Bienvenidos

sábado, 25 de mayo de 2013

Popa Chubby


Universal Breakdown Blues
2013

01 - I Don't Want Nobody
02 - I Ain't Giving Up
03 - Universal Breakdown Blues
04 - The Peoples Blues
05 - Rock Me Baby
06 - 69 Dollars
07 - Somewhere Over The Rainbow
08 - I Need A Lil' Mojo
09 - Danger man
10 -Take Me Back To Amsterdam
11 - The Finger Bangin' Boogie
12 - Mind Bender

Modern Electric Blues



Chris Duarte Group


Infinite Energy
2010

01 - Ridin'
02 - City Life Blues
03 - Cross My Heart
04 - Waiting On You
05 - Sundown Blues
06 - Cold Cold Day
07 - My Heart Don't Want To Let You Go
08 - Killing Time
09 - Purple Gloaming
10 - Me All Me
11 - Hamra St.

Whatever progressions the Chris Duarte Group make on their 2010 release Infinite Energy are a matter of depth, not breadth. The group doesn’t try anything new Duarte still specializes in a distinctly Texas brand of the blues, one that has Stevie Ray Vaughan as ground zero, where even the Hendrix-isms are filtered through SRV but they do manage to lock into a soulful groove on “My Heart Don’t Want to Let You Go” and creates a noir-streaked moodiness on the instrumental “Hamra St” quite unlike anything he’s done before. Elsewhere, the sound remains the same and if the production is way too clean for Duarte’s increasingly rough, wobbly vocals, his guitar sounds hot and full, speaking with a warmth he can not manage, nor needs to create, as a singer.

Modern Electric Texas Blues



Gary Primich


Mr. Freeze
1995

01 - Bad Poker Hand
02 - I'm The One
03 - Route 90
04 - Mr. Freeze
05 - Go On Fool
06 - Dummy On Your Knee
07 - Dallas Texas
08 - Slap You Silly
09 - Jenny Brown
10 - You Came A Long Way From St. Louis
11 - Red Top
12 - Easy Ridin' Mama
13 - Let me Go Home Whiakey

Although he had made solid, workmanlike albums in the past, Mr. Freeze is where all the cherries came up at once on Gary Primich's musical slot machine. While his harp playing was never in dispute, his vocals on this outing finally find their own style, sounding for the first time comfortable, assured, and totally in the pocket. Kicking off with the high-octane shuffle "Bad Poker Hand" featuring Mark Korpi's stylistic nod to Brewer Phillips, Primich contributes four of his own compositions to this 13-tracker while jumping on such stylistically diverse material as Gene Ammons' "Red Top" and Washboard Sam's "Easy Ridin' Mama," vaulting between subgenres with consummate ease. Other highlight tracks include a harp showcase on "You Came A Long Way From St. Louis" and the rumbling boogie of Mark Korpi's "Slap You Silly." Featuring guest turns from the aforementioned Korpi, bassist supreme Sarah Brown, Mark Rubin, Gene Taylor, and acoustic slide man Steve James along with Gary's regular working band, there's a wide variety of real good stuff to enjoy here. If you were to pick just one album to start absorbing this harp.

Harmonica Blues



Boz Scaggs


Fade Into Light
1999

01 - Lowdown
02 - Some Things Happen
03 - Just Go
04 - Fade Into Light
05 - Harbor Lights
06 - Lost it (Valley version)
07 - Time
08 - Sierra
09 - We're All Alone
10 - Simone
11 - I'll Be The One

Fade into Light is a stellar album. It features unplugged and redone performances from Scaggs' classic Some Change, Silk Degrees, and Middle Man, as well as some new tunes. The unplugged tunes include readings of "Dirty Lowdown" and "Simone." "Harbor Lights" is changed significantly as well, in that the disco riff in its ending has been replaced by smooth jazz. "Sierra" is a remarkable redo that gives the tune a completely different feel. "Just Go" has Scaggs playing almost everything on the track, and it is one of his most nakedly emotional performances committed to tape. The sheer brokenness in his voice reveals a depth and dimension in the performance that takes the listener deep into the lyric. It is followed by a sultry, nocturnal read of "Love T.K.O." that reveals his deep authority, allowing the lyric to speak through him, not because of him. There is an authority here that allows the vast emotion in the song to be read through the spirit of acceptance, and it all lies in his nuance and phrasing. It's so inspired, offering a view of the many sides of Scaggs as a singer, that Fade into Light is a must for anyone even remotely interested in Boz Scaggs.

