I just had the opportunity to review the most recent release, Live , from Zac Harmon & The Drive and it's super! Opening with soulful, NTRO , Nate Robinson on bass and Gino Iglehart on drums set a solid foundation, with Corey Lacy building on keys and lush guitar work by Zac Harmon and Kingston Livingston really setting the bar. Terrific opener. Blue Pill Thrill has super movement and soulful vocals by Harmon. Lacy on keys works the rhythm with Robinson and Iglehart and Livingston and and Harmon play stinging riffs on guitar really giving this track some kick. Deep blues track, Feet Back On The Ground features Albert King like stinging riffs and super soulful vocals by Harmon. Keeping the music floor low allows Harmon plenty of space to go dynamically from soft to wow quickly adding real emotion to the track. Excellent! Boogie Down is a strong jam with a firm piano base by Lacy giving Harmon plenty of headroom for vocal corralling. Lacy lays in some real tasty keyboar...
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I started a quest to find terrific blues music and incredible musicianship when I was just a little kid. I also have a tremendous appreciation of fine musical instruments and equipment. One of my greatest joys all of my life was sharing my finds with my friends. I'm now publishing my journey. I hope that you come along!
Bob Malone is Playin’
Up a Storm on New Mojo Deluxe CD Coming August 21 on Delta Moon Records
L.A.-Based
Keyboardist/Singer/Songwriter on Tour This Summer and Fall with Solo Dates as
Well as With Rock Legend, John Fogerty
LOS
ANGELES, CA – Bob Malone, who has toured the world for two decades as a solo
artist, as well as played keyboards in rock legend John Fogerty’s band since
2011, announces the release of his new CD, Mojo Deluxe, on Delta
Moon Records, distributed nationally by Burnside Distribution. Bob Malone will
support the release of Mojo Deluxe with a number of solo dates
that showcase his unique
hybrid of rock, blues and New Orleans R&B, delivered with high-energy piano
virtuosity and a voice all his own. Shows include two weeks in the northeast in August, followed
by southern dates in September and almost a month in the UK in October. Malone
will also be doing more tour dates as a member of John Fogerty’s band as well.
Mojo Deluxe is the eighth solo album for Bob Malone, who was
classically trained, holds a degree in jazz and has played a lifetime of shows
at rock and roll clubs, theatres and arenas. Born and raised in New Jersey, he
has lived in New York City, New Orleans and Boston, and is currently based in
Los Angeles. Playing an average of 100 tour dates a year, he has shared stages
with Bruce Springsteen, Jackson Browne, Jimmy Buffett, Rickie Lee Jones, The
Neville Brothers, Rev. Al Green, Dr. John and many others. As a solo artist,
Bob tours the US, UK, Europe and Australia extensively, including sets atGlastonbury Music Festival and
Colne Blues Festival in the UK; Long Beach Bayou Fest, Falcon Ridge Folk Fest
in the US; plus the Blue Mountains Music Fest and Narooma Blues Fest in
Australia.At the world-famous New Orleans Jazz & Heritage
Festival, he has twice played the legendaryWWOZ Piano Night.
The even-dozen tracks on Mojo
Deluxe feature the wide-breadth of Malone’s musical knowledge and
include exiting originals, as well as cool covers of songs by Ray Charles
(“Hard Times”) and Muddy Waters “She Moves Me”). The sound is a perfect gumbo
of dirty blues, classic rock & roll and New Orleans piano pyrotechnics.
It’s where Bob Malone stomps his foot on a miked-up cigar box, rips on a funky
old upright piano and a vintage Wurlitzer and sings fearlessly of life at the
halfway point. It’s loaded with deep grooves, swamp rock, gospel-drenched
ballads and plenty of nasty slide guitar. The all-star band backing him on the
new CD includes harmonica player Stan Behrens (WAR), bassist Tim Lefebvre
(Tedeschi-Trucks Band), drummer Mike Baird (Journey, Bob Dylan, Joe Cocker),
producer/guitarist Bob DeMarco and drummer Kenny Aronoff, Malone’s Fogerty
bandmate. The album was recorded at several studios in the Los Angeles
area, as well as in New York City.
Bob Malone offered insights into
some of his songs contained on Mojo Deluxe:
“Certain Distance” - “I am an introvert,
and a loner. I have always felt a little bit separate from my fellow humans.
Most people - even the ones who know me well - take it personally. Which has
always amazed me. So once and for all, I want you all to know it’s not you -
It’s me. Now leave me alone.”
“I’m Not Fine” – “When people ask me how
I’m doing, I say: “fine!” “great!” “never been better!” It’s the American way -
nobody likes a complainer! But lately it’s been getting a lot harder to fake
it. To be honest: I’m not fine. Thanks for asking.”
“Paris” – “When I tour Europe, I usually
play Paris, and my wife, of course, likes to go there with me. When we are
there together, it is terribly romantic and we sincerely feel we are in the
finest place on earth. But the last time I played Paris, I went alone, and when
you’re there alone, Paris is just a city full of French people. Smoking. And
when the waiter gives you that Gallic arch of the brow when you ask about a
table for one, you just can’t wait to go home.”
