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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, July 16, 2012

Five Star to play "Rewind The 80s Music Festivals"

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For ticket info and prices, please visit: www.rewindfestival.com

Due to the outstanding success of the first "Rewind Scotland – The 80s Festival" in Perth during July 2011, the festival returns for the second year in a row. As with last year’s unforgettable concert performances and audience participation celebrations, this year’s Rewind Scotland boasts another massive live outdoor line-up of the crème de la crème of 80s recording artists/performers.

Rewind Scotland will take place from Friday 20th July until Sunday 22nd July at Scone Palace, Perthshire, Scotland (www.scone-palace.co.uk).

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Full details for ticket outlets and prices are available from the official Rewind Festival website - www.rewindfestival.com.

This year’s line-up is headlined by Big Country and Holly Johnson. Adam Ant & The Good, The Mad & The Lovely Posse are confirmed as very special guests. Other highlights include a rare appearance from Village People, Scottish icons Midge Ure, Jimmy Somerville, Altered Images and Average White Band, as well as the reformed original line-up of Five Star, Lightning Seeds, Marc Almond, Chesney Hawkes, Roland Gift and many more!

As in 2011, the organisers have announced that Rewind Scotland will once again take place at the historic setting of Scone Palace in Perthshire – the home of The Earls of Mansfield and the crowning palace of the Kings of Scotland.

The festival takes place on the weekend of the 20th-22nd July and, as well as the massive line-up of 80s artists, features loads of other festival fun from Silent Discos to Live Karaoke bars along with Camping and Glamping (Glamorous Camping) options.

click for hi res click for hi res click for hi res click for hi res Originally launched at Henley-on-Thames in 2009, Rewind The 80s Festival boasts the biggest line-up of 80s artists in the world, and in its first three years has featured such iconic 80s names as: Boy George, Tony Hadley, Rick Astley, Gloria Gaynor, Kim Wilde, ABC, Go West, Howard Jones, Nik Kershaw and many more.

2011 saw the first Rewind Festival take place north of the border and take Scotland by storm, and the festival in Henley-on-Thames sell out in advance for the very first time.

For an exclusive video preview of the artists, on Wednesday 18th January at 20:30, tune into "Fast Forward to Rewind Scotland" on Vintage TV (Sky 369 and Freesat 515).

Average White Band
AWB are regarded as one of the top funk and soul bands in the history of music. Best known for their timeless instrumental mega-hit "Pick up the Pieces" they’ve had a career full of several gold selling albums and Grammy nominations. "Cut the Cake" and the 1980 UK top 20 hit "Let’s Go Round Again" attracted wider audiences to their ‘authentic’ R&B sound. The current band line-up continues to record and tour around the world, to on-going critical and audience acclaim.

