To guests from Japan

私と私の友人sussexは日本の友達とのアルバムを交換したいと思う。
日本で発売されたBlues Albumを所蔵している人たちの多くのご連絡ください。
このブログに紹介されたアルバム以外にも多くのことを分けることがある。

Saturday, February 25, 2012

The Matt Jacobs Bluesgroup - A Tribute to Stevie Ray Vaughan

Styles : Texas Blues, Blues Rock
Released : 2005
Lable : Self Lable

01 - Cold Shot
02 - Riviera Paradise
03 - Tightrope
04 - Tin Pan Alley


Guitarist Matt Jacobs formed the band in 2005 together with three friends who share his ambition to hit the Dutch stages and treat the audiences to powerful bluesrock.
Their first mission was to record a CD. 'A tribute to Stevie Ray Vaughan' is both a compliment to the late guitarvirtuoso and a token of their confidence.
The Matt Jacobs Band plays songs originally recorded by artists such as Johnny Lang, Joe Bonamassa, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Kenny Wayne Shepherd as well as classics from Fleetwood Mac, Derek and the Dominoes, Led Zeppelin and a growing number of original work.
The Matt Jacobs Band consists of Matt Jacobs on guitar, his brother Bram on drums, Dirk Pauwels on bass and vocals.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Cool Papa (Haskell Sadler) - Cool Papa & The Allstar Blues Band

Styles : West Coast Blues, Electric Blues
Released : 1982
Lable : TJ Records

01 - Draw In Your Lips
02 - Shady Spot By The River
03 - Papa's Boogie
04 - Hard Times
05 - Woman I'm Going Crazy
06 - End Of The Road
07 - What Have I Done
08 - I'm Gonna Walk On
09 - I Had A Woman


Haskell Robert Sadler, also known as Cool Papa Sadler (April 16, 1935 ? May 6, 1994)
Born in Denver, Colorado, Sadler played a number of times at the San Francisco Blues Festival. He was one of the members of the San Francisco Bay Area blues scene from the 1960s through to the 1990s. Sadler wrote "747" as recorded by Joe Louis Walker.
He died in Berkeley, California in 1994.

Personnel
Haskell Sadler (Cool Papa) : Guitar, Vocals
Sam Myers : Drums
Connel Page : Bass
Kenney Herrera : Saxophone
Big Bob Deance : Rhythm Guitar

original LP from sussex

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Cueselle Settle (Mr. Q.) - Cocktail Boogie

Styles : Piano Blues
Released : 2011
Lable : Music Maker

01 - Cocktail Boogie
02 - Georgia
03 - We Three
04 - Mr. Q's Blues
05 - San Francisco
06 - Everyday I Have The Blues
07 - You'll Never Know
08 - Mood Indigo
09 - What I Say
10 - Juice Headed Woman
11 - Earl Hines Tune
12 - Thank You Pretty Baby
13 - Begin The Beguine
14 - Don't Take Your Love From Me


Mr. Q was born in 1913. He is an old hep-cat whose music just makes you have to smile. A self-taught pianist, he has fashioned his own sound by mixing the piano styles of Art Tatum, Earl Hines and Oscar Peterson interspersed with songs by the Ink Spots.
He graduated from North Carolina, A&T in the 30s. He started his career when he left school to travel with Blanche Calloway’s Orchestra as a singer. They performed as far away as Mexico, traveling back through Texas he took off on his own and hustled a job as a singer in a local saloon. Returning home six months later his parents were upset. Mr. Q appeased them by giving his mother $500 he earned in tips, all in change. He soon migrated to Harlem, and got a job, playing harmonica with the Savoy Sultans, the house band at the Savoy ballroom. He sang at tables at local. He went to all night jam sessions where he witnessed the legends of the day perform such as Oscar Peterson, Art Tatum and Teddy Wilson. Mr. Q returned to Winston-Salem in 1963 and became a fixture performing at piano bars.
This album was never issued when Mr.Q was alive-he passed away in 2000 of natural causes. Cocktail Boogie has been a secret treasure of the Music Maker office for years.

original CD from sussex

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Morgan Davis - Drive My Blues Away

Styles : Downhome Blues, Acoustic Blues
Released : 2011
Lable : Electro-Fi Records

