Post-Bluesbreakers, John Mayall still leading A Special Life

Mayall_special_lifeIt’s been five years now since British multi-instrumentalist, bandleader and singer John Mayall broke up his storied Bluesbreakers for good and put together a new five-piece line-up for his 2009 album Tough (which probably describes pretty well the decision to disband the Bluesbreakers for Mayall). But judging by his latest release A Special Life (Forty Below Records), we dare say Mayall hasn’t missed a beat, with the 80-year-old Godfather of British Blues continuing to set the pace for musicians across the generations. While there may not be anything too terribly novel about this album compared to Mayall’s past work, A Special Life is a fine case of Mayall just continuing to be Mayall, offering another solid helping of diverse blues, roots, and rock.

The album kicks off with the breezy sounds of Clifton Chenier’s “Why Did You Go Last Night”, combining its “whoa, pretty baby” refrain with guest accordion and backing vocals from Clifton’s son C.J. Chenier and some sturdy keys from Mayall. That’s followed by a rocking “Speak of the Devil” (Sonny Landreth) that features some particularly slick work from guitarist Rocky Athas, before the band slips into a shuffling country version of the Jimmy Rogers classic “That’s All Right” with Mayall blasting away on harmonica.

The Mayall original “World Gone Crazy” may just be one of the smoothest-sounding political statements you’ve ever heard, with its pointed lyrics on war, followed by another pair of covers: first, the slow blues of Albert King’s “Floodin’ in California”, on which Mayall’s passionate guitar mixes with some delightful organ, while harmonica, keyboards, and lyrics combine to give Eddie Taylor’s “Big Town Playboy” plenty of Chicago blues swagger.

Mayall again takes lead guitar and harmonica on the slow, sensitive title track, before diving into a gritty version of Jimmy McCracklin’s “I Just Got to Know” with C.J. Chenier again assisting on vocals. Next, Mayall and the band – the same as on Tough (Athas on guitar, Greg Rzab on bass, and Jay Davenport on drums) minus Tom Canning on keys, with those duties now handled by Mayall himself – revisit the Mayall & the Bluesbreakers classic “Heartache”, closing out the album on the steady-rocking Rzab/Athas track “Like a Fool” and a “Simple Man”-ish “Just a Memory” that itself has all the makings of a classic.

Produced and designed – including the original cover art – by Mayall, the CD was co-produced, engineered, and mixed by Eric Corne, who Mayall met while recording a guest spot on former Bluesbreakers member Walter Trout’s upcoming album The Blues Came Callin’, due out in early June. Whether you’re a child of the 1960s or the 2010s, if blues is your thing, Mayall is a name with which you need to be familiar, with A Special Life proving Mayall’s music just as special today as ever.

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Much-anticipated documentary B.B. King – The Life of Riley takes blues fans riding with the King

bb_king_life_of_rileyEarlier this week, we told you about some of the praise guitarist Kenny Wayne Shepherd had to offer concerning the great B.B. King in the liner notes of Shepherd’s new album Goin’ Home. In addition to telling us that he has “known and played with the King of the Blues since I was 15 years old” and identifying King as “one of my biggest influences”, Shepherd also observed that “No musician has better shown that sometimes you can say everything you need to say with just one note”, a sentiment echoed by a host of fellow musicians – including Bono, Eric Clapton, Mick Taylor, John Mayall, Bobby “Blue” Bland, Joe Bonamassa, Bruce Willis, Robert Cray, Derek Trucks, and Jonny Lang – at one point during the B.B. King – The Life of Riley documentary currently screening in theaters throughout the U.S.

Released in 2012 in the UK, the acclaimed documentary has finally made its way to the states for a limited theatrical screening – playing just one night in many cities – before it’s issued on DVD and Blu-Ray in mid-June.

Produced and directed by Jon Brewer, who worked with King for more than two years and collected hundreds of hours of footage for the project, and narrated by Morgan Freeman, B.B. King – The Life of Riley features interviews with King and a plethora of other musicians and music industry personnel (a number of whom have since passed on), including Bobby “Blue” Bland, Bonnie Raitt, Walter Trout, Carlos Santana, Bono, Joe Bonamassa, Bruce Willis, Aaron Neville, Eric Clapton, Leon Russell, Rufus Thomas, Robert Lockwood Jr., Buddy Guy, B.B.’s longtime trumpet player and bandleader Calvin Owens, photographer Ernest Withers, Dr. John, John Mayer, Jonny Lang, Robert Cray, Billy Boy Arnold, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Ronnie Wood, Mick Taylor, Paul Rodgers, Peter Green, Johnny Winter, Derek Trucks, John Mayall, Joe Walsh, Solomon Burke, Ringo Starr, Bill Wyman, Keith Richards, Susan Tedeschi, and King’s longtime manager Sid Siedenberg, as well as several other managers and producers who have worked with King through the years.