“Watching Over Me”- “It took me 25 years
to write this song. In the early ‘90s I moved to Los Angeles from the east
coast and before long I had a few gigs with country music legend Freddy Fender.
There was this one show in Las Vegas and I completely underestimated how much
gas money I would need to get there in my aging piece-of-sh*t Dodge van. By the
time I arrived, my gas tank was empty, as was the half-pint of cheap whiskey in
my glove box. I had no functioning credit cards, no money in my bank account
and the gig paid by check. With nothing left to lose, I took the one single
dollar I had left to my name and put it in a slot machine. I won two-hundred
bucks. To this day, that’s really the only spiritual experience I’ve ever had.
I’m still not a religious man, but I have to wonder…”
“Chinese Algebra” – “I always wanted to
write something that would contain all of the eclectic elements of my piano
playing in one coherent piece of music and discourage bad harmonica players
from asking to sit in with the band. This is the result.”
“Can’t Get There From Here” – “I am
Generation X, and I am middle-aged. And like every generation before, I can’t
believe how fast it happened. I’ll spend the second half of my life trying to
undo the damage done in the first half of my life. And maybe, in the end –
redemption.”
In addition to releasing albums
on his own and playing on scores of others as a session player and singer, Bob
Malone played on the 2012 John Fogerty album,Wrote A Song For Everyone, including Fogerty’s duets with Bob Seger, Miranda
Lambert and Keith Urban. Bob’s TV appearances with John Fogerty included “The Late Show with David
Letterman”and “The View.” His own music is heard regularly on “Dr. Phil,” “Entertainment
Tonight”and
“The Rachel Ray Show.” Malone’s albums have earned Top-20 spots on theLiving Blues,Roots Music Reportand Earshotradio charts, and are played on
stations worldwide, including Sirius/XM’sBluesville, BBC Radio 2, Jazz-FM
Londonand NPR’sAcoustic Café.
Kurzweil Music Systemschose Malone to make the demo
videos for their newFortedigital piano, and he is endorsed byQSC Audio, Hammond OrganandFishman Acoustic Transducers.
“Pulsating, roaring keyboard
work that grabs you and shakes you until you cry for mercy.”- Keyboard Magazine
“John Fogerty’s five-man
backup band was slouch-free, too — with the show-stealer trophy going to a
shaggy-haired Bob Malone”- Edmonton
Journal
“Malone’s latest shows off
everything that makes him great and more. Great songs, amazing production and
playing, it doesn’t get much better than this.” - Filter
“If he could find a way to
throw that Steinway grand over his shoulder the way a hot dog guitar player
does, I think he would.”- NOLA Defender
“[Malone] showed that while
he is a fantastically technically accomplished player, he fully knows the
meaning of showmanship as well. A true virtuoso and crowd-pleaser.”Shetland News
Bob
Malone will also release a DVD later this summer that contains many of the
songs on Mojo Deluxe.
Lucille Bogan (April 1, 1897 – August 10, 1948) was an American blues singer, among the first to be recorded. She also recorded under the pseudonym Bessie Jackson . The sexologist and music critic, Ernest Borneman , stated that Bogan along with Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith , was in "the big three of the blues". She was born Lucille Anderson in Amory, Mississippi , United States, and raised in Birmingham, Alabama . In 1916, she married Nazareth Lee Bogan , a railwayman, and gave birth to a son. She first recorded vaudeville songs for Okeh Records in New York in 1923, with pianist Henry Callens . Later that year she recorded " Pawn Shop Blues " in Atlanta, Georgia , which was the first time a black blues singer had been recorded outside New York or Chicago. In 1927 she began recording for Paramount Records in Grafton, Wisconsin , where she recorded her first big success, " Sweet Petunia ", which was covered by Blind Blake . She also recorded for Brunswick...
Charles LoBue was one of the fathers of the custom electric guitar business. Charles came to the industry after taking classes from Michael Gurian, first working in and around the guitar repair business in NYC in the mid 60's. Charles' interest in the business began by doing basic repairs on factory made guitars. These were primarily made by Gibson and Fender, the "Gold Standard" for electric guitars, as well as any guitar including acoustics which came through the door. As a professional player in the U.S. in the 60's, Gibson and Fender were the most likely choices if you wanted an electric guitar. It is well known that the Brits used European made guitars as well, primarily due to their accessibility. By the mid late 60's both companies had been sold to larger corporations which were not primarily in the guitar business. The basic perception even today is that the guitars made by these companies during this period were inferior in quality and also l...
It is with great sadness to report that J. Blackfoot (born John Colbert , November 20, 1946) died today, November 30, 2011 at Methodist Germantown Hospital near Memphis, TN. We will keep you abreast of service information as we receive it. J. Blackfoot will truly be missed. “Like” Bman’s Facebook page (available in over 50 languages). I will not relay senseless nonsense. In this way I can get out the word on new talent, venues and blues happenings! - click Here
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