01 - Sure As You Live
02 - Thank You Mr. Reed
03 - Anticipation
04 - When You Got A Good Friend
05 - Arlene
06 - The Money Men
07 - Dissatisfied
08 - Re-Break My Heart
09 - Love Puzzle
10 - Look Down The Road
11 - Drive My Blues Away
12 - Happy Song
13 - Ramblin' On My Mind


For over 40 years, Morgan Davis has been bringing a rich tradition of blues, infused with his own keen sense of humour, to audiences across North America and Europe. Originally from Detroit, Morgan moved to Toronto in the late 1960’s where he started to develop his own style and gain recognition for his talents. His long and illustrious career had seen many accomplishments and accolades, playing with John Lee Hooker, Albert King, John Hammond and, in a career highlight, the legendary Dr. John.  A renowned songwriter whose songs have been covered by the likes of Colin James, Davis’ 2004 album Painkiller won four Maple Blues awards, and the Juno for Blues Album of the Year. In 2006, he recorded At Home In Nova Scotia, which pays homage to the Maritimes, which he has called home for ten years. This year, Davis recorded his first ever solo album called, Drive My Blues Away. Now the down-home blues veteran is set to rock Harvest with a style that’s all his own, both solo and with good blues friends Geoff Bartley and Dan Stevens. 

Personnel
Morgan Davis - Guitars, cigar box guitar, voice
Colin Linden - Guitar on "Happy Song"
Seymour Townes - Harmonica
Franz - Percussion on "Sure As You Live"

original CD from sussex

Monday, February 13, 2012

Che & Ray - Crazy Boogie (LP)

Styles : Boogie Woogie, Piano Blues (Diatonic Harp)
Released : 1980
Lable : EMI Records (Switzerland)

01 - Telephone-Boogie
02 - Crazy B-O-O-G-I-E
03 - Boogie Brushes
04 - Aliaso
05 - Walking
06 - Get The Boogie
07 - Boogie Sonata
08 - Diamond Heart
09 - Good Luck


Jean-Marc Peyer (Che) fine and Raymond (Ray) have known each other
from school and began playing together in 1968 boogie-woogie.
The major part of their repertoire consists of boogie-woogie and blues originals, rapidly played on Grand piano and electric piano, some with blues harmonica deposits Peyer from Che. These as well as classics by Ludwig van Beethoven and Scott Joplin come to rock'n'roll of Jerry Lee Lewis.

Discography
1975 - Giants Of Boogie-Woogie & Blues
1976 - Burning The Boogie
1977 - Boogie Explosion
1977 - Che & Ray Live
1979 - California
1980 - Crazy Boogie
1981 - Instrumental Boogie Woogie and Blues (Soloalbum von Che Peyer)
1983 - Right Time To Boogie
1986 - Boogie-Race - 10 Jahre unterwegs
1988 - The Zurich Session (live)
1991 - Midnight Special (live)
1992 - Boogie-Party
1993 - Boogie Dig-It-All
1995 - Jubilee featuring John Brack
1999 - The Original 1968-1998 (Doppel-CD)
2006 - Boogie, Blues & More (solo CD von Che Peyer mit Band)
2010 - CHE in concert (solo CD von CHE am Flugel, Blues-Harp und vocal ohne Band)

Thursday, February 9, 2012

John Carey & Piano Bob - Back In New Orleans

Styles : New Orleans Blues, Piano Blues (Diatonic Harp)
Released : 2010
Lable : John Carey

01 - Back In New Orleans
02 - Parade of Injustice
03 - Spirit Inside of Me
04 - Soul Surgeon
05 - Union Man Blues
06 - Doin' the Big Easy
07 - Slow Dancin'
08 - Boathouse Blues
09 - Rock-A-Bye Baby
10 - The Storm
11 - Ride the Train
12 - Gipsy Woman Blues
13 - Box Spring Boogie
14 - Desir'ee
15 - Father & Son


