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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!


Please email me at Info@Bmansbluesreport.com

Monday, February 20, 2012

Bman's Exclusive Interview with Craig Ruskey - The Real Blues Forum


As most of you who regularly read my report know, I'm always on the hunt for music that I don't know about, and that includes the roots of the blues where this quest started. A few months ago I was invited to join a group of dedicated enthusiasts who have such a wealth of knowledge and love for the music that it inspired me to do some additional investigation. As I am on Facebook (Bman's Blues Report) as a "page", I can't join a "group" so I fell back to my alter ego, Charles LoBue, who's page I administer, to join the group. I'll publish a separate story on Charles as time allows. My quest for blues music came from initially hearing Duane Allman, Johnny Winter, Jeremy Spencer and Eric Clapton and going backwards to their influences, becoming a rabid record junkie. It's always really great to find that my love for the blues masters isn't a solo endeavor and not only am I not the only person who loves this genre but there are actually people who have dedicated more time to it than me!!. I found this group who had really narrowed focus on a part of the blues genre that I love so much. One of the administrators agreed to share his journey with me.


Bman: Hi Craig. First I want to thank you for taking time from your schedule to talk with me. I want to take a moment to iterate the Mission Statement of the Forum:

“The Real Blues Forum is for everybody who wants to share information and enthusiasm about real blues. We don’t waste time debating about what is ‘real’ or isn’t ‘real’ – our simple definition is that it’s the work of those African American blues artists included in ‘Blues & Gospel Records 1890-1943’, by Robert M.W. Dixon, John Godrich and Howard Rye; ‘The Blues Discography, 1943-1970’, by Les Fancourt and Bob McGrath; and ‘The Blues Discography, 1971-2000’, by Robert Ford and Bob McGrath (plus artists who have recorded since 2000, who would be eligible for inclusion in an updated edition). “

Bman: I was invited to join this group a few months ago and was thrilled. This forum from my perspective is made up of people who love deep blues music. Many participants are absolutely scholarly in their knowledge regarding this subject.

Craig: First off, thanks for the great words about The Real Blues Forum as well as your participation. You've been adding some nice stuff. One of the finest attributes of the forum is its make-up and membership. We’re comprised of authors and writers, discographers, promoters, internet and radio disc jockeys, record producers, label owners, researchers, collectors and dealers, artists, musicians, bona-fide Blues scholars, and hundreds of fans of the African-American Tradition in Blues. It’s global, too, folks from the US, the UK, Scotland, Croatia, Spain, Portugal, France, Brazil, Germany, Japan, Canada and almost everywhere in between. And as we continue to grow, we find we’re adding people from other countries.

Bman: Yes. It's interesting. My readers are from all corners of the globe as well. How did you get involved with the Real Blues Forum?

Craig: Paul Vernon, who started the RBF, invited me to join shortly after his initial brainstorm. Paul and I (as well as a good many more on the forum) go way back; actually 30-plus years when he was publishing a Blues magazine called “Sailor’s Delight.” Paul was a working record dealer (as well as a collector) who used to make frequent trips to the US from his home in the UK. He'd come over, buy out private record collections, juke box warehouses, record stores and more. Then he’d then ship the records back home to the UK, sort through them and start the huge task of listing them as auction or set-sale items in his magazine. Along with the auction and set-sale Blues lists were stories on artists (both Fiction and Non-Fiction), cartoons, jokes, the great British humor I've always loved, and all sorts of other bizarre goings-on. As a matter of fact, Paul and I first met back in 1982 when he was in the US on one of his record trips. We both attended a party at the home of a mutual friend who was another record collector.

Bman: We've all been down that road! What is the significance of these particular reference materials and how were they chosen.


Craig: Our "bibles" are the evolving discographies that have come from years and years of research. The late Mike Leadbitter (a true pioneer in my mind) worked with Neil Slaven, another Blues guru who's still at it today, to deliver the first Post-war discography, "BLUES RECORDS 1943-1966." A discography not only lists an artist's recorded output, but it also includes all pertinent information on the song titles, where the tracks were recorded, who the players were on those sessions (if known), matrix numbers, A and B sides, what labels issued the recordings, unissued tracks left in the can and more. Leadbitter & Slaven's original effort later grew into two separate volumes in the 1980s (volume one covered letters A - K while volume two covered letters M - Z).