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click for hi res Big Country
Internationally-renowned Scottish rockers Big Country will be making their Rewind Festival debut, headlining on 21st July in Perth this year, adding to another six major UK/Irish festival dates the band perform at this summer. Formed in Dunfermline, Fife in 1981, they enjoyed huge success in the 80s thanks to their unique brand of rock music and such massive hits as “In a Big Country” "Chance" and “Fields of Fire (400 Miles)” taken from their multi-platinum album 'The Crossing" produced by the legendary Steve Lillywhite. Sadly band founder member Stuart Adamson passed away in 2001. The band reformed in 2011 with a new line-up fronted by The Alarm’s Mike Peters and original members Bruce Watson, Tony Butler, Mark Brzezicki and Bruce’s son Jamie Watson. "The band are looking forward to this summer’s festivals, celebrating our 30th anniversary and recording new material" said Tony Butler. In recent months they have been in the studio with Steve Lillywhite once again, Youth and Bill Nelson working on a new album for release in 2013.
Jimmy Somerville
Glaswegian Jimmy Somerville first shot to fame back in 1984 with groundbreaking band Bronski Beat. Their debut single "Smalltown Boy" introduced the world to Jimmy’s unusual "falsetto squeal" (his own words), making the top three in Britain as well as being a huge hit all over Europe. Having had several lively pop dance hits in ’84 and ’85 with the band, Jimmy left for a rest after the pressures of new found fame took its toll. Within months he was back forming the Communards with his old friend Richard Coles and enjoyed a string of hits with their mixture of good old fashioned "gay" disco and more bluesy, acoustic, political and social comment songs, including a hedonistic cover version of the Philly soul classic "Don't Leave Me This Way".
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click for hi res Five Star
Dubbed "Britain’s answer to the Jackson Five" with their dynamic sound and fabulous dance routines, Five Star rocked the British and US pop charts in the 80s. Named and managed by their father Buster Pearson, the band scored a total of 16 top 40 singles, 6 of which went top ten, and achieved a multi-platinum selling UK no.1 album in 1986 with "Silk & Steel". A formidable live act in the 80s, they sold out 6 nights at Wembley Arena to an audience of more than 60,000 in their 1987 UK tour. The five siblings make their Rewind Festival debut in 2012, celebrating their 25th anniversary in the music industry.
Chesney Hawkes
After shooting to fame as the title character in the film "‘Buddy’s Song" in 1990, Chesney Hawkes quickly became one of Britain’s best-loved stars. The following year, he released the single "The One and Only" (penned by Nik Kershaw) from the film’s soundtrack which went on to become the 20th biggest selling single of the 90s. Chesney has never been far from the spotlight since, with numerous TV appearances and new material, finding a whole new generation of fans who want to see him perform live.
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click for hi res Go West
Celebrating 25 years together and as one of the greatest singer-songwriter duos to emerge in the eighties they had their first hit "We Close Our Eyes" in 1985, the first of many including "Tracks of My Tears", "Call Me" and the opening song to the hugely successful film "Pretty Woman", "King of Wishful Thinking". Fantastic performers with a huge repertoire of hits, Go West are a real treat live.
Right Said Fred
Brothers Richard and Fred Fairbrass are as recognisable now as they were back in 1992 when Right Said Fred became the first UK band since the Beatles to reach No.1 in the US with a debut single. That single – "I’m Too Sexy" – hit No.1 in thirty two countries and garnered an Ivor Novello Award before further hits like "Deeply Dippy" (another Ivor Novello) and "Stand Up For The Champions" contributed to the band’s overall haul of twenty million records worldwide.
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click for hi res Midge Ure
One of Britain’s most prolific and well-respected songwriters, co-organiser of the Live Aid concerts and former member of such iconic groups as Visage and Thin Lizzy; Midge Ure is a man of many talents. True musical royalty, he received an OBE back in 2005 for services to music and charity. Midge achieved huge success in the 80s with the synthpop band Ultravox, with worldwide hits such as "Dancing With Tears In My Eyes" and "Vienna", going on to have a successful solo career too. Having performed a reunion tour with Ultravox back in 2010, this summer he plays solo bringing his extraordinary back catalogue to Rewind.
Limahl
One might think of Limahl in the same bracket as Boy George, Phil Oakey or Margaret Thatcher as having one of the defining bouffants of the era! But, the original duo tone spiky mullet man was oh, so much more than his legendary hair and the wave of sometimes dodgy imitation haircuts he inspired; Kajagoogoo, the band he fronted, so much more than their crazy name and angular posturings. Music mattered with a million selling debut album "White Feathers" and five chart hits over two years: - "Too Shy"(no 1) – "Ooh To Be Ahh" (no 7) – "Hang On Now" (no 13) – "Only For Love" (no 16) and "The Neverending Story" (no 4).
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click for hi res Sinitta
American born Sinitta is a professional actress / singer who has lived in the United Kingdom for most of her career. Best known for her singing she began recording in 1983 and has had 14 international hit singles including "So Macho", "Toy Boy", "Cross My Broken Heart" and her cover of "Right Back Where We Started From". More recently, Sinitta has appeared as a mentor on the ITV Talent Show "The X Factor", discovering new artists such as Leona Lewis, Olly Murs and JLS and has also made appearances as a contestant on both "Dancing on Ice" and "I’m a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here!"
Les McKeown's Legendary Bay City Rollers
When Les McKeown became lead singer of the Bay City Rollers just days after his 18th birthday, the addition of his voice and personality transformed the band from potential one hit wonders into an international super group, notching up nine UK top ten hits including two number ones. Their first two albums, "Rollin’’ and "Once Upon A Star", stayed on the album charts for a total of 99 weeks and "‘Bye Bye Baby", the Rollers’ first No. 1 single, was the UK's biggest selling single of 1975. Between 1974 and 1978 the Bay City Rollers achieved no 1s in pop charts across the world with such songs as "Saturday Night" and "I Only Want To Be With You". Mass hysteria seemed to follow their every move; the screams of a generation of young girls could be heard across the nation and in every corner of the globe – the world had truly turned tartan!
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click for hi res Katrina (Ex-Katrina & The Waves)
The former lead singer of Katrina & The Waves, Katrina became an international pop star in the 80s with the massive hit "Walking on Sunshine", which has remained a timeless summer anthem ever since. Following this success, the band received a Grammy nomination for "Best New Artist". After a period of downtime the band surged back into the limelight in 1997, when Katrina & The Waves represented Great Britain in the Eurovision Song Contest with "Love Shine a Light" and went on to win!