John Carey on Vocals, Harmonica
In the New Orleans scene, the John Creay Blues Summit was a weekly jam session at Vic’s on Tuesdays. On Wednesday night, the the John Creay Blues Party took place at the Hard Rock Cafe and featured some of the top names in Blues today. John then took the Summit to the Kentucky Theater of the Arts, where He performed with Grammy winner Chris Thomas King and Henry Butler to a SOLD OUT audience. Carey’s first New Orleans release, Hot For Louisana, featured his funky rhythmic harp playing with such notable backing musicians as George Porter Jr. (Meters), and the Memphis Horns. The tune “People You Love”, from Hot For Louisana, is also included on the Louisiana Red Hot Records compilation, Blues ~ The Language Of New Orleans. Blues Review Megagine said, “Like Dr. John, Carey splits his musical time between classic Crescent City boogie and contemporary funk-blues, often combining the two with good results. On his next release, New Orleans Blues Reunion, John was backed by the Carey Brothers (His Sons), Joe Krown on Keyboards and percussionist Big Chief Smiley Ricks (Dr. John). John released a Blues Duo CD called “Crossroads” with Taos New Mexico Blues legend Cullen Winter. John is currently splitting his time performing live music in South Florida, New Orleans and New Mexico.

Piano Bob on Piano
Piano Bob has won national awards , shared the stage with most of the prominent nationally known blues artist and has toured extensively in the past and present. In the early 90s, “Piano Bob & The Snowman” competed for and won the B.B King “Lucille” Award and were presented it at the W.C. Handy Blues Awards in Memphis Tennessee. Kenny Neal, Luther Alison,Keb Mo,Louisiana Red,Smokin” Joe Kubek,Big Bill Morganfield, John Gros and B.B King are just some of the many notable blues artist Piano Bob has jammed or played with. Bob’s current Band (Piano Bob’s 88s) contains some of South Florida’s finest musicians who are particularly qualified to orchestrate His musical styles. Make no mistake, His music is meant to be thoroughly enjoyed and partied to!

files from sussex

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Greg Burgess - Brother Blues And Me

Styles : Piano Blues, Boogie Woogie
Released : 2003
Lable : Greg Burgess

01 - Billy and Elton
02 - The Weasel's in the Coop
03 - Big Brown Panther
04 - C Boogie
05 - Brother Blues No. 2
06 - That Would Be Nice
07 - All Day, All Night Long
08 - High Water Boogie
09 - Gee Gee Gee
10 - I'm Listening
11 - The End of the Blues
12 - Brother Blues No. 1
13 - Rid Those JItters
14 - I Got the Blues Deep Inside Me


Greg Burgess’s first album, “I Am Not Alone,” selected by Joe Miklos of the Billtown Blue Notes as the best blues album of 1999, was a solo endeavor. This is Burgess’s second recording of blues numbers as a sole frontman, and here he is joined for the first time by Grammy-winning drummer Steve Mitchell and bassist Andy Seal. Burgess has written all the songs on the recording (his wife, Beverley Conrad, is the co-writer of “All Day, All Night Long,” a tune which has been covered by blues singer Ann Kerstetter on her album “Duke Street Diary”). Except for “All Day, All Night Long,” “C Boogie,” and “High Water Boogie,” the tunes here were penned in preparation for the trio’s appearance at the 2003 Billtown Blues Festival. Burgess first started singing and playing blues piano in the early 70’s as a teenager with his guitarist friend Artie Renkel, who now resides in Clarksdale, Mississippi. In the 80’s, Burgess lived with his wife in Rochester, NY, and there for a time played with Augie Jr., later a notorious busker in New Orleans, and for a longer time as a sideman for bluesman Joe Beard. During his tenure with Beard, he had the opportunity to back up such luminaries as Big Joe Turner, Buddy Guy and Junior Wells, Taj Mahal, and soul singer Roy C. Burgess has been performing with Mitchell and Seal since 2000. This recording, made in Steve Mitchell’s rented trailer down by the river, was engineered and mastered by Andy Seal.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Rocky Zharp & The Blues Crackers - Crackin' Up

Styles : Harmonica Blues
Released : 1999
Lable : King Hudd Records

01 - Heard the News
02 - Big Road Blues
03 - Funky Tracks
04 - Pallet On the Floor
05 - Brave New Day
06 - Hurt Me
07 - In the Cornfield
08 - Dylanistic
09 - Great God Almighty
10 - Play That Country Music
11 - Harp Walk
12 - Pretty
13 - 9 Lb Hammer