Those have now evolved into "The Blues Discography 1943-1970" by Les Fancourt and Bob McGrath. There's also a Pre-war discography, "Blues & Gospel Records 1890-1943" by Robert M.W. Dixon, John Godrich and Howard Rye. In addition to those, there's also "The Blues Discography 1971-2000" by Robert Ford and Bob McGrath which covers the more modern recordings of artists like Valerie Wellington, Big Time Sarah, Luther Allison, Hound Dog Taylor and loads of others. The amount of unselfish effort that has gone into these tomes is difficult to imagine, but let's just say it's a mountainous task to assemble discographical works of this sort. The compilers and writers had to pore over each and every detail left in session files, find reissued versions of original recordings, track down paperwork and so much more. The long and short of it is, that's why these reference materials were chosen.We learned early on at the forum, simply because of the sheer amount of info that was passing back and forth daily, that we were going to have to operate similarly to a library. Libraries have a system where they catalog every book, magazine and newspaper they have so people can find things relatively easily. If you need a book for research, you can go to a library and look it up by its title, its author or the subject matter. Shortly after The Real Blues Forum got underway, the realization was there that we were going to have to catalog posts in some way so that members could somehow look up what and who has been discussed on the forum. Because of the limitations of Facebook, and through trial and error, the best thing we figured out was to ‘index’ the artists. In short, if someone starts a discussion about John Lee Hooker with a youtube video or a song from any number of available sites like Soundcloud, Picosong, Spotify, or others, we index the name John Lee Hooker in the ‘comments’ box. What the indexing does is store Hooker’s name so that anyone can look him up in the forum by typing his name in Facebook’s ‘Search this group’ feature. Once you type his name in, every discussion where John Lee Hooker was mentioned will come up in reverse chronological order from the most recent back to the inception of the forum. Granted, it’s limited and takes time to trawl through everything posted about a particular artist, but it does work. At some point in the distant future, computer archaeologists are going to stumble on the RBF and find a wealth of information about the African-American Blues Tradition. And so much new information has been discovered and come to light in recent years that we're all beginning to realize it's ongoing. I think for a long time an awful lot of Blues collectors probably thought everything worthwhile had been found and there'd be no more real discoveries to speak of anymore. I was certainly one of them, but it's amazing how far research has come since the 1940s and '50s when people really began documenting the music and the artists. Long lost recordings from the 1930s have been found in flea markets and yard sales, photographs of Blues artists who were faceless names for so many years have been discovered, birth and death certificates, marriage licenses. All that by itself is truly incredible, because in a lot of cases we're talking about recording artists who were born in the late 1800s and the early part of the 20th Century.

Bman: Oh Yeah. It's absolutely incredible. I’ve been exploring and listening to blues music most of my life and I have to tell you some of the members of this group are downright amazing in this specific knowledge. I am regarded as scholarly in some circles but I couldn’t hold a candle to many of these people. It certainly isn’t for everyone, but it is terrific for those who are passionate about these recordings. I absolutely love it. It’s great not to see the same artist posted every day as on many pages. It appears to me most of the members are genuinely interested in digging deep into the “real deal”!

Craig: Absolutely true on all counts, Bman." The RBF is NOT for everyone, but there’s a reason for that. Our "Mission Statement" defines what the forum focuses on, and it’s very straight-forward. The Pre-war and Post-war Blues discographies (our ‘bibles’ as they are lovingly referred to) are strictly dedicated to the African-American artists - the first generation artists who laid the foundation in the 1920s and 30s and then the second generation who went on to re-shape the the music in the immediate Post-war years. With all the activity on all the music forums on the internet, there are plenty of places available for people who love Stevie Ray Vaughan, the Fabulous Thunderbirds, Susan Tedeschi, Roomful of Blues, Rory Gallagher and anyone else under the sun, but the RBF is the first and ONLY Blues forum we are aware of with strict coverage and focus on the African-American Blues artists of the Pre and Post-war eras and beyond.In easy-to-understand terms, if you want to join the RBF to discuss your passion for Johnny Winter, you’d be in the wrong house. Johnny’s great and we’re not taking anything away from him or his fans, but his influence came directly from people like Lightnin’ Hopkins, Muddy Waters, Guitar Slim, Clarence Garlow and others. Johnny gets plenty of love at numerous other Blues forums and that’s great as well as needed, but the RBF is there for the men and women who influenced Johnny and all his contemporaries. To add to that a little bit, simply because of the cross-over and enormous influence of Blues music on other forms and styles, there are now off-shoot forums for real Country, Gospel, Soul and a miscellaneous forum where almost everything fits... including Blues. As opposed to being what some might consider an exclusive Blues forum, we prefer to look at what we have as a very focused group devoted to the history of first, second and third generation Blues artists.