Blues/Rock



Lonnie Brooks


Roadhouse Rules
1996

01 - Hoodoo She Do
02 - Backbone Man
03 - Too Little Too Late
04 - Stranger In My House
05 - I Need A Friend
06 - Evil Twin
07 - Roll Of The Tumbling Dice
08 - One Track Train
09 - Before You Go
10 - Get Through To You
11 - It's Your World
12 - Treat Me Like Your Dog
13 - Stake My Claim'
14 - Rockin' Red Rooster

Lonnie Brooks' music comes from the R&B side of the blues. Brooks is a passionate singer with an intense rock-like guitar style. With the exception of "Roll of the Tumbling Dice" (a relaxed duet featuring the harmonica of Sugar Blue), the music on Roadhouse Rules is generally unrelenting in its ferocity, blues-oriented but also quite open to the influences of Stax-type soul and rock. The impressive musicianship and sincerity of Brooks' music is probably easier to respect than to love; this release gives listeners a good sampling of his playing.

Modern Electric Chicago Blues


             

Kelly Joe Phelps


Tunesmith Retrofit
2006

01 - Crow's Nest
02 - The Anvil
03 - Spanish Hands
04 - Plumb Line
05 - Scapegoat
06 - Big Shaky
07 - Tight To The Jar
08 - MacDougal
09 - Loud As Ears
10 - Red Light Nickel
11 - Handful Of Arrows
12 - Tunesmith Retrofit

A year and a half after his remarkable live album, Tap the Red Cane WhirlwindKelly Joe Phelps returns to the studio with his restless, searing, intimate vision and remarkable skills as both an instrumentalist and a songwriter. While Phelps employs several musicians from his past, such as guitarist Steve Dawson, fiddler Jesse Zubot, and keyboardist Chris Gestrin (all of whom played on 1983's Slingshot Professionals), there's nothing here that's reminiscent of that set. First and foremost, Phelps is a songwriter here. Phelps looks at his subjects, such as the lover in "Spanish Hands," from the side. He communicates directly while peeling back the layers of appearance, and describes her as both "a gentle bell" and "a cat's eye." This is the songwriter as poet, heard over and again as the subtly shaded instrumental backdrops caress his words lovingly, letting them roll out unencumbered. In the opener, "Crow's Nest," his acoustic guitar is unassuming as he trots out the words "Come along to the riverside, sit down now/I just want to hear somebody else whine/If you've got tomorrow, I've got a blade/We can dig a hole into an old book/We can keep our secrets there." He allows the truth of desperation, love, and the willingness of other possibilities all to emerge before Zubot floats his way in and adorns that guitar with some lonesome balladry of his own. On "The Anvil," Wallace Stevens' ghost comes to visit in Phelps imagery, metaphors, and similes, accompanied by a shuffling snare and a pump organ as he sings "There is an eye walking curiously/By the campground, the bedside night stand/My leg bones feel weary yet walk on they will/Holding for wheels and gravy/On a plate full of nothing but shaking my head/With a side bowl of nothing to do." His rhymes touch the inside, looking at difficulty and confusion from a nearly wistful place, longing for he knows not what. But it's Phelps use of the banjo on Tunesmith Retrofit that is the album's biggest surprise. (Before recording this set, he hadn't played one in 20 years.) He doesn't try to play bluegrass, nor does he try to haunt the ghosts of those players who have gone before.

Modern Acoustic/Slide Guitar Blues

Dave Hole


Whole Lotta Blues
1996

01 - Nobody Hears Me Crying
02 - Short Fuse Blues
03 - Quicksand
04 - I Found Love
05 - Tore Down
06 - Key To The Highway
07 - I Can't Be Satisfied
08 - Going Down
09 - The Plumber
10 - Berwick Road
11 - Keep Your Motor Runnin'
12 - Up All Night Thinking
13 - Crazy Kind Of Woman
14 - Blues Will Call Your Name
15 - Counting My Regrets
16 - Travelling Riverside Blues