Rocky released a live cd as well as a studio cd, "Crackin' the Blues" with his band The Blues Crackers, (Official promoters of mandatory fun and audience participation). In 2002 Rocky released two CD's: "The Best Of Rocky Zharp" (which has been getting air play in the United States and throughout Europe) and "The Blair Zharp Project," a children's cd with Irish folk singer Andrea Blair (which had two number one songs on mp3.com.)
The Blues Crackers Performed for the fifth year at "Jazz In The Pines" in Idyllwild, Ca. in 2002 and are booked for August 2003. The band played at the 18th annual Monterey Bay Blues Festival the 29th of June 2003 and was ask to come back in 2004.
Rocky's original song, "Scars" from "Crackin' the Blues" and "The Best Of" CD's was featured on the Dec/Jan 2003 Blues Revue Magazine compilation CD distributed throughout the world. Rocky's song "Merry Merry Christmas" from his Christmas cd was featured on a Hospice compilation CD "Ho Ho Hospice" distributed throughout the United States to help raise money and awareness for Hospice. Rocky's country song "Too Drunk To Stagger" was featured on an anti-drug/pro-family compilation CD, "Songs of Recovery" by Sun Ray Addictions.

files from sussex

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Ezra Charles - Return Of The Radio Avengers

Styles : Piano Blues (Texas Style)
Released : 1999
Lable : Icarus Records

01 - A little of This
02 - 88 Answers
03 - Get In Line
04 - I Wanta Be Around Her
05 - Ezra's Boogie-Woogie
06 - So Cool
07 - Bolivar Ferry
08 - I Must Be Crazy
09 - Hurry Up & Love Me
10 - Drive Time
11 - Shootaround
12 - Knock On My Door


Ezra Charles is one of Texas most popular piano players, winning the Houston Press Readers' Poll for Best Keyboardist seven times, and listed in Dallas Buddy magazine's Texas Tornadoes of the Keyboard as a charter member of the Hall of Fame. Growing up in Beaumont, Texas, the first band he played in consisted of himself, Johnny Winter, Edgar WInter and a drummer. Moving to Houston, he organized Thursday's Children, now widely regarded among the most influential Texas bands of the Sixties. He spent most of the Seventies preparing for his career as a Blues master, personally being mentored by Leon Russell, playing with Lightnin' Hopkins, and becoming the last protege of the late Professor Longhair in New Orleans. His present band began in 1983 as a rockabilly trio, but two years later he added a horn section, and the lineup was born that has survived to this day as Ezra Charles and The Works. He has spent the last twenty-five years writing a body of work that chronicles his life and the Texas Gulf Coast atmosphere that permeates his music. As the band's horn arranger as well as songwriter, he has drawn from both the heritage of the "Blue-Eyed Soul" horn bands of the Beaumont-Port Arthur-Louisiana region as well as the rich sound of Houston\'s Duke-Peacock stable that recorded behind Bobby "Blue" Bland and Gatemouth Brown. A true "keeper of the flame," he stands as a valuable link between the past and the future of Texas regional music.

Henry Brown - Henry Brown Blues

Styles : Piano Blues, St. Louis Blues
Released : 2008
Lable : Southland Records

01 - Henry Brown Blues
02 - Got It & Cain't Quit It
03 - Bottled In Bond
04 - Blues For Charlie O'Brien
05 - Deep Morgan Is Delmar Now
06 - Henry Brown Boogie
07 - O'Fallon Blues
08 - My Blues Is In The Bottle
09 - Papa Slick Head
10 - Handyman Blues
11 - Scufflin' Boogie
12 - Henry Brown's Talking Blues


Bio
Henry Brown left Tennessee for St. Louis, MO, at the age of 12 and took up the piano while still in school. His playing style, an economical form of piano blues, was taught to him by a Deep Morgan Street blues player known to the public only as "Blackmouth." Brown later worked with St. Louis Jimmy Oden and trombonist Ike Rogers; with Rogers and guitarist Lawrence Casey, he formed a trio called the Biddle Street Boys. He recorded sides (often in tandem with Rogers) with Mary Johnson, among others, in between playing in clubs around St. Louis, where he lived most of his life and worked regularly right up through the mid-'70s.