Bman: That's exactly how I see it. My report focus specifically on what interest me. I review new recordings that are released and give my opinion on them but it is a small part of the research that I am doing for myself to find blues talent regardless of where or when it was created. I have found some really terrific artist in Australia and Spain and Brazil... many places! As I'm writing this interview I'm listening to an artist new to me named Reed Turchi. I really like it. My interest in blues music is fairly broad, as is my interest in music in general (probably not really). My writing endeavor is a personal search for interesting music that I haven’t heard or have been under exposed to. I’ve been doing it for a long time and have been exposed to a lot of early artists. It appears that you have been at this for a long time as well. Tell me about your background.

Craig: Like almost everybody of my generation (I’ll be 53 soon), I came to the real, deep Blues through the side door – sort of. Very few of us had a Robert Nighthawk epiphany because of the radio or randomly finding a record of his at a flea market or yard sale. By that, I mean many of us discovered Blues by-way-of the White bands who were playing and recording in the 1960s and ‘70s. It was my love for The Allman Brothers Band and early Fleetwood Mac that dropped me in the abyss I’m in with you and everyone else at the RBF. For most of us, listening to records by the bands we loved as kids made us want to find where they came from, where they ‘got it’ from. Writer’s credits and liner notes on my records directed me to Muddy Waters, T-Bone Walker, Elmore James, Little Walter Jacobs, Sonny Boy Williamson, Howlin’ Wolf and hundreds more. I was also very fortunate to have had a teacher in my first two years of high school who loved Blues, R&B and Vocal Group Harmony music. He was a world-class record collector who turned me on to tons of incredible Blues. It was through him that I got my first tastes of artists like Johnny Otis, Professor Longhair, Roosevelt Sykes, Pete “Guitar” Lewis and a great many more. And it was that high school teacher who hosted the party in 1982 when Paul and I were introduced.

Bman: I didn't have that advantage. It was me digging it out of the dirt. I'd share what i found with my pal Stilladog and he would find something cool and turn me back. I know he turned me on to James Cotton and Lightning Hopkins. Sure there were a lot more but I remember the specific days in my mind. It's funny. So are your personal tastes in music tightly focused in these areas or is your taste more diverse?


Craig: I still love The Allman Brothers Band, Rory Gallagher, early Fleetwood Mac (when Peter Green fronted the band) and more, but once I found my way to the real, deep Blues, it became my life’s passion, and it has been since I was about 13 years old. The first inkling I had of what it was goes back to a Duane Allman compilation that came out in 1972, the year after Duane was killed. The liner notes mentioned Duane being in awe of someone named Robert Johnson, who I'd never heard of until then. So I headed to the library to see what I could find. We had real hunting to do - there was no internet or Google back then! I came home with the two Columbia albums by Robert Johnson, put them on the turntable and had my mind permanently altered.Once I found RJ, I started digging more to find other the artists who influenced the Blues/Rock bands I dug as a young kid, and there was no turning back.


Bman: Yeah. I had live at the Fillmore start me off but then Clapton as well. Then Delaney and Bonnie and John Mayall. It just grew like a mushroom cloud. I searched for years to find the original Robert Johnson lp's. The second one wasn't that hard, but it seemed the first one took me years. But I also liked the newer stuff a lot. I got addicted to guitar and Alvin Lee and Kim Simmonds.

I have to say I read amazing insights almost every day. I mean the minutia that some of the members know is absolutely phenomenal. I’ve only been a member for a few months but I just hope to continue to pick up a few tips here and there and hope I can hold my own as to not be considered deadwood. What do you think that the average member is there for?


Craig: One thing is for sure - there is no 'dead wood' on the RBF. Everyone there learns something they weren’t aware of before, no matter how long they’ve been part of this world. And while there are members who are very focused in their particular field of knowledge, there are all sorts of others who are also very centered, but in different areas. So if someone has a question about Sleepy John Estes or Tarheel Slim, chances are very good that someone on the forum knows the answer to your question. In the short six months since this forum began, we’ve grown from a small handful of original members to over five-hundred at present, and we’re getting new folks on a daily basis. Of the entire membership, there’s definitely a steady flow of discussion among regular and very active posters, but there are plenty of people who joined that enjoy sitting back, reading and enjoying the daily activity and wild sense of humor that permeates the RBF. Paul and I have both received messages from members who don’t actively participate telling us that they love the forum and the staggering information that is exchanged every day.