In addition to plenty of both early and more recent footage of King, the movie takes fans riding with the King of the Blues to visit King’s birthplace and some of the plantations and cotton fields King once worked, also recounting King’s family, his early days in Memphis – where he earned the nickname of “Blues Boy”, later shortened to B.B. – and the story behind the naming of his guitar Lucille, as well as musical collaborations with the likes of Leon Russell (“Hummingbird”), Bono (“When Love Comes to Town”), and Eric Clapton (Riding with the King). Clocking in at an hour and a half, the film offers a nice look back at the life and career of one of blues music’s finest and serves as a powerful reminder of all that King has brought to the genre as well as the countless other musicians he has influenced and inspired.

The documentary also of course includes a pretty great musical sequence, much of which is available on the companion soundtrack, including two songs previously unavailable digitally in “Walking Dr. Bill” and a “Sweet Sixteen” from a 1974 show in Africa.

You can catch the film in theaters only through the end of May. Whether you see it on the big screen or wait for it on DVD or Blu-Ray, B.B. King – The Life of Riley is one everyone should watch!

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Twenty years on, Kenny Wayne Shepherd still quite at home playing the blues on Goin’ Home

KWSBand_Goin_Home (220x220)Here at The BluesPowR Blog, we like Kenny Wayne Shepherd‘s stuff like “Blue on Black” or “True Lies” just as much as the next guy or gal, but for us, his band has never sounded better than when they’re fully immersed in the blues, whether on “Shame, Shame, Shame” from the guitarist’s Ledbetter Heights debut or the band’s cover of Bessie Smith’s “Backwater Blues” from its 2011 studio album How I Go. Or, of course, almost any of the songs from the band’s latest CD Goin’ Home (out this week on Concord Records), which in many ways serves as a return to his roots for Shepherd, including recording for the first time during his two decade career in the guitarist’s hometown of Shreveport, Louisiana.

Consisting of a dozen covers of songs from some of Shepherd’s earliest and strongest influences – all three Kings of the blues (Albert, Freddie, and B.B.), Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, Bo Diddley, and Stevie Ray Vaughan, among them – Goin’ Home is a splendid trip down memory lane performed by one of the industry’s preeminent blues-rock guitarists, joined here by such good friends as Keb’ Mo’, Joe Walsh, Warren Haynes, Kim Wilson, Robert Randolph, Ringo Starr, and the Rebirth Brass Band. Recorded during an 11-day gap in the band’s touring schedule, the album – Shepherd’s first on the Concord label and eighth overall – captures a majority of the 22 tracks cut during the session, all done live in the studio as you’d see performed, with everyone in the same room and only minimal overdubbing.

The album kicks off with a greasy, rocking take on Freddie King’s “Palace of the King” that quickly reminds us of all this band – comprised of five-time Grammy Award nominee Shepherd on guitar and vocals, Noah Hunt on primary lead vocals, Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble member Chris “Whipper” Layton on drums, Tony Franklin (The Firm, Gary Hoey, Roy Harper) on bass, and Riley Osbourn on keyboards – is capable, accompanied by some strong female background vocals and the horns of the Rebirth Brass Band.

That’s followed by an equally slick take on “Everything’s Gonna Be Alright” (Magic Sam, Little Walter) much in the vein of Magic Sam that also features some superb work on keys from Osbourn, and a simmering but intense “I Love the Life I Live” (Muddy Waters) that includes both Fabulous Thunderbirds frontman Kim Wilson on harmonica and Joe Walsh on guitar.

In addition to the lyrics for those who don’t already know them, the album’s liner notes also contain some commentary from Shepherd about each song and/or how the original artist influenced him, here, for example, expressing that “One of the main reasons I didn’t sing on my albums for years was because I wanted to sound like Muddy Waters and just couldn’t get beyond the fact that I didn’t…Much of what I have learned about vocal phrasing I have learned from Muddy and his ability to blend singing with an almost conversational approach…”. That said, it’s not Shepherd, but rather vocalist Hunt – who, we’re reminded on Goin’ Home, has a great voice for the blues – belting this one out between some pretty mean licks on both guitar and harp.