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Holly Johnson
One of the most recognisable and powerful voices from the eighties, we’re excited to announce that Holly Johnson will be making his Rewind Festival debut this year. As lead singer and lyricist of Frankie Goes to Hollywood, he enjoyed phenomenal commercial success during the 1980s with hits including "Two Tribes", "The Power of Love" and their controversial debut "Relax". After Holly and the band split, he went on to have an equally successful solo career, with platinum selling album Blast reaching the top of the charts in 1989.
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Recipients of a Star on the Hollywood walk of fame between Liberace and Betty Grable, Village People will be performing for you at this year’s festival. Well known for their on-stage costumes depicting American cultural stereotypes, how many can you name? Village People have sold upwards of 100 million records worldwide with their disco and dance hits, including their trademark "Macho Man", "Go West", "In the Navy", "Can't Stop the Music", and their biggest hit, "Y.M.C.A.", with its cult dance. We’ll be watching for all the correct moves!
Adam Ant and The Good, The Mad & The Lovely Posse
16th October 1980 was a turning point in history for Adam Ant, when he was thrust upon the general public with his first national television performance on the BBC’s flagship music programme; Top of the Pops. For almost 2 years Adam and the Ants dominated the charts with their singles and subsequent albums, especially “Kings of the Wild Frontier” which charted for 66 consecutive weeks, 12 of which were at the number 1 position. Hits such as “Prince Charming”, “Ant Rap”, “Friend or Foe”, “Goody Two Shoes” and Ivor Novello winning “Stand & Deliver” left an indelible punk shaped mark on the music industry, and now with his new band The Good, The Mad and The Lovely Posse, Adam Ant brings his iconic sound and look to Rewind this summer as our very special guest