Bman: I didn't realize that you guys have only been here as long as I have. Quite an impressive group of guys and an incredible bank of knowledge. I appreciate you sharing your insights. I absolutely love being a part of the forum and appreciate your time. Anything that you would like to share that I haven’t asked?


Craig: I think you've asked some great questions! I just want to re-state that The Real Blues Forum is there for the study, preservation, discussion and exchange of information about the great number of African-American Blues artists who helped create Blues, whether it’s the Pre-war masters like Charley Patton, Willie Brown, Son House and others, to the Post-war greats like Muddy, T-Bone, Wolf and more. And we’re not only talking about those people, their music and styles, we’re there every single day discussing and honoring all the heroes who are lesser known, but no less brilliant; Otha Turner, Floyd Jones, TV Slim, Johnny Young, Eddie Taylor, Maxwell Street Jimmy Davis, Lefty Dizz, Hambone Willie Newbern…

Bman: Again, Craig. Thanks for your time. Son House thanks you and Robert Pete Williams thanks you!!

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I55 Productions Artist: Billy Lavender New Release - Memphis Livin - Review


I just received the new release, Memphis Livin, by Billy Lavender. It's a real strong release overall. It has a rock blues flavor overall but great guitar blues riffs and harmonica work throughout. It opens with Singin The Blues, a blues rock tune with some pretty tasty slide work by Brad Webb. Another track, Let's Party is an uptempo blues track with strong vocals by Reba Russell (who sounds quite a bit like Bonnie Raitt in quality. She is again backed by great guitar and harp work. Just Chillin is a real funky track with real effective key backing by Russell Wheeler. The track gives the band a chance to stretch out a bit on their own. Cool track. Each artist gets a chance to step up. Cold As Ice is the down and dirty "T Bone Walker" type song and my favorite on the release. Vince Johnson harp does his best work on the release and Billy steps up a little on guitar and also plays some tasty soloing. Get Along has a country honky tonk or Jerry Lee Lewis type flare. It's a real strong track. Blue is more of an ethereal song which puts the sounds of CSN on track with Brad Webb showing his chops on sitar which is actually quite effective. Shake It is right out of the can Chicago Blues. It comes off blasting with harp and never turns back. Billy steps up here with some great guitar riffs as well. Bad Boy is a strong blues rock track with solid guitar work and of course the band always sounds tight. 3AM is another track where the band gets to stretch a bit and Billy takes full advantage of the opportunity with his guitar and Vince Johnson's vocals and harp work set the groove. Delta Time wraps up the release with an Albert King like tune really getting down in the "Bad Side" groove. This is a very cool tune with plenty of guitar to end the release and leaves you wanting more. If you get the chance, check this release out!

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Rolling The Stone - Jimmy Yancey


James Edwards "Jimmy" Yancey (February 20, 1894 – September 17, 1951) was an African American boogie-woogie pianist, composer, and lyricist. One reviewer noted him as "one of the pioneers of this raucous, rapid-fire, eight-to-the-bar piano style"
Yancey was born in Chicago in (depending on the source) 1894, or 1898. His older brother, Alonzo Yancey (1894 – 1944) was also an pianist, while their father was a guitarist. Yancey started performing as a singer in traveling shows during his childhood. He was a noted pianist by 1915, and influenced younger musicians, such as Meade Lux Lewis and Albert Ammons.

While he played in a boogie-woogie style, with a strong-repeated figure in the left hand and melodic decoration in the right hand, his playing was delicate and subtle, rather than hard driving. He popularized a left hand figure which became known as the 'Yancey bass', and was later used in Pee Wee Crayton's "Blues After Hours", Guitar Slim's "The Things That I Used to Know" and many other songs. Part of Yancey's distinctive style was that he played in a variety of keys but always ended every song in E flat.

Most of his recordings were of solo piano, but late in his career he also recorded with vocals by his wife, Estelle Yancey, under the billing 'Jimmy and Mama Yancey'. They appeared in concert at the Carnegie Hall in 1948. In 1951, the twosome recorded the first album that was released by Atlantic Records the following year.

During World War I, Yancey played baseball in a Negro league baseball team, the Chicago All-Americans. Throughout his life, Yancey kept a job as groundskeeper for the Chicago White Sox.

