Crow era. It was the soundtrack of the post-slavery era. It has a lot of historical significance and we should never forget that.”
Visit Billy’s website at www.billybranch.com
Photos by Bob Kieser © 2016 Blues Blast Magazine.
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Featured Blues Music Review – 2 of 6
Nick Fishman Blues Band – California Fresh
www.nickfishmanbluesband.com
self release
10 songs time-41:20
You can have the best musicians in the world at you beck and call, but unless you have quality songs and a strong vocalist it is all for naught. Such is the case with drummer-band leader Nick Fishman and his “blues band”. The nine originals and one cover song are enjoyable at the time of listening, but become completely forgotten afterwards. Joshua Cook at first hearing appears to be a passable singer, but after repeated listening’s there is more depth to his “blue-eyed soul” vocals. The talent of the musicians gathered here is beyond reproach and Nick is a solid jazz-influenced drummer. The soloing of the individual players is a treat for the ears. The program here is mostly a mélange of jazz, funk, soul and R&B with a few blues tunes for good measure. At the risk of over using one of my favorite descriptions, this recording grows on you.
The title tune is a jazz instrumental that shows off the exquisite horn section of Ken Moran, Charlie Gurke and Henry Hung, the piano skills of Colin Hogan and the strong drum playing of Nick Fishman. “Make It Good” is ok white boy soul music and Joshua Cook also tosses in a good but brief guitar solo. “Baby Let’s” fairs better in the vocal department and the jazzy electric piano of Colin Hogan is a nice touch. The drums keep the snappy beat.
A nice and slow piano and horn section blues is the simmering “Broke”. A song composed by Little Richard and one of his freaky clones Esquerita, “Freedom Blues”, is spritely contains seemingly endless “nah nah nah nahs”. Kid Anderson’s funky guitar and soloing breath life into “My Girl San Francisco”, a heart felt ode to the city. It also features some energetic trumpet courtesy of Henry Hung. The other instrumental “Extra Simple” is a showcase for jazzy sax and piano excursions.
The final song once again features the guitar playing of Kid Anderson on the R&B flavored “Hole Where My Heart Used To Be”.
The solid musicianship throughout this recording makes up for the lack of any memorable tunes or riffs. The musical interludes are worth the price of admission. Everything here is well intentioned, but they could surely stand some stronger songwriting. It will be well worth it to see what this talented band does next.
Reviewer Greg “Bluesdog” Szalony hails from the New Jersey Delta.
Live Blues Review – Lead Belly Fest
The Lead Belly Fest – Carnegie Hall February 4, 2016
After a successful event at London’s Royal Albert Hall in 2015, the Lead Belly Fest descended upon New York City’s Carnegie Hall. It was entertaining as well as educational. It was also very long, as the expected 2 ½ hour length ended up stretching out to nearly four hours.
An impressive list of twenty performers or so took to the stage, each giving the crowd one or two songs. Some were performed by Lead Belly himself, others were somewhat related to him and his influence on music today. In between acts, informative films were projected on the white Carnegie Hall backdrop, teaching the audience who this Huddie William Ledbetter, the King of the 12-String Guitar is, and how he has influenced many musicians and song writers today; some of whom performed this evening, others speaking on film.
The show’s opening performance came from guitarist Nick Moss and his vocalist Michael Ledbetter (who also happens to be a distant relative of Lead Belly). An acoustic version of “CC Rider” set the evening into motion.
Dom Flemons of the Carolina Chocolate Drops gave a banjo rendition of “Poor Howard”, in addition to being part time host of the evening.
The young Liverpudlian blues guitarist Laurence Jones and his band brought it up a notch with an energetic two song electric blues set.
Tom Chapin took on two of the more popular Lead Belly numbers; “Rock Island Line” and “Midnight Special”.
After a heartwarming introduction by his lovely wife Marie, Walter Trout took to the stage with some dazzling lead guitar work. Opening with his dedication to B,B. King “Say Goodbye To The Blues”, he finished with “T.S.Blues”, a song he identifies with as a survivor of a deadly disease.
Dana Fuchs almost stole the show with her amazing rendition of “Gallow’s Pole” to end the first part of the evening.
Highlights of the second part featured Edgar Winter, though his version of “Tobacco Road”, a standard from his own set, did not work well with the house band tonight.
Jerron ‘B;ind Boy’ Paxton was thoroughly entertaining.