About CD
Solo piano from St. Louis musician Henry Brown, recorded in 1960. 12 tracks. Apart from a few recordings of long ago Henry Brown has never had an opportunity before to express himself fully on record. A taciturn man he communicates more eloquently in his music than in his taut speech, as his moving playing on 'Got It and Cain't Quit It" or "My Blues Is In The Bottle' testifies. In 'Blues for Charlie O'Brien' he acknowledges his indebtedness to the interest of the detective and slyly jokes about the Police Squad. His inexorable left hand boogie figures are powerfully demonstrated in 'Scufflin' Boogie' whilst he plays 'Handyman Blues' to an unexpected tango rhythm. These and the remaining titles should help to bring Henry Brown the recognition he deserves as a blues pianist of the first importance.

original CD from sussex

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Steve Lucky - Smack Dab In The Middle

Styles : Jump Blues, Boogie Woogie
Released : 1992
Lable : Way Cool

01 - Smack Dab In The Middle
02 - The 12 Bar Blues
03 - Linda Lu
04 - Greenbacks
05 - Dukes Blues
06 - Boogus Interruptus
07 - Don't Do It
08 - My Little Baby
09 - She's Tough
10 - Red Beans And Rice
11 - Kidney Stew
12 - Old Folks Boogie


Steve Lucky is now famous as the bandleader of Steve Lucky and the Rhumba Bums, but this CD was made before the conception of that band. This was a 1992 release of material that he was performing regularly in New York including some rocking originals, some great boogie woogie numbers, and plenty of vintage R&B and Blues chestnuts. In addition to Steve Lucky on piano and vocals, it features Jim Davis on tenor sax, Phil Shimmel on drums, Tim Tindall on bass, and 2 great guitarists, John Lucic and Chris James.

Born in Seattle and raised near Detroit, Steve Lucky started playing piano at age eight and was playing and singing professionally by the time he was thirteen. He founded and led the six-piece Blue Front Persuaders through the ‘80s, playing jump-blues, ‘40s and ‘50s R & B, and swing, while living in Ann Arbor and attending the University of Michigan. Their novel sound and wild show was a big draw on the Midwest college circuit, earning them a spot on Star Search and a notable review for one of Lucky's original songs in Billboard magazine.

In 1987 Lucky moved to New York City to play keyboards for Grammy award-winning guitarist and vocalist Johnny Clyde Copeland. During the next five years he was active in the Greenwich Village music scene, was hired to score performance art and theater, and performed with a diverse group of musicians including Joan Osborne, Blues Traveler, and the Spin Doctors.
Sticking to his musical roots, Lucky formed his own band in New York City working the nightclubs and touring throughout Europe until he moved to San Francisco. This is the band that he recorded for "Smack Dab In The Middle".

Steve Lucky can be heard on Elvin Bishop's 2004 release, with Little Charlie & the Night Cats on Alligator Records, with John Hammond Jr. on Virgin Records, and with Little Walter’s famous sideman, the late Dave Myers on BlackTop Records. Lucky has performed or recorded with Kim Wilson, Meters' founder and drummer Zigaboo Modeliste, Johnny Clyde Copeland, Duke Robillard, Earl King, Lowell Fulson, Roy Gaines, Chuck Berry's pianist Johnnie Johnson, James Harman, Carol Fran, Mark Hummel, Angela Strehli, Paul de Lay, Rusty Zinn, Carey Bell, Johnny Dyer, Finis Tasby, and 1999 Grammy-nominee Odetta. In addition to piano Steve Lucky is passionate about playing the Hammond B3 organ.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Buddy Moss (2 LP)

Buddy Moss - Vol.1 - Georgia Blues (1930-1935)

Styles : Country Blues, Piedmont Blues
Released : 1983
Lable : Travelin' Man Records

01 - I'm On My Way Down Home
02 - Diddle-Da-Diddle
03 - She Looks So Good
04 - She's Coming Back Some Cold Rainy Day
05 - Bye Bye Mama
06 - Cold Country Blues
07 - Prowling Woman
08 - When I'm Dead And Gone
09 - Jealous Hearted Man
10 - It Must Have Been Her
11 - Joker Man
12 - Back To My Used To Be
13 - Broken Down Engine No. 2
14 - Some Lonesome Day
15 - My Baby Won't Pay Me No Mind
16 - Stop Hanging Around


Buddy Moss - Vol.2 - Red River Blues (1933-1941)

Styles : Country Blues, Piedmont Blues
Released : 1984
Lable : Travelin' Man Records