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click for hi res Roland Gift
At one time picked by People Magazine as one of their 50 most beautiful people, Roland Gift came to attention with the release of the first Fine Young Cannibals album. His high, soaring voice was immediately recognizable, his style being both on classic soul singers and modern techniques that provided him with an edge. It was with the second FYC album four years later, however, that the band began to break internationally, with "She Drives Me Crazy" being heard everywhere.
Lightning Seeds
Lightning Seeds were formed by Ian Broudie in 1989, after having been involved with numerous bands in post-punk Liverpool, including Big in Japan and Holly Johnson, he decided to go it alone. Lightning Seeds have been entertaining audiences for over 20 years, and it’s easy to see why when witnessing their unmissable live performance. Ian Broudie conceived the band and penned the majority of the critically acclaimed debut album Cloudcuckooland, featuring the hit single Pure. The band’s 1994 album, Jollification, saw the Lightning Seeds garner the attention they rightly deserved, spawning the hit singles Lucky You, Change, Perfect and Marvellous. In 2006 they released of The Very Best of the Lightning Seeds and in 2010 the band returned to the live arena with a full UK tour and studio album.
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click for hi res Marc Almond
With over thirty years in music, the iconic Marc Almond, a huge influence to a generation of musicians who came after him, has sold over 30 million records worldwide and remains one of Britain’s most unique and interesting pop stars. He first rose to fame in 1980 after forming Soft Cell, recording four albums and enjoying several Top 10 hits including the international classic and BRIT Award winning "Tainted Love". After Soft Cell went their separate ways in 1984, Marc went on to have a diverse and acclaimed solo career, continuing to tour and record new music to this day.
The Straits
Formed by former members of Dire Straits Alan Clark, Phil Palmer and Chris White, due to the substantial demand to hear the band’s much loved catalogue of great songs, The Straits includes three original members along with some of the top session players to form a great new combo. Terence Reis was handpicked as the front man for The Straits for his voice with elements of Mark Knopfler, JJ Cale and Steve Earle and his guitar technique that’s remarkably similar to Knopfler’s own. Listen out for such rock classics as "Sultans of Swing", "Money for Nothing" and "Brothers in Arms".
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Fronted by the dapper Martin Fry, their debut album The Lexicon of Love crashed straight into the charts at number one, showcasing a string of hits including "The Look of Love", "Tears Are Not Enough" and "Poison Arrow". After five further albums and a greatest hits, ABC bowed out of the spotlight in the early nineties, only to resurrect the name at the end of the decade much to the delight of their fans. Whether performing as a band or with an orchestra in the Albert Hall, Martin Fry is the consummate show man.
Wang Chung
Wang Chung came out of the post-punk, New Wave scene in the UK going on to achieve global success selling millions of records. Throughout their 30 year career they have released 5 albums and 2 Greatest Hits compilations. They have had 6 US Top 40 hits including a number 1 and international Top 40 hit, "Dance Hall Days", achieved cult status with their soundtrack for William Friedkin’s movie "To Live and Die in LA". In the process of all of this (and somewhat unintentionally), Wang Chung became part of the contemporary culture of North America. Their huge smash "Everybody Have Fun Tonight", with its now famous line "Everybody Wang Chung Tonight"' saw the invention of a new US verb; 'to Wang Chung', the band being name-checked by everyone from Homer Simpson to Frasier Crane.
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click for hi res Altered Images
Clare Grogan started her 30 year long career as a schoolgirl popstar in her band Altered Images; by day studying for her A Levels and at night touring and playing festivals alongside Siouxsie and The Banshees, Echo and The Bunnymen and U2 and recording sessions for John Peel. Clare never got to finish her exams as the band were signed to Epic Records in 1981, the same year she appeared in the BAFTA winning film Gregory’s Girl. Altered Images quickly had worldwide success, selling millions of records which topped the charts in several countries, including "I Could Be Happy", "Don’t Talk To Me About Love" and "Happy Birthday". After an eighteen-year gap in performing with Altered Images, in 2002 Clare was persuaded to sing their hits again and continues to play in front of huge and enthusiastic crowds.
The Christians
Described by The Sun as "arguably the best voice in pop" Garry Christian is both "the face" and "the voice" of THE CHRISTIANS .. another Liverpool success story emerging in the late 80s - renowned for their endless string of soul-inspired hits .. "Forgotten Town", "Born Again", "When the Fingers Point", "Ideal World", "The Bottle", "Father", "Perfect Moment", "What’s in a Word", "Harvest for the World", to name but a few .. often forgotten until you hear the songs and remember how much you loved them! THE CHRISTIANS are celebrating 25 years since the release of their iconic eponymous album this year with a re-release along with a brand new album.
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click for hi res John Parr
Few musicians from England have made such a mark on America as John Parr has. He first found fame in America with the song he is probably best known for, "St. Elmo’s Fire (Man in Motion)", the popular 80s tune that he wrote and performed for the iconic film of the same name. Around that same time, he had another hit song that climbed the charts, called "Naughty, Naughty." As a Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter, he has enjoyed a long and successful career, selling more than 10 million albums and working with a variety of top names including Tina Turner, Bryan Adams, Meatloaf, Journey and The Beach Boys.