Yancey died of a stroke secondary to diabetes in Chicago on September 17, 1951. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986

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The Sound of Dire Straits' European tour

"Never mind Love Over Gold.
The Straits are PURE GOLD"

– Classic Rock

THE STRAITS
MARCH 2012 EUROPEAN TOUR

"THE SOUND OF DIRE STRAITS"

FORMER MEMBERS OF DIRE STRAITS
PERFORM THE GREATEST HITS

MONEY FOR NOTHING, ROMEO AND JULIET, TUNNEL OF LOVE, WALK OF LIFE, PRIVATE INVESTIGATIONS, SOLID ROCK, EXPRESSO LOVE AND MANY MORE!

click for hi res

After a hugely successful 14-date UK and European tour in 2011, and having just returned from playing at the Volvo Ocean Race in Abu Dhabi, The Straits will be heading out on an 18-date European tour in March 2012.

The Straits are comprised of former Dire Straits members Alan Clark (keyboards) and Chris White (sax, vocals), plus world-class musicians Steve Ferrone (Tom Petty’s drummer), Terence Reis (lead vocals, guitar), Mike Feat (bass), Adam Phillips (guitar) and Jamie Squire (keyboards, vocals).

The Straits will perform for one night only in the UK, at London’s indigO2 on Thursday 29th March.

The forthcoming European tour is a direct result of the overwhelming demand to hear the band’s much loved catalogue of unforgettable songs. The Straits will perform songs from the classic albums Dire Straits (1978), Communiqué (1979), Making Movies (1980), Love Over Gold (1982), Brothers In Arms (1985) and On Every Street (1991).

Experience the unforgettable classic songs - Sultans of Swing, Romeo And Juliet, Tunnel Of Love, Private Investigations, Money For Nothing, Walk Of Life, and Brothers In Arms.

"Terence Reis carries it off with aplomb... exactly what a packed Apollo had come to see – a great night”
– Record Collector

THE STRAITS
MARCH 2012 EUROPEAN TOUR

THE STRAITS
MARCH 2012 EUROPEAN TOUR

London IndigO2 concert ticket prices:
£11.75/£28.00/£39.00/£50.00

0844 844 0002 / www.ticketmaster.co.uk
0871 230 1097 / www.seetickets.com
0871 424 4444 / www.ticketline.co.uk

Belfast, Northern Ireland – Ulster Hall
Monday 5th March

Tickets: £33.00/£35.00
BUY TICKETS

Dublin, Ireland – Olympia Theatre
Tuesday 6th March

Tickets: €32.50/€34.50
BUY TICKETS

Gothenburg, Sweden – Brewhouse
Friday 9th March

Tickets: 290.00Kr/390.00Kr
BUY TICKETS

Copenhagen, Denmark – Amager Bio
Saturday 10th March

Tickets: 320.00Kr
BUY TICKETS

Aarhus, Denmark – Train
Sunday 11th March

Tickets: 285.00Kr
BUY TICKETS

Stuttgart, Germany – LKA
Tuesday 13th March

Tickets: €30.90
BUY TICKETS

Prague, Czech Republic – KC Vltavska
Wednesday 14th March

Tickets: 890.00Kc/1090.00Kc
BUY TICKETS

Vienna, Austria – Gasometer
Friday 16th March

Tickets: €37.50
BUY TICKETS

Munich, Germany – Muffathalle
Saturday 17th March

Tickets: €28.85
BUY TICKETS

Zurich, Switzerland – X-Tra
Sunday 18th March

Tickets: CHF65.00
BUY TICKETS

Porto, Portugal – Hard Club
Wednesday 21st March

Tickets: €26.00
BUY TICKETS

Lisbon, Portugal – Aula Magna
Thursday 22nd March

Tickets: €26.00/€32.00
BUY TICKETS

Bilbao, Spain – Sala Santana 27
Saturday 24th March

Tickets: €15.00
BUY TICKETS

Gijon, Spain – Teatro Jovellanos
Sunday 25th March

Tickets: €15.00/€20.00/€22.00
BUY TICKETS

Paris, France – La Cigale
Tuesday 27th March

Tickets: €45.50/€56.50/€67.50
BUY TICKETS

Tilburg, Holland – O13
Wednesday 28th March

Tickets: €40.00
BUY TICKETS

London, UK – Indig02
Thursday 29th March

Tickets: £11.75/£28.00/£39.00/£50.00
BUY TICKETS

Beau Sejour, Guernsey – Sir John Loveridge Hall
Sunday 1st April

Tickets: £45.00/£50.00
BUY TICKETS

THE STRAITS: THE BAND MEMBERS

Alan Clark (Keyboards)
Alan joined Dire Straits in 1980 as their first keyboard player and played a significant part in their transformation into one of the world’s biggest bands. Acknowledged by his fellow band members as Dire Straits' unofficial musical director, he co-produced the band’s last studio album On Every Street. Alan has played and recorded with many other high profile artists including Eric Clapton, Bob Dylan, Tina Turner and the Bee Gees. Visit Alan Clark’s official website - www.alanclarkmusic.com.