01 - Red River Blues
02 - Prowlin' Gambler Blues
03 - Tampa Strut
04 - Who Stole De Lock
05 - When The Hearse Roll Me From My Door
06 - Insane Blues
07 - Dough Rolling Papa
08 - Some Lonesome Day
09 - Jinx Man Blues
10 - Evil Hearted Woman
11 - Worrysome Woman
12 - Mistreated Boy
13 - You Need A Woman
14 - Joy Rag
15 - I'm Sittin' Here Tonight
16 - Unfinished Business

original LP from Sussex


Biography
Eugene "Buddy" Moss was, in the estimation of many blues scholars, the most influential East Coast blues guitarist to record in the period between Blind Blake's final sessions in 1932 and Blind Boy Fuller's debut in 1935. A younger contemporary of Blind Willie McTell and Curley Weaver, Moss was part of a near-legendary coterie of Atlanta bluesmen, and one of the few of his era lucky enough to work... ...More
Eugene "Buddy" Moss was, in the estimation of many blues scholars, the most influential East Coast blues guitarist to record in the period between Blind Blake's final sessions in 1932 and Blind Boy Fuller's debut in 1935. A younger contemporary of Blind Willie McTell and Curley Weaver, Moss was part of a near-legendary coterie of Atlanta bluesmen, and one of the few of his era lucky enough to work into the blues revival of the '60s and '70s. A guitarist of uncommon skill and dexterity, he was a musical disciple of Blind Blake, and may well have served as an influence on Piedmont-style guitarist Blind Boy Fuller. Although his career was halted in 1935 by a six-year jail term, and then by the Second World War, he lived long enough to be rediscovered in the '60s, when he revealed a talent undamaged by time or adversity.
Moss was one of 12 children born to a sharecropper in Jewel, a town in Warren County, Georgia, midway between Atlanta and Augusta. There is some disagreement about his date of birth, some sources indicating 1906 and many others a more recent vintage, 1914. He began teaching himself the harmonica at a very early age, and he played at local parties around Augusta, where the family moved when he was four and remained for the next ten years. By 1928, he was busking around the streets of Atlanta. "Nobody was my influence," he told Robert Springer of his harmonica playing, in a 1975 interview. "I just kept hearing people, so I listen and I listen, and listen, and it finally come to me."
By the time he arrived in Atlanta, he was good enough to be noticed by Curley Weaver and Robert "Barbecue Bob" Hicks, who began working with the younger Moss. It was Weaver and Hicks who got him his first recording date at the age of 16, as a member of their group the Georgia Cotton Pickers. On December 7, 1930 at the Campbell Hotel in Atlanta, the group did four songs for Columbia: "I'm on My Way Down Home," "Diddle-Da-Diddle," "She Looks so Good," and "She's Comin' Back Some Cold Rainy Day." The group that day consisted of Barbecue Bob and Curley Weaver on guitars and Moss on harmonica. Nothing more was heard from Moss on record until three years later. In January of 1933, however, he made his debut as a recording artist in his own right for the American Record Company in New York, accompanied by Fred McMullen and Curley Weaver, cutting three songs cut that first day, "Bye Bye Mama," "Daddy Don't Care," and "Red River Blues."
In the three years leading up to that date, he'd taught himself the guitar, at which he became so proficient that he was a genuine peer and rival to Weaver. He frequently played with Barbecue Bob, and after Bob died of pneumonia on October 21, 1931, he found a new partner and associate in Blind Willie McTell, performing with the Atlanta blues legend at local parties in the Atlanta area. By the time he started recording in 1933, Moss was so good as a player and singer, that all 11 songs that he cut during the four days of sessions were released, far more than saw the light of day from McMullen or Weaver at those same sessions.
In later years, Moss credited Barbecue Bob with being a major influence on his playing, which would be understandable given the time they spent together. Scholars also attribute Blind Blake as a major force in his development, with mannerisms and inflections that both share. It is also suggested by Alan Balfour and others that Moss may have been an influence on no less a figure than Blind Boy Fuller, although who influenced whom is anyone's guess ? it is clear that Moss' first recordings display some inflections and nuances that Fuller didn't put down on record until some years later.
The January 1933 sessions also featured Moss returning to the mouth harp, as a member of the Georgia Browns ? Moss, Weaver, McMullen, and singer Ruth Willis ? for six songs done at the same sessions. But it was on the guitar that Moss would make his name over the next five years.
Moss' records were released simultaneously on various budget labels associated with ARC, and were so successful that in mid-September of 1933, he was back in New York along with Weaver and Blind Willie McTell. Moss cut another dozen songs for the company, this time accompanied by Curley Weaver, while he accompanied Weaver and McTell on their numbers.