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You Don't Miss Your Water - William Bell


William Bell (born July 16, 1939) is an American soul singer and songwriter, and one of the architects of the Stax-Volt sound. As a performer, he is probably best known for 1961's "You Don't Miss Your Water" (his debut single); 1968's "Private Number" (a duet with Judy Clay, and a top 10 hit in the UK); and 1976's "Tryin' To Love Two", Bell's only US top 40 hit, which also hit #1 on the R&B charts. Upon the death of Otis Redding, Bell released the well-received memorial song "A Tribute To A King".

As a songwriter, Bell co-authored the Chuck Jackson hit "Any Other Way" (itself a cover, since Bell issued it first, as a follow-up to "You Don't Miss Your Water"), Billy Idol's 1986 hit "Got To Be Your Lover", and the blues classic "Born Under A Bad Sign", popularized by both Albert King and Cream.
Bell was born in Memphis, Tennessee. He took the last name "Bell" as a stage name in honor of his grandmother, whose first name was Belle.

After releasing a few scattered singles in the late 1950s as a member of the vocal group The Del-Rios, Bell began recording for the Stax label in 1961. He scored a minor hit (#95 pop) with his first Stax single, the country-flavored "You Don't Miss Your Water". Further singles followed, both as a solo artist and (for one single) as a member of The Del-Rios. National chart success for these singles was non-existent, but Bell was successful enough as a regional artist that Stax stuck with him for seven straight non-charting singles. In 1966, Bell finally broke through with his first substantial R&B hit, "Share What You Got (But Keep What You Need)"

In 1967, Bell co-wrote the song "Born Under a Bad Sign" with Booker T. Jones which became a signature song for blues musician Albert King. It was later popularized by the power trio Cream. A year later, in 1968, Bell's collaboration with Judy Clay yielded the memorable hit, "Private Number."

Further U.S. hits followed with "I Forgot to Be Your Lover" (1968),In early 1969 Bell caught the eye of New York Soul DJ Herb Hamlett and was the opening act at Hamlett's 50 Acre Club in upstate NY. They became instant friends and when Hamlett moved to Atlanta in 1979 the pair renewed their friendship with Bell giving Hamlett a autographed copy of the album. which was remade into a U.S. Top 10 pop hit by Billy Idol in 1986 as "To Be a Lover." It had previously been covered by the Jamaican singer George Faith and was the (amended) title tune for his 1977 album To Be a Lover, and has since been sampled by Ludacris on his song "Growing Pains" from Word of Mouf and Jaheim on "Put That Woman First" from Still Ghetto.

Bell continued to record for Stax through the label's dissolution in 1975, with modest commercial success. He then switched to Mercury, and in 1977 topped Billboard 's Hot Soul Singles chart with his polyamorous soul song "Tryin' to Love Two".

In 1985 Bell founded the label Wilbe and issued Passion, which found its most receptive audiences in the UK (although "I Don't Want to Wake Up Feeling Guilty," a duet with Janice Bullock, was a minor U.S. hit). In 1986, The single "Headline News" entered the UK Singles Chart.