Like on other recent albums, Shepherd does take a few turns on vocals, including for Stevie Ray Vaughan’s “House is Rockin'” – a track selected by Vaughan’s former bandmate Layton – and again a bit later on another Freddie King number “Boogie Man”, a cut that allowed Shepherd to “step out of my normal role of playing rhythm guitar throughout the song and just focus on the singing and playing fills and solos like a lot of bluesmen tend to do”.

In between, guitarist Warren Haynes trades vocals with Hunt on Albert King’s “Breakin’ Up Somebody’s Home”, revisiting one of the songs performed when Shepherd sat in for a few shows with Haynes’ “other” (and soon-to-be full-time) band Gov’t Mule, while Pastor Brady Blade Sr. (whose son Brady is the owner of the studio in which the album was recorded and co-producer of the project with Shepherd and Bill Pfordresher) provides some deep, spirited vocals to accompany Hunt’s on Bo Diddley’s “You Can’t Judge a Book by the Cover”.

The slow, blistering blues of B.B. King’s “You Done Lost Your Good Thing Now” is one of several songs to feature some impressive work from Osbourn on keyboards, not to mention awfully soulful vocals from Hunt and a devastating guitar solo from Shepherd, who credits King with “encouraging me to focus on vibrato and playing the right notes at the right time. No musician has better shown that sometimes you can say everything you need to say with just one note” (a sentiment echoed many times over during the The Life of Riley documentary on King that is screening in the U.S. currently and that we’ll be telling you more about in the coming weeks).

The band pays tribute to Johnny “Guitar” Watson with a driving “Looking Back”, “chosen for this record,” according to Shepherd, “because of its early rock n’ roll groove and playful flirtatious lyrics”. That’s followed by the funky slink of Buddy Guy’s “Cut You Loose” featuring Ringo Starr on drums, before Keb’ Mo’ joins the band (including sharing vocals with Hunt) for Albert King’s “Born Under a Bad Sign” – which has long served as the band’s intro music for concerts – complete with some stinging guitar and rich horns.

A gritty, seven-and-a-half minute take on Muddy Waters’ “Still a Fool” caps off the album, featuring more scorching guitar – this time with a little help from Robert Randolph – along with distorted vocals from Shepherd, a sign that the singer/guitarist may still not feel entirely worthy singing the songs of Waters, although he certainly does alright playing them, as proven here.

Like his earlier 10 Days Out: Blues from the Backroads project (check it out if you haven’t already), Goin’ Home is another solid effort from Shepherd at helping to keep the blues alive. With its heavy blues focus, it’s possible that Goin’ Home may not be Shepherd’s best-selling album (though we hope we’re wrong on that), but it is certainly one of his best.

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Keb’ Mo’ serves up slice of BLUESAmericana

Keb_Mo_BluesAmericanaLast week, we gave you something of a preview of singer/songwriter Keb’ Mo’s new album BLUESAmericana (Kind of Blue Music) with a Blues Lyrics of the Week post on the project’s opening track, “The Worst is Yet to Come”. In addition to its interesting lyrics, the album also includes a wonderful array of sounds – many courtesy of Mo’ himself – once again proving the multi-instrumentalist and three-time Grammy winner one of most versatile bluesmen today. Recorded in Nashville and produced by Mo’ and Casey Wasner, BLUESAmericana features nine original songs plus one cover, a soulful, satisfying take on Jimmy Rogers’ “That’s Alright” on which Mo’ himself handles electric and slide guitar, bass, organ, and harmonica, joined only by Steve Jordan on drums.

It all starts on those intoxicating grooves of “The Worst to Yet to Come”, with Mo’ on guitar, banjo, tambourine, and wailing away on harmonica in addition to providing his usual strong vocals. Colin Linden guests on mandolin, with Michael Hanna also turning in a fine performance on organ, accompanied by hand claps and some inviting background vocals, all of which serves to help lure the listener in so much that you just may start to believe the song’s chorus that things can only go downhill from here.

Fortunately for us all, Mo’ isn’t the kind of guy to let us down, proceeding to offer up a delightful selection of tunes that range from the soft, introspective ballads of “For Better or Worse” and the closing “So Long Goodbye” – the latter made all the sweeter by Mo’s wife Robbie on backing vocals while Keb’ handles acoustic guitar, bass, organ and piano – to the breezy “Do It Right” co-written with Jim Weatherly (“Midnight Train to Georgia”) and featuring Mo’ on acoustic guitar, banjo, slide guitar, organ, and harmonica, to the bouncy, New Orleans sound of “Old Me Better” with the California Feetwarmers adding some parade drums, washboard, banjo, sousaphone and other horns to Mo’s guitar and banjo, for what Mo’ calls “a humorous way of looking at the fact that maybe it wasn’t better than now, but it sure seems like it at times” with lyrics such as “I don’t drink too much, I don’t swear as much, you even made me go to church/ I ain’t done much talkin’ since the day we got together/ I’m a different man because of you, and I like the old me better” and “Well, I got to say you’re the only one that I’ve ever loved/ you and I are a good fit, we’re like a hand and glove/ but now I’m sitting here looking back, wearing this stupid sweater/ truth be told, I got to say, I like the old me better”.