These songs sold well enough that he was back in New York in the summer of 1934, this time as a solo guitarist/singer, to do more than a dozen tracks. At this point, Moss' records were outselling those of big-name colleagues Weaver and McTell, and were widely heard throughout the Southern and border states. This body of recordings also best represents the bridge that Moss provided between Blind Blake and Blind Boy Fuller ? his solo version of "Some Lonesome Day," and also "Dough Rollin' Papa," from 1934 advanced ideas in playing and singing that Blind Boy Fuller picked up and adapted to his own style, while one could hear in "Insane Blues" and pick up the lingering influence of Blind Blake.
By August of 1935, Moss saw his per-song fee doubled from $5 to $10 (in a period when many men were surviving on less than that per week), and when he wasn't recording, he was constantly playing around Atlanta alongside McTell and Weaver. When Moss returned to the studio in the summer of 1935, it was with a new partner, Josh White, working under his alias of "The Singing Christian." The two recorded a group of 15 songs in August of 1935, and it seemed like Moss was destined to outshine his one-time mentors Weaver and McTell, when personal and legal disaster struck.
In an incident that has never been fully recounted or explained, Moss was arrested, tried, and convicted in the murder of his wife and sentenced to a long prison term. The truth behind the crime, and the validity of the subsequent conviction, were further called into doubt by the efforts that began almost immediately to secure Moss' release, all to no avail until 1941, when a combination of his own good behavior as a prisoner, coupled with the entreaties of two outside sponsors willing to assure his compliance with parole, helped get him out of jail. It was while working at Elon College under the parole agreement that he met a group of blues musicians that included Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee.
In October of 1941, Moss, Terry, and McGhee went to New York to cut a group of sides for Okeh/Columbia, including 13 numbers by Moss featuring his two new colleagues. Only three of the songs were ever released, and then events conspired to cut short Moss' recording comeback. The entry of the United States into World War II in December of the same year forced the government to place a wartime priority on the shellac used in the making of 78 rpm discs. There was barely enough allocated to the recording industry to keep functioning, and record companies were forced to curtail recordings by all but the most commercially viable artists; a ban on recording work by the Musicians' Union declared soon after further restricted any chance for Moss to record; and the interest in acoustic country blues, even of the caliber that he played, seemed to be waning, further cutting back on record company interest.
Moss continued performing in the area around Richmond, Virginia and Durham, North Carolina during the mid-'40s, and with Curley Weaver in Atlanta during the early '50s, but music was no longer his profession or his living. He went to work on a tobacco farm, drove trucks, and worked as an elevator operator, among other jobs, over the next 20-odd years.
Although he still occasionally played in the area around Atlanta, Moss was largely forgotten. Despite the fact that reference sources even then referred to him as one of the most influential bluesmen of the '30s, he was overlooked by the blues revival. In a sense, he was cheated by the fact that his recording career had been so short ? 1933 to 1935 ? and had never recovered from the interruption in his work caused by his stretch in prison. Fate stepped in, in the form of some unexpected coincidences. In 1964, he chanced to hear that his old partner Josh White was giving a concert at Emory University in Atlanta. Moss visited White backstage at the concert, and the white acolytes hanging around established legend White suddenly discovered a blues legend in their midst. He was persuaded to resume performing in a series of concerts before college audiences, most notably under the auspices of the Atlanta Folk Music Society and the Folklore Society of Greater Washington. He also had new recording sessions for the Columbia label in Nashville, but none of the material was ever issued.
A June 10, 1966 concert in Washington, D.C. was recorded and portions of it were later released on the Biograph label. Moss played the Newport Folk Festival in 1969, and appeared at such unusual venues as New York's Electric Circus during that same year. During the '70s, he played the John Henry Memorial Concert in West Virginia for two consecutive years, and the Atlanta Blues Festival and the Atlanta Grass Roots Music Festival in 1976.
Buddy Moss died in Atlanta in October of 1984, once again largely forgotten by the public. In the years since, his music was once again being heard courtesy of the Biograph label's reissue of the 1966 performance and the Austrian Document label, which has released virtually every side that he recorded between 1930 and 1941. As a result, his reputation has once again grown, although he is still not nearly as well-known among blues enthusiasts as Blind Willie McTell or Blind Boy Fuller.
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Thursday, February 2, 2012