Bell's recording career extended to 2006, when his most recent LP, New Lease of Life, was released on his own Wilbe Records label. The 2010 Sci-fi Thriller,Repo Men, Featured Bell's 1967 "Every Day Will Be A Holiday" in an important scene where a famous singer was mixing this song, as well as in the soundtrack.
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Sunday, July 15, 2012

West Texas Blues Festival Headlines Tommy Castro - Save the dates: July 26-29, 2012



Tall City Blues Fest, nestled in downtown Midland, TX, will host more than 23 different performers this year!!!

Featuring award-winning blues & roots music, accompanied by emerging talent across 4 stages!!!

2 Main Stages + Community Stage + Indoor Acoustic Jam Stage

JULY 26-29, 2012

Located in the heart of West Texas halfway between Dallas & El Paso on the I-20 corridor, Midland, TX is featuring its 2nd year of Tall City Blues Fest!

SATURDAY NIGHT HEADLINER

Multi-time Blues Music Awards Winner

Tommy Castro!!!

NOTEABLE AWARDS/ ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Blues Music Award for B.B. King Entertainer of the Year Award (2012, 2010, 2009), Blues Music Award for Blues Male Artist of the Year (2012, 2010, 2008), Blues Music Awards Contemporary Blues Album of the Year (2012, 2010, 2009), Blues Music Awards Band of the Year (2012, 2010), Maples Blues Award Nominees for B.B. King International Artist of the Year (2010), Living Blues Awards Reader’s Poll for Best Blues Album (2009), ‘Painkiller’ voted BluesWax Album of the Year (2007), Bay Area Music Award for Outstanding Blues Album & Outstanding Blues Musician (1997), Tommy Castro Band served as house band for 3 seasons on NBC’s ‘Comedy Showcase’, Opened for B.B. King on his summer concert tour (2001 & 2002).

Click here for more info about Tommy Castro's performance at Tall City Blues Fest!

FRIDAY NIGHT HEADLINER

and BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND

James 'Boogaloo' Bolden Blues Band!!!

NOTEABLE AWARDS/ ACCOMPLISHMENTS

32 years as Band Leader for B.B. King, 2012 Music Achievement Award Recipient (Texas Southern University), Having my image used on the Montreaux Jazz Festival in Switzerland (2006 & 2009), Voted Best Blues Band by Downbeat Magazine (1988, 1989, 1990, 1991), W.C. Handy Award Recipient for Best Blues Band of the Year (1996 & 1997), Performed on Bill Cosby Show (1992), Performing at the White House for 5 Presidents with B.B King & the Duke Ellington Orchestra.

Click here for more info about Boogaloo's performance at Tall City Blues Fest!

TALL CITY BLUES FEST ALSO OFFERS

Educational Clinics

(Click here to browse & pre-reg)

Midnight Troubadours

Troubadours are separately ticketed from the Festival or complimentary with VIP credentials!

Click here for more info on these midnight jam sessions.

The Real Blues Tour

(Presented by Big Jim Adam)

The Real Blues Tour is a multi-media, Travel-Guide Performance showcasing the history of blues beginning in the early 1900's.

Click here for more info.

PLUS

Art & Memorabilia Auctions + Interactive Hospitality Stations + Food Vendors + Shopping & More!

SAVE THE DATES

JULY 26-29, 2012

Click here to see entire line-up!

Local/regional bands not featured.

FESTIVAL KICK-OFF

Thurs, July 26th (7-10 PM)

with a Zydeco Street Dance

featuring the

2012 Zydeco Music Awards Lifetime Achievement Winner

Nathan & The Zydeco Cha-Cha's

Admission for Street Dance on Thursday is FREE!

Shrimp & Crawfish sold separately.

FRIDAY & SATURDAY FEATURE MORE THAN 23 PERFORMERS

ACROSS 4 STAGES!!!

Friday & Saturday require paid admission.