Everybody was waiting for the arrival on stage of Eric Burdon, who performed a killer version of “In The Pines”, followed by one of the songs that catapulted him to fame with his group the Animals, “House of the Rising Sun”, a tune also made famous by Lead Belly.
Vocalist Sari Schorr stunned the crowd with her powerful voice covering “Black Betty”, augmented by the blues guitar wizardry of Innes Sibun.
This was followed by Kenny Wayne Shepherd’s electric set, the acoustics of Carnegie Hall echoing to the notes of his lead guitar playing.
The evening began to close with a touching set by the 87 year old Tom Paley, the last man alive who has played with Lead Belly, and who played on this same stage with him in 1949.
Then finally it was Buddy Guy and his band to instill in us all what the blues is all about.
The planned encore with all participants of “Goodnight Irene” never took place due to timing issues, but it was a good night for Irene and everybody else nonetheless. The last show Lead Belly ever played was at Carnegie Hall in 1949 and this evening showed how his music (and his influence on it) has come full circle.
Photos by Arnie Goodman © 2016. Commentary by Barry Fisch.
Featured Blues Music Review – 3 of 6
Aaron Curtis – River Rising
Self-Produced
www.facebook.com/Aaron-Curtis-Blues-683060595139707/timeline
CD: 10 Songs; 32:34 Minutes
Styles: Contemporary Electric Blues Rock
Many people listen to the blues for the same reasons they watch football: a) it’s loud; b) it’s high-energy; c) it’s addicting; d) it’s fun; and e) it’s tailor-made for drinking and partying. Fans should keep these things in mind while listening to London’s Aaron Curtisand his latest album, River Rising. Gary Grainger, the UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year, describes Aaron’s music as having“a great raw sound,” according to Curtis’ promotional info sheet. Such is consummately true, more so than on other albums. You won’t hear him playing Jimi Hendrix-style riffs, or trying to pull off the same fretwork finesse as Eric Clapton. Aaron sticks to traditional and contemporary blues rhythms, although basic, and compels listeners to turn the volume up. Vocally, he’s reminiscent of The Doors’ Jim Morrison and Warren Zevon (who performed “Werewolves of London”). However, he talk-sings through most of the album, with curiously-flat inflections on his love songs like “Sweet Rollin’ Baby”. With all of that said: Who cares?
This is barroom blues, tailgating blues, and above all, football blues. Complexity’s not necessary. The note that Aaron included with his latest CD contains a promising paragraph: “With his unique 21st-century-meets-old-school approach, Aaron has been rocking his native London and the South East for over ten years. His debut album, I’m Going to Tell You, drew widespread acclaim, and saw him performing venues from London’s Ain’t Nothing But to a headline spot at Ireland’s Cobh Blues Festival. Now, with his latest offering River Rising, Aaron takes another step forward, offering a stripped-down, guitar-and-drums-led sound that hearkens back to the roots of the blues whilst sounding startlingly modern. The album is already getting heavy airplay from top blues DJ’s like Gary Grainger (mentioned earlier) and John Brown.”
In a lot of ways, Europe is even more of a blues continent than North America is. Blues may have been birthed in the U.S., through the literal and figurative labor pains of African-American slaves, but it’s migrated “across the pond” – the Atlantic Ocean – in spectacular style. Unlike some European artists, who sound just as American as the music they play, you can definitely tell that Aaron Curtis is a Brit, and that’s a great thing. With him on ten original tracks (nine plus a ghost track) is Reg Patten on drums. Curtis himself performs on vocals and electric guitar.
The following song shows what’s right and wrong with River Rising:
Track 04: “Mojo Hand” – With a catchy, swinging beat that invites club-goers and football watchers to kick back and have a beer, track four isn’t half-bad. However, Curtis mumbles some of the lyrics, and the sentiments aren’t exactly new: How many mojo hands DON’T contain a “black cat bone”? “Ain’t hearing no back door slam. I’m packing my mojo hand.” How many mojo hands bring bad luck instead of good? One won’t find any on this CD.
When there’s a River Rising in your party playlist, blues fans, make the volume rise too!
Reviewer Rainey Wetnight is a 36 year old female Blues fan. She brings the perspective of a younger blues fan to reviews. A child of 1980s music, she was strongly influenced by her father’s blues music collection.
Featured Blues Music Review – 4 of 6
Jimmy Burns – It Ain’t Right
Delmark Records
www.jimmyburnsband.com
15 tracks / 57:58
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