Modern Electric Blues

Danny Bryant's Red Eye Band


Live
2007

01 - Heartbreaker
02 - Slow Blues/Sweet Little Angel
03 - Hideaway/Bring Your Fine Self Home
04 - Girl From The North Country
05 - Play To Win, Born To Loose
06 - Last Man Standing
07 - This Is The Blues
08 - Always With Me
09 - Good Time Woman

Blues/Rock

The Yardbirds


Collection Gold
1989

22 Tracks


The Yardbirds are mostly known to the casual rock fan as the starting point for three of the greatest British rock guitarists: Eric ClaptonJeff Beck, and Jimmy Page. Undoubtedly, these three figures did much to shape the group's sound, but throughout their career, The Yardbirds were very much a unit, albeit a rather unstable one. And they were truly one of the great rock bands; one whose contributions went far beyond the scope of their half dozen or so mid-'60s hits ("For Your Love," "Heart Full of Soul," "Shapes of Things," "I'm a Man," "Over Under Sideways Down," "Happenings Ten Years Time Ago"). Not content to limit themselves to the R&B and blues covers they concentrated upon initially, they quickly branched out into moody, increasingly experimental pop/rock. The innovations of ClaptonBeck, and Page redefined the role of the guitar in rock music, breaking immense ground in the use of feedback, distortion, and amplification with finesse and breathtaking virtuosity. With the arguable exception of the Byrds, they did more than any other outfit to pioneer psychedelia, with an eclectic, risk-taking approach that laid the groundwork for much of the hard rock and progressive rock from the late '60s to the present.

British Invasion/Blues/Rock



Dave Hole


Steel On Steel
1995

01 - Wildfire
02 - Quicksand
03 - Counting My Regrets
04 - Killing Bite
05 - Take Me To Chicago
06 - I Won't Leave
07 - Worry
08 - I Found Love
09 - Going Down
10 - One Last Breath
11 - Hook, Line & Sinker
12 - Cold rain
13 - Blues Will Call Your Name

With his third album, Steel on SteelDave Hole turns in another set of ready-made originals and covers, all highlighted by his sizzling slide guitar work.

Modern Electric Blues



viernes, 24 de mayo de 2013

Hans Theessink


Wishing Well
2013
¡RECOMENDADO!
01 - New Home Upon The Hill
02 - Wishing Well
03 - Wayfaring Stranger
04 - Take Your Picture
05 - Snowing On Raton
06 - Make Me Down A Pallet On Your Floor
07 - Alberta Let Your Hair Hand Down Low
08 - Living With The Blues
09 - Hellbound
10 - Kathmandu
11 - Delia
12 - Ballad Of Hollis Brown
13 - Didn't We Try
14 - Early This Morning Blues

Modern Electric Blues



Lonnie Brooks


Reconsider Baby
1994

01 - Mama Talk To Your Daughter
02 - Reconsider Baby
03 - Sweet Home Chicago
04 - Things I Used To Do
05 - Big Leg Woman
06 - The Train And The Horse
07 - Crosscut saw
08 - Woke Up This Morning
09 - Crazy Bout You Baby
10 - Two Guitars Shuffle

Modern Electric Chicago Blues



Harvey Mandel & The Snake Crew


Snake Crew
2002

01 - It Is What It Is
02 - Baby Batter II
03 - Have You Seen My Baby
04 - Train Wreck
05 - So Far So Good
06 - Land Of The Free
07 - I Had A Life
08 - Everybody Wants To Go To Heaven
09 - I'd Do You
10 - Twizzle Zing
11 - Set In Stone
12 - Layin' Around Here With The Blues
13 - You'll Never Know
14 - Free Flow

Blues/Rock



Mick Taylor & Snowy White


Arthur's Club Geneve
1995
¡RECOMENDADO!
01 - You Gotta Move
02 - I Wonder Why
03 - You Shook Me
04 - Judgement Day
05 - Little Wing
06 - Can't Your Heart

Blues



The Yardbirds


Blue Eyed Blues
1972

12 Tracks









British Invasion/Blues/Rock






Kelly Joe Phelps


Tap The Red Cane Whirlwind
2005

01 - Hard Time Killin' Floor Blues
02 - Not So Far To Go
03 - Jericho
04 - Fleashine
05 - Cardboard Box Of Batteries
06 - God Tooth
07 - Tommy
08 - I Am The Light Of The World
09 - Waiting For Marty