Chris White (Saxophone)
Chris White's first real break in the music industry came in 1981 when he was asked to play on Nick Heyward's album "North of a Miracle". Following this success, his reputation continued to build. He was asked to play and record with artists such as Paul McCartney, Aztec Camera, The The and Mark Knopfler, the latter leading to what he is best known for - the saxophone sound of Dire Straits. His work with the band included two World Tours, the "On Every Street" and "On The Night" albums, and the legendary "Live Aid" and "Mandela" concerts. More recently, Chris has performed on two of Mark Knopfler's solo albums. Outside of this association, he has recorded and toured with many artists, including Joe Cocker and Robbie Williams. He is currently also working on material for his second album of original work.

Steve Ferrone (Drums)
Acknowledged by his peers as one of the world’s greatest drummers, Steve first came to the world’s attention with The Average White Band and has since played with a list of high profile acts including Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Eric Clapton, Quincy Jones, Scritti Politti, Chaka Khan and Slash. Steve endorses Gretsch drums, Sabian cymbals and Pro-Mark drumsticks.

Terence Reis (Lead Vocals, Guitar)
Born in Maputo, Mozambique, Terence grew up playing the guitar in the style of the local finger picking street musicians, which is remarkably similar to that of Mark Knopfler. His voice made him the perfect front man for The Straits, which has elements of Knopfler, JJ Cale and Steve Earle mixed in with his own unmistakable, original sound. An honours graduate at the University of the Witwatersrand School of Dramatic Arts in Johannesburg, Reis is also an award-winning actor and has starred in several major films while continuing a parallel career as a musician.

Mick Feat (Bass)
Mick is an internationally renowned bassist who began his career as session bassist for Island Records, and has since gone on to work with many artists including Mark Knopfler, Art Garfunkel, David Gilmour, Van Morrison, Tina Turner and Justin Haywood. A master of most string bass instruments, Mick is also a respected composer and singer.

Adam Phillips (Guitar)
Adam moved to London in the early nineties and began playing with veteran singer songwriter Tom Robinson. Since then, Adam has worked both in the studio or touring with a wide variety of artists including Cher, Tina Turner, Lionel Richie, Richard Ashcroft, James Morrison, Hamish Stuart and Enrique Iglesias.

Jamie Squire (Keyboards, Vocals)
As well as being a fine keyboard player, 24 year-old Jamie is a highly talented multi-instrumentalist and singer, destined to become a star in his own right, having recently signed a recording contract with I.M.Port Records. Jamie is an enthusiastic and ambitious young man who is considered a major asset to the band.



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Sunday, February 19, 2012

WNTI 91.5 Rock-it Science with Greg Lewis - Playlist-links for Feb 16 2012

Playlist Songs--SONG---ARTIST---ALBUM---





Everything's Fine, Erja Lyytinen, Songs From The Road
Start: 20:01:00 End: 20:08:00 Duration : 7:00



No More, Rocky Athas Group, Miracle
Start: 20:09:00 End: 20:13:00 Duration : 4:00



With You Tonight, Aynsley Lister, Tower Sessions
Start: 20:13:00 End: 20:22:00 Duration : 9:00



Natural Man, Savoy Brown, Voodoo Man
Start: 20:27:00 End: 20:33:00 Duration : 6:00



Going Down, Chicken Shack, The Deram Years
Start: 20:33:00 End: 20:36:30 Duration : 3:30



Boogie Real Low, Joel DaSilva & The Midnight Howl, Joel DaSilva & the Midnight Howl
Start: 20:36:30 End: 20:40:00 Duration : 3:30



King Of Zydeco, Rory Gallagher, Big Guns
Start: 20:44:00 End: 20:47:30 Duration : 3:30



Opelousas Hop, Clifton Chenier, Bayou Blues
Start: 20:47:30 End: 20:50:00 Duration : 2:30



Blue Tarp Blues, Sonny Landreth, From The Reach
Start: 20:50:00 End: 20:54:30 Duration : 4:30