Fabio Santangelo - Blues

Styles : Blues Instrumental
Released : 2011
Lable : Fabio Santangelo

01 - Long Winter Blues
02 - Free Hand
03 - Bluesboy
04 - Poor Man Blues
05 - Hopeless
06 - Sorrow
07 - The Long Cold Night
08 - Stormy Clouds Blues
09 - Midnight Blues


Fabio Santangelo is Piano, Electronic Keyboards Player come from Italy.
He started playing keyboards at the age of 14 in 1993.
Play Styles in the middle between Blues and Electronica, mainly play blues, jazz.

The Walking Stick Man - Undercover Blues

Styles : Chicago Blues, Modern Acoustic Blues (Diatonic Harp)
Released : 2008
Lable : Music Lab Records

Part 1 (Studio)
01 - Snatch It Back And Hold It
02 - Chiltlins Con Carne
03 - Mellow Down Easy
04 - Gerontology
05 - Bye Bye Bird
06 - Walking Sax
07 - What I Say
08 - Caravan
09 - Shake For Me
10 - Harpa Boogie
11 - In The Blind Mans World

Part 2 (Live)
01 - Big Boss Man
02 - Baby Please Don't Go
03 - Sitting On The Top Of The World
04 - Harpa Boogie
05 - What I Say
06 - Going Down
07 - Honky Tonky Blues
08 - Roadrunner
09 - Party Blues


The Walking Stick Man: Singer, Guitarist, Harmonica, Bass & Doublebass player; cigar box luthier, as well as compositor and founder of the musical entertainment company "Blues Business", has recently been honoured with the award of the best Bluesman in Catalunya.
Jordi Llaurens Ynesta (The Walking Stick Man) was born on the 8th of October in 1972, in Gracia, Barcelona.
He’s played the harmonica since he was nine, the guitar since he was sixteen, and started his professional career as a bass player at the age of 19.

"Undercover Blues" is The Walking Stick Mans latest recording in the form of a double cd. Part 1 was recorded at Rosaazul Studios with the band and Part II is a live recording of The Walking Stick Man alone at The Honky Tonk Blues Bar in Barcelona 2008.
In this last album you can recognize his influences: Lightnin’ Hopkins, Sonny Boy Williamson, T.Bone Walker, Willie Dixon, Howlin’ Wolf, Buddy Guy, to name a few.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Rocky Zharp - Live at Ya Ya's With Josh W. Jones

Styles : Acoustic Blues, Folk Blues (Diatonic Harp)
Released : 2010
Lable : King Hudd Records

01 - What More Do You Want
02 - Ya Ya
03 - Time Vs Money Blues
04 - This Land
05 - Blinder Interlude
06 - Sitting On Top of the World
07 - Show Me
08 - Ramblin Time Again
09 - Quicksand
10 - 9 Lb Hammer
11 - Dirty Dog Blues
12 - Frankie & Johnny
13 - Ain't Nobody
14 - Waiting On T-Bone
15 - Happy Good Friday Blues
16 - When The Saints Go Marching In
17 - You Are My Sunshine
18 - That's All
19 - Wonderful World (Bonus)


One of the best Rocky Zharp's live album, well forming an ensemble of acoustic guitar and harmonica.

files from sussex

Bernie Marsden - Going To My Hometown

Styles : Bluesrock
Released : 2009
Lable : Bernie Marsden

01 - Till The Day I Die
02 - The Time Is Right For Love
03 - Bell Bottom Blues
04 - The Hell Square Dance
05 - Key To The Highway
06 - Out On The Western Plains
07 - Lovehunter
08 - Going To My Hometown
09 - Ain't No Love In The Heart Of The City
10 - Rock And Roll Shoes
11 - Wheels Within Wheels
12 - Here I Go Again


Going to My Hometown is an acoustic live album by former Whitesnake guitar player Bernie Marsden and His Acoustic Band, released in 2009.
Bernie has been touring, the theme being " Bernie plays Rory". During the tour Bernie has been joined by some of Rory's last line up so it promises to be quite an event.

Recorded at the Radcliffe Centre, Buckingham by Steve Readfern with the Rockhopper Mobile on November 8, 2008