$20 Friday Day Pass, $30 Saturday Pass, $40 Weekend Pass

Friday, July 27th, Gates open at 4 PM, First performer at 5:30 PM

Saturday, July 28th, Gates open at 10 AM, First performer at 11 AM.

Continuous music alternates between 2 Main Stages!!!

and then Tall City Blues Fest wraps up on Sunday, July 29th with a…

GOSPEL BRUNCH & BLUES JAM

(Sunday is all indoors)

Admission on Sunday is FREE!

Brunch provided by Permian Basin Chef's Association.

Click here to sign up to participate in the Blues Jam.

Tall City Blues Fest is a family-friendly festival.

Children under 12 are admitted free when accompanied by a parent or guardian.

The mission of Tall City Blues Fest is to create an experience like none other that brings award-winning blues & roots music to West Texas and makes people feel enlightened, joy-filled & loved.

SAVE THE DATES

JULY 26-29, 2012

Downchild Blues Band


Donnie Walsh thinks a hat might make a difference.

“Something that will help the band fit in … or stand out,” says the veteran Canadian bluesman by way of explaining the title of the new Downchild album, I Need A Hat.

It’s a joke, of course. Downchild doesn’t need a hat, or a ticket, a tag, a bag, a niche, or a flashing neon sign.

Forty years on, Downchild remains a blues force, true to itself and without equal.

For just about every waking moment of the four decades since he formed the Downchild Blues Band – Canada’s best known and best loved blues outfit – Walsh has been living the dream that changed his life back in the early 1960s, when someone dropped a Jimmy Reed album onto the turntable at his girlfriend’s 16th birthday party in suburban North Toronto.

It’s a moment Walsh – he also answers to his “given” name, Mr. Downchild, taken from a song by Sonny Boy Williamson II – says he will never forget.

“That was it. I was hooked. I never wanted to play anything else.”

He drove his girlfriend crazy learning Reed’s lip-splitting harmonica technique, then James Cotton’s. He locked himself away from the world while he picked apart Muddy Waters’ and Albert King’s guitar licks, reconstructing them in his own inimitable style on a beat-up electric guitar. And when he did venture out, it was to one of Toronto’s legendary blues dives to catch his heroes Luther Allison, B.B. King, Buddy Guy and Junior Wells, all of them regular visitors in those days to Walsh’s hometown, Canada’s blues capital.

Walsh was a good student. He is recognized around the world as both a blues harp virtuoso with few equals, and an unusually expressive guitarist.

He wasn’t the only one, of course. They say Toronto’s built on the blues, but all across Canada the blues, particularly jump-style and Chicago blues that used to blast across the border from radio stations in northern U.S., is a basic, shared language.

Singer Chuck Jackson, tenor sax player Pat Carey, drummer Mike Fitzpatrick, bassist Gary Kendall, and pianist/organist Michael Fonfara – Walsh’s compadres in Downchild for the past decade and a half, and, he says, the “best musicians I’ve ever played with” – were soaking up the blues in their teenage years as well, in different parts of the country.

Their shared dedication has served them well. And with the release of their 16th album, I Need A Hat, October 6th, 2009, on the Canadian independent label Linus Entertainment, Donnie Walsh and his buddies are celebrating their collective longevity big time.

Comprising a new batch of Walsh originals – edgier, darker, more caustically humorous than ever before – I Need A Hat boasts a cluster of stellar guests. Dan Aykroyd – a long-time friend and admirer of Downchild – on harmonica, second-generation Canadian blues-rocker Colin James and Nashville-based Canadian roots music veteran Colin Linden on guitars, and Stax Records legend Wayne Jackson of the Memphis Horns on trumpet, all make muscular and eloquent contributions to the album, which Walsh produced over five days earlier this year in Toronto’s famed Metalworks Studios.

“It’s not really producing,” says Walsh, a self-deprecating homegrown star – when he’s not on the road, he’s fishing his favourite pickerel hole at his secret lake in northern Ontario – and a ribald raconteur with a lacerating dry wit.