Zydeco Train, Contino, Back Porch Dogma
Start: 20:54:30 End: 20:58:30 Duration : 4:00



Man Smart, Woman Smarter, Harry Belafonte, Sing Your Song; The Music
Start: 20:58:30 End: 21:00:00 Duration : 1:30



Got Love If You Want It, Rod Price, Open
Start: 21:01:00 End: 21:06:00 Duration : 5:00



King Bee, Brett Marvin & The Thunderbolts, City Beat
Start: 21:07:00 End: 21:10:00 Duration : 3:00



Moan And Cry, Arthur Neilson, Moan And Cry
Start: 21:10:00 End: 21:15:33 Duration : 5:33



Black Crow Blues, Rick Vito, Lucky In Love: The Best Of Rick Vito
Start: 21:15:33 End: 21:19:41 Duration : 4:08



We're Gonna' Make It, Peter Karp Sue Foley, Beyond The Crossroads
Start: 21:24:00 End: 21:26:30 Duration : 2:30



I Like What You're Doing, Carla Thomas, The Best Of Carla Thomas
Start: 21:26:30 End: 21:29:30 Duration : 3:00



Wade In The Water, the Staple Singers, Freedom Highway
Start: 21:29:30 End: 21:32:30 Duration : 3:00



What Can I Do [Somebody Tell Me], Little Buster & The Soul Brothers, Right On Time
Start: 21:32:30 End: 21:36:30 Duration : 4:00



You Upset Me Baby, BB King, Singin' The Blues
Start: 21:36:30 End: 21:39:30 Duration : 3:00



The Blues, Henrik Frieschlader Band, Live
Start: 21:43:30 End: 21:47:30 Duration : 4:00



Clems Dilema, Denny Freeman, Twang Bang
Start: 21:47:30 End: 21:53:00 Duration : 5:30



A Bit Less Then Zero, Demian Band, Tattoo'd Fish
Start: 21:53:00 End: 21:56:30 Duration : 3:30



Fat City, Blues Band, Destination GB Blues
Start: 21:56:30 End: 22:00:00 Duration : 3:30


New Recording Release: Infinitas Rapsodias - Del Castillo - Review


I just received and had the opportunity to review the new release by Del Castillo entitled Infinitas Rapsodias. This is definitely not a blues recording but is quite interesting. As you may have guessed from the title, if you aren't familiar with the band, this is a Latino influenced band. I listened to this band totally cold having not been exposed to their music earlier. Lumbres De Babylon builds from a moving ballad to a real guitar frenzy speeding as it progresses. Fuego Egipcio is an instrumental and really shows the trio of guitar players chops. You've likely heard something like this before but likely not with this intensity. Brotherhood features Leann and Malford Milligan and is a strong vocal track of course with great instrumental backing. Para Mi Sobrina is another strong instrumental track featuring Carl Thiel. Vida is a strong composition with blazing guitars and with the addition of Phoebe Hunt on violin which forms a nice composition. Amor Venme A Buscar is an experiment where the band backs Canadian born opera sensation Anna Maria Kaufman.

Also included with the recording is a video disc which is quite interesting. There is a 25 plus minute long video of the band with playing and interviews. I found this very entertaining. Also on this second disc are three cover tracks, Listen To The Music, What A Wonderful World and While My Guitar Gently Weeps. The George Harrison composition is absolutely terrifically and masterfully done.
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I Put A Spell On You - David Gilmour and Mica Paris


David Jon Gilmour, CBE, D.M. (born 6 March 1946) is an English rock musician and multi-instrumentalist who is best known as the guitarist, one of the lead singers and main songwriters in the progressive rock band Pink Floyd. In addition to his work with Pink Floyd, Gilmour has worked as a producer for a variety of artists, and has enjoyed a successful career as a solo artist. Gilmour has been actively involved with many charities over the course of his career.

In 2003, he was appointed CBE for his charity work and was awarded with the Outstanding Contribution title at the 2008 Q Awards.[2] In 2011, Rolling Stone Magazine ranked him #14 in their list of the greatest guitarists of all time
Mica Paris is one of the UK’s finest and most respected female singers with a career full of Top 10 hit singles and albums worldwide.
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St. Louis Blues - Sylvester Weaver and Walter Beasley


Sylvester Weaver (July 25, 1897 – April 4, 1960) was an American blues guitar player and pioneer of country blues.
On October 23, 1923, he recorded in New York City with the blues singer Sara Martin "Longing for Daddy Blues" / "I've Got to Go and Leave My Daddy Behind" and two weeks later as a soloist "Guitar Blues" / "Guitar Rag". Both recordings were released on Okeh Records. These recordings are the very first country-blues recordings and the first known recorded songs using the slide guitar style. "Guitar Rag" (played on a Guitjo) became a blues classic and was covered in the 1930s by Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys as "Steel Guitar Rag" and became a country music standard too.