There are few artists who offer the raw sincerity and accomplished musical acumen that guitarist, singer, and songwriter Kelly Joe Phelps does. From his first offering, Lead Me On on the Burnside label, through his subsequent studio outings for Rykodisc, Phelps has done something remarkable: forged himself a solid identifying mark as a folk and blues musician of distinction in fields owing so much to the past that latter-day performers are usually crushed under the weight of them. Tap the Red Cane Whirlwind is a collection of solo live performances recorded n California in 2004. Lee Townsend, who has long been affiliated with him, produced the set. It opens with a nine-and-a-half-minute version of Skip James' "Hard Time Killin' Floor Blues." Phelps snakily moves the tune through various modes and modulations, delving deep into Delta blues tonalities and backside melodies that open up spaces inside it. His voice, smoky and sweetly raspy, is never harsh, though it often sounds like it is inhabited by ghosts. It's a stunner. The other cover here is a smoking version of the late Rev. Gary Davis' "I Am the Light of the World." Dignified, soulful, and spot-on musically, Phelps is a dynamite guitarist who adds, subtracts, and morphs figures onto the original fingerstyle lines, and uses his voice to offer evidence of the timelessness of the lyric. And as moving and virtuosic as these two performances are, it's his own songs that offer the true prize of this collection. There's "Jericho," with its spooky droning bassline just under some slippery, winding fingerstyle playing, all of it supporting a vocal that comes from some lost world, just beyond the pale, to impart a tale from antiquity that weighs heavily on the forbidding present juncture. The stinging folk-blues of "Gold Tooth" showcases Phelps' ability to make the strings literally dance as his singing tugs at the ends of lines while driving others deeper into the spectral groove. The tenderness inherent in "Waiting for Marty" is elegiac, full of sepia tones and the notion of bittersweet memory. Here is the place where longing, regret for a life squandered, and the acceptance of things as they are even as they drift away into the ether and invisible history makes for a song that is literally unlike any other. Simply stated, if there is one recording that captures the sum of the magic, power, and poetry that is Kelly Joe Phelps, this one's it.

Modern Acoustic Blues



Dave Hole


The Plumber
1993

01 - The Plumber
02 - You Don't Have To Be Pretty To Sing The Blues
03 - Do What You Do
04 - Is It True? (Part.1)
05 - Three Days Out
06 - Sign Me Up
07 - Me And My Guitar
08 - New Way To Live
09 - Is It True (Part.2)
10 - Wrecking Yard
11 - North West Blues
12 - Boogaloo

Modern Electric Blues

Spooky Tooth


Collected Singles
1977


"Evil Woman"



"Tobacco Road"



"I Am The Walrus"



British Invasion/Blues/Rock



Danny Bryant's Red Eye Band



Live At Cox's Yard
2004

01 - Further On Up The Road
02 - Old Love
03 - Play To Win (Born To Lose)
04 - Girl From The North Country
05 - Black Cat Bone
06 - Albatross
07 - Living With The Blues
08 - Elmore James Tribute
09 - Too Many Dirty Dishes
10 - Love Of Angels
11 - Crying For My Baby
12 - All Along The Watchtower
13 - Tellin' Stories

Blues/Rock

Dave Hole


Working Overtime
1993

01 - Nobody Hears Me Crying
02 - You're Gonna Reap Everything Sew
03 - Stormy Seas
04 - Mean Old Airplane
05 - Working Overtime
06 - Key To The Highway
07 - Up All Might Thinking
08 - I Can't Be Satisfied
09 - Twenty Years
10 - Crazy Kind Of Woman
11 - Berwick Road

Dave Hole second disc features nine original compositions and covers of Muddy Waters and Big Bill Broonzy, rendered in a vocal and guitar style somewhat similar to Johnny Winter's best blues work but with an edge of youthful vigor. "Biting slide guitar work" is an understatement. Hole can also play the thoughtful Roy Buchanan card on the likes of "Berwick Road."