“We’ve been together long enough to know just how everything fits, every groove, every note, every piece of punctuation. It’s not as if we have to go looking for hooks – they just happen. That’s one of the great things about a band that’s been together for as long as we have. It just gets better and better.”

“I get a buzz doing the final mix, tweaking the nuances, the little elements I know are in there, hiding somewhere. Those little bits are like pure gold to me. I love shining them up.”

“And it was really exciting this time to have so many great guests adding their own parts.”

During the past 40 years and against all odds, Walsh and his band mates have won countless music industry awards, including a Juno (Canada’s Grammy) for “Best Roots and Traditional Album” in 1991. They also received a Juno Award nomination in 2005 for “Blues Album of The Year” for their album “Come On In.” In 2007 Downchild was named “Entertainer of The Year” at the annual Maple Blues Awards (the Canadian equivalent of a W.C. Handy Award).

With more than 80 great musicians on the payroll during its long life, Downchild is a robust road beast, having racked up thousands of performances at concert halls, fairgrounds, saloons and roadhouses in every corner of the continent.

The inspiration for Aykroyd’s and the late John Belushi’s fabulous creation, The Blues Brothers – they recorded Downchild’s “Shotgun Blues” and Walsh’s “(I Got Everything I Need) Almost”, the latter shortlisted as one of Canada’s Essential Songs in a survey conducted by the Toronto Star in 2007 – Downchild is an institution in their homeland, and revered by blues fans around the world.

America’s National Public Radio service pays regular tribute, featuring Downchild in concert specials and blues programs.

For years a favourite on the North American festival circuit, the band made its first concert appearance in Europe in 2008, at the Lille Blues Festival in France, returning in 2009 for the Tobakken Blues Festival in Esjberg, Denmark. More trips to Europe, where Downchild’s reputation is almost mythical, are in the works.

Apart from its earliest incarnations, with Donnie’s brother, the late “Hock” Walsh as singer, Downchild was always more than a bar band. A party band, sure – good times guaranteed, just as it says on one of Downchild’s album titles.

But musicianship of the highest order, sharp arrangements, strict adherence to its legitimate sources, slick pacing and a steely fix on the moods of its audiences, have always set Downchild apart. This has been a class act for the better part of its 40-year life.

Drummer Mike Fitzpatrick credits the quality and individual character of the songs Walsh and singer Chuck Jackson – he contributed “Down in the Delta” and “I’ve Gotta Leave” to I Need A Hat – have brought to the band.

“The songwriting is exceptional,” he says. “There’s always some unexpected slant to the story in each song, or a line that cuts straight to the bone.”

Bassist Gary Kendall hears something old and something new each time he listens to I Need A Hat.

“The more I play it, the more I get it,” he says. “This is vintage Downchild – straight up blues, no frills, no R&B, nothing slick. But Donnie’s doing something new with his lyrics, commenting on what’s happening in the world, reaching out to people who’ve lost their jobs and are facing hard times. That’s different. His songs are usually much more personal.”

About the reasons for Downchild’s success, Walsh is succinct and unequivocal.

“First, it’s knowing your audience, and knowing when to give them what they want,” he says. “If they want to dance, you step up the groove. If they want to watch, you give them lots of solos.”

“As for keeping a band together for as long as Downchild has been around, it’s an unspoken thing, finding a balance between what I need and what I know each musician can give. Every member of this band is well equipped to do what each of us wants and needs. Downchild has always been bigger than the sum of its parts, and I can’t really explain why. “

“But I do know that after 40 years doing this, I’m happier than I’ve ever been. The hard parts are easier. I’m writing songs all the time – and better songs – which surprises me. I get to experience new things all the time, and see new places.”

“And I get to make my own records. I will never sell enough of them to put me out of work … but that’s probably a good thing.”
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