Weaver recorded until 1927, sometimes accompanied by Sara Martin, about 50 additional songs. On some recordings from 1927 he was accompanied by Walter Beasley and the singer Helen Humes. Weaver often used the bottleneck-style method, playing his guitar with a knife. His recordings were quite successful but in 1927 he retired and went back to Louisville until his death in 1960. Though many country blues artists had a revival from the 1950s on, Weaver died almost forgotten.

In 1992 his complete works were released on two CDs, the same year his (up to then anonymous) grave got a headstone by engagement of the Louisville-based Kentuckiana Blues Society (KBS). Furthermore the KBS has annually honored since 1989 persons who rendered outstanding services to the blues with their Sylvester Weaver Award.
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WORRIED BLUES - The Little Devils


Bandmembers

Ringo Dennov: vocal, guitar
Philip Jones: Bas, backing vocal
Per Anker: Drums

The band write and play their own material

The bands music all through based in Rock`n Roll, also has a good mixture
of elements, ranging from Rhytm and Blues, punk, country, reggae, funk and soul

All of the 3 musicians, have been around on the danish music scene for many
years, playing in many different bands and parcipated in many deversed music
styles throug the years, from pure Blues bands, HeavyRock to hardcore punk, pop, funk

The first 6 months of 2009: 1 & 2 on Bandbase's musicchart
Last half of 2009: number 4 on the Copenhagen musicchart - Local Heroes
And last as number 8 on the national musicchart - Local Heroes

The band stay true to their own original writing music
and for the main part play there own material

But when the band are performing life, their also find a place for a couble of cover songs,
but their play them, in The Little Devils own style and always ad their own unique touch

Do you like nicely produced popmusic
nice good clean sounding guitar and smooth vocals
and the popular music of today

Then the Band THE LITTLE DEVILS is NOT FOR YOU
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But if you like music with and edge and all played, with just the right amount
of attitude and passion that screams Rock `n Roll but all still delivered in a original way

Well then check The Little Devils out

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Look At Yourself - Big Bat Blues Band


The Big Bat Blues Band have been on the road for seventeen years now, showing their musical roots from the traditional blues and playing great names from the 40's and 50's, when the genre was going through its best moments. Muddy Waters, John LeeHooker, Sonny Boy Williamson and Elmore James are just a few amongst so many names cited in this musical universe and they are always there when the night is on whiskey and blues - a perfect combination, by the way.
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The Big Bat Blues Band play the standard blues, with nice arrangements and a particular link with the classics of the Mississipi Delta. The music seeks inspiration from the everyday life, women, whiskey, whiskey and more whiskey.
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The band played so much of the classics, such as "Hoochie Coochie Man", by Muddy Waters, and "Woke Up This Morning",by B. B. King, that they ended up making their own classics.
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The Derek Trucks Band - Tour Update


Date City Venue Attendees Reviews Notes Tickets
03/28/2012 Knoxville, TN Tennessee Theatre 0 0
Buy tickets
03/29/2012 Columbus, OH Palace Theatre 0 0
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03/30/2012 Charleston, WV Clay Center 0 0
Buy tickets
04/20/2012 Live Oak, FL Wanee Music Festival 0 0
Buy tickets
04/25/2012 Charlottesville, VA nTelos Pavilion 0 0 Pre-Sale Begins 2/14 at 10:00 AM (Local Time) Buy tickets
04/26/2012 Cincinnati, OH Taft Theatre 0 0
Buy tickets
04/28/2012 Wilkesboro, NC MerleFest 0 0
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04/29/2012 Nashville, TN Ryman Auditorium 0 0
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05/25/2012 - 05/27/2012 Chillicothe, IL Summer Camp Music Festival 0 0
Buy tickets
06/29/2012 Toronto, ON Toronto Jazz Festival 0 0
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09/05/2012 Los Angeles, CA Hollywood Bowl 0 0 With BB King Buy tickets
10/27/2012 San Juan, PR Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise 0 0
Buy tickets
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