Modern Electric Blues

jueves, 23 de mayo de 2013

James Cotton


Cotton Mouth Man
2013

01 - Cotton Mouth Man
02 - Midnight Train
03 - Mississippi Mud
04 - He Was There
05 - Something For Me
06 - Wrapped Around My Heart
07 - Saint On Sunday
08 - Hard Sometimes
09 - Young Bold Women
10 - Bird Nest On The Ground
11 - Wasn't My Time To Go
12 - Blues Is Good For You
13 - Bonnie Blue

Blues harp maestro James Cotton was 77 at the time of this album's release. He can barely sing anymore, and the years of playing and touring have left his voice a hoarse croak, but make no mistake, he can still play the harp, and his stunning, overdriven blasts on the instrument are as powerful and as immediate as ever. He's the living embodiment of the Chicago blues, and one of the genre's last surviving founders of it, having mentored with the great Sonny Boy Williamson, and he recorded, played, and toured with Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters, cutting his first sides at the age of 19 for Chess Records. He's done this a long time, and as this delightful, joyous, stomping, and vibrant set shows, he doesn't need to sing to command the stage. Cotton wrote or co-wrote most of the songs here with the album's producer, Tom Hambridge, and the vocals are handled by guest artists, most of them by Darrell Nulisch, the former Texas Heat and Anson Funderburgh & the Rockets vocalist who has been handling the singing duties for Cotton's band for some time now, but Gregg Allman, Warren Haynes, Ruthie Foster, Delbert McClinton, and Keb' Mo' are also featured singers. But this isn't one of those duets albums that artists make in the twilight of their careers by any shot -- Cotton is amazing on these cuts, his harp blasts full of passion, power, and enough pure energy to light up the night sky. Cotton may not do somersaults on stage anymore, but his harp lines do, weaving in and out of these songs like a charging Chicago freight train. There isn't a single lame cut here, but the closer, "Bonnie Blue," with Cotton croaking out a moving vocal accompanied only by his harp and the resonator guitar playing of Colin Linden, is particularly poignant. Cotton may be cruising in on 80 years of age, but he's just released one of the best albums of his career.

Modern Electric Delta/Chicago Blues



Tim Too Slim' Langford


Goin'-Public
2002

01 - What Is Wrong
02 - The Shinin' Moon
03 - My Babe
04 - In The Pines
05 - Highway 51
06 - Come On In My Kitchen
07 - Crawlin' King Snake
08 - Jesus Just Left Chicago
09 - Crazy Mixed Up World
10 - Swamp Opera

Modern Electric Blues



Snowy White's Blues Agency


Blues On Me
1989

01 - I Can't Help Myself
02 - Blues On Me
03 - Out Of Order
04 - When You Broke Your Promise
05 - I want Your Love
06 - Out Of My Dreams
07 - Addicted man
08 - Open For Business
09 - Walking The Streets
10 - Land Of Plenty

British Blues/Rock



Robben Ford & The Blue Line


In San Francisco
1993

01 - The Brother
02 - You Cut Me To The Bone
03 - Start It Up
04 - Step On It
05 - Prison Of Love
06 - Worried Life Blues
07 - Tell I'm Your Man
08 - Talk To Ypour Daughter
09 - Help The Poor

Modern Electric Guitar Blues



Dave Hole


Ticket To Chicago
1997

01 - Out Of Here
02 - You're Too Young
03 - Phone Line
04 - You Got The Blues
05 - My Bird Won't Sing
06 - Bermuda Triangle
07 - Wheeler Dealer
08 - Empty Train
09 - Why Can¡t You Be True
10 - Beyond Jupiter
11 - Cold Blue Moon
12 - Outlaw
13 - Ain't No Justice
14 - Bullfrog Blues

Slide guitarist Dave Hole kicks up a fun ruckus on Ticket to Chicago, his fourth album for Alligator Records. This native of Perth (Australia), the Chicago blues label's first overseas signing, realizes for the first time his dream of playing with Chicago blues musicians bassist Johnny B. Gayden (Albert Collins), pianist Tony Z (Larry McCrayBuddy Guy), and drummer Ray "Killer" Allison (Buddy Guy), along with (on several tracks) a horn section and harmonica (courtesy of Billy Branch). The opening "Out of Here" serves as the starter's pisto Hole and company play too fast, too loud, and sound too rowdy on just about every one of these 14 songs (13 Hole originals and William Harris' "Bullfrog Blues," here dedicated by Hole to late blues-rock guitarist Rory Gallagher). In other words, Ticket to Chicago is a wonderfully high-spirited blues album, the kind to listen to when you're in the mood to go out and raise some hell but you're either too tired, too broke, or too ripped up to actually go out and do it.

Modern Electric Blues