Old Pal Records 
Set to Release New CD from Hank Mowery, Account to Me, on August 
6
Album Offers an 
Appreciation of the Late Blues Singer/Harmonica Player Gary Primich and Features 
Five of His Songs, Including Two Previously 
Unrecorded 
Tunes
GRAND RAPIDS, MI – Old Pal Records announces an August 6 
release date for 
Account to Me, the new CD from singer/harmonica 
player Hank Mowery featuring five songs written by the late singer/harmonica 
player Gary Primich, including two previously-unrecorded tunes. 
Account to 
Me will be available for sale through CD Baby and iTunes, with 
additional sales info available at 
www.hankmowery.com.   
  
“We don’t consider this a ‘tribute’ CD, but more of a 
collaboration with the Primich family,” says Hank Mowery about the new album, 
which also features Gary’s former bassist Patrick Recob, and detailed liner 
notes about the songs as well as Primich’s importance to blues by Severn Records 
singer/harmonica player Tad Robinson, a long-time friend. 
Account to Me showcases five Primich 
compositions: “Put the Hammer Down,” “My Home” and “Pray for a Cloudy Day,” plus 
two unearthed never-before-recorded songs, “Tricky Game” and the title track; 
two Hank Mowery originals; a new song from Patrick Recob; and covers of Memphis 
Slim’s “Banana Oil” and Rev. Robert Wilkins’ “That’s No Way to Get Along.” All 
of the tracks fit together seamlessly and one could imagine very easily Gary 
Primich, himself, recording an album such as this.
“‘Account to Me” is just a classic Gary tune,” says Mowery 
about the newly-discovered song. “He was such a great story teller and this 
really paints a picture that is hard to listen to at times, knowing his 
history.  On the vocal track we kept, I almost had to stop multiple times and 
could barely get through it.  I just kept thinking about him writing this and 
his family hearing it for the first time...it still gives me a lump in my 
throat.  After the song ended, it wasn't perfect but I knew I would never get as 
close to that song as I was in that moment, so we kept it.
Mowery calls the other new song, “Tricky Game,” “another 
classic Gary tune, with a lot of meaning and a touch of humor.  We were all in 
the studio looking at Gary's lyrics trying to figure out what direction to take 
on the song and what Gary was thinking on a couple of the parts. We were having 
a lot more trouble on this than with ‘Account to Me.’ Our piano player, Chris 
Corey, quietly stood up, walked over to the piano and played a lick....we all 
stopped and said ‘that's it!’ At that point everyone stood up and started 
working on their parts; it was a great moment and maybe one of the most creative 
moments I have ever been a part of,” he recalls.
The Hank Mowery originals include the album’s opener, 
“Spend a Little Time,” a rocking barroom blueser that kicks off the CD in grand 
style; and “If I Knew What I Know,” which asks the universal question we all ask 
when tragedy happens to a friend. “I had the idea for the song right after Gary 
passed in 2007 but never finished it,” Mowery remembers. Maybe a little too 
honest for me at the time, but when we started this project I knew it was time 
to finish it.”
The catalyst for recording Account to Me had 
its beginnings in 2012 when Mowery did a tribute show in Grand Rapids for Gary 
on the fifth anniversary of his death. Mowery and Primich had first met in 1995 
when Hank was running a blues club in Grand Rapids and the two hit it off really 
well, with Mowery booking Gary anytime he came through town. After he left the 
club, Mowery stayed in touch with Primich and when he knew Gary was struggling 
with some issues, flew the bluesman into Grand Rapids to do a couple so shows to 
help his friend. Another trip was planned for the following year but never 
happened because of Gary’s death.
“That 2012 tribute show in Grand Rapids included 
Doug Deming, Dennis Gruenling, their band, Peter Madcat Ruth and my band,” says 
Mowery. “When Gary's family heard about it they got very involved and Gary's 
dad, JV, came up for the show...it was really great...he addressed the crowd and 
had every single person laughing and crying at the same time. 
“About a month 
after the show I got a call from Gary’s sister, Darsha, asking if I would record 
these two songs they had found lyrics to after Gary passed. I told her that 
there were many other players (more famous than I) that would jump on this 
chance and that maybe she should rethink the offer. She said that they trusted 
me to do what needed to be done and respect Gary. I was very honored and humbled 
to be asked to do it. After we started the project, Darsha wanted us to do a few 
covers as well, so we said no problem. I then asked Darsha if she wouldn't mind 
if I did a few originals and made a full CD out of it. That is when she made the 
offer to release it on Old Pal Records.
“I asked Primich 
bassist Patrick Recob to come in for the project and he accepted. I asked Tad 
Robinson to do the liner notes because he was a long-time friend of Gary's. I 
contacted Kate Moss to design the CD because she and her husband Nick had become 
somewhat close with Gary and actually had recorded with him not long before he 
passed away. I found an all-analog studio in Grand Rapids where we could record 
it like Gary would've wanted it. And I only included players that either knew 
Gary or understood the weight of the project and could respect its significance. 
I wanted to surround the sessions with people that were up for trying new things 
to create unique textures throughout the CD, would give honest feedback, leave 
egos at the door, not worry about how many of their licks were used on the CD 
and generally get into and enjoy the spirit of what we were 
doing.”