IMG_4564 (165x220)That’s just one of the comments you’ll read from Mo’ in the album’s liner notes (which also include lyrics for each song), with Mo’ for example describing the gospelish, creeping “Somebody Hurt You” as “where the blues meets the church…a testimonial to claiming your bright future and letting go of a maybe dark past” with Mo’ on guitar (sounding a bit like B.B. King at times), bass, and keyboards while Michael Hicks joins on organ. Add to that some nice horns, hand claps, and deep backing vocals that include Mo’s longtime friend and civil rights movement Freedom Rider Rip Patton, and you have all the trappings of yet another terrific song.

Some Robert Johnson-like guitar introduces the swaying “I’m Gonna Be Your Man”, on which Mo’s passionate vocals combine with some soft R&B strains and horns. That’s followed by a grooving, even more R&B sounding “Move” that has Tom Hambridge (who co-wrote the song with Mo’) keeping a funky beat on drums, with Mo’ on guitar, electric piano, and banjo, Hicks again on organ, and Paul Franklin on pedal steel. Rounding out the album is the plucky country blues of a “More for Your Money” that features producer Wasner on drums and Tim Shinness on both cello and mandolin.

With its smooth vocals, laidback down-home sounds, and diverse instrumentation, BLUESAmericana is rich in a multitude of ways, offering a simplicity and, at the same time, impressiveness that few can achieve. It may not be straight blues according to Mo’, but we’re pretty sure you can count on this one being among the nominees for both next year’s Grammy and Blues Music awards.

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Tedeschi Trucks Band, Charlie Musselwhite, Trampled Under Foot, Doug MacLeod big winners at 2014 Blues Music Awards

The annual Blues Music Awards took place in Memphis last night, and although the ceremony wasn’t broadcast live on SiriusXM as in years past and the results haven’t yet been posted to the Blues Foundation’s website, here are the winners based on reports from those who attended the event.

The Tedeschi Trucks Band and Charlie Musselwhite both took home three honors on the night, the Tedeschi Trucks Band for band of the year, rock blues album (Made Up Mind), and contemporary female artist, and Musselwhite for harmonica player, traditional album, and album of the year, both for his role in the Remembering Little Walter compilation that also included Billy Boy Arnold, Mark Hummel, Sugar Ray Norcia & James Harman.

Trampled Under Foot earned two awards, for contemporary album (Badlands) and instrumentalist-bass (Danielle Schnebelen), as did Doug MacLeod, who cleaned up in the acoustic categories with nods for both acoustic artist and acoustic album (There’s a Time).

Buddy Guy walked away with the B.B. King Entertainer of the Year award, while Shawn Holt & the TeardropsDaddy Told Me earned best new artist debut honors. Gary Clark Jr. was recognized as contemporary male artist, while James Cotton was voted traditional male artist, John Nemeth as soul blues male artist, Irma Thomas as soul blues female artist, and Diunna Greenleaf as the Koko Taylor Award recipient for traditional female artist.

On the recording front, the Royal Southern Brotherhood won best DVD for their Songs from the Road set, while Bobby Rush‘s Down in Louisiana was honored as soul blues album and Lurrie Bell‘s “Blues in My Soul” was voted song of the year. Others recognized included Ronnie Earl (guitar), Eddie Shaw (horn), Victor Wainwright (piano), and Cedric Burnside (drums).

Congratulations to all the winners and nominees!

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Blues Lyrics of the Week: The Worst is Yet to Come

There are plenty of reasons to like singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist Keb’ Mo’s latest album BLUESAmericana, and we’ll tell you all about them in our review of the album coming up here on The BluesPowR Blog. But in the meantime, we couldn’t resist taking a closer look at some of the lyrics from the project, perhaps our favorite of which happen to be from the album’s opening track, a groovy little diddy about hope called “The Worst is Yet to Come”.

We’ve all had our bad days, of course, when it seems like nothing is going our way, which is exactly what the man in this song experiences. And although Keb’ and co-writer Pete Sallis do manage to present the slightest bit of positive with words such as “Now the sun keeps on shinin’, just like it should/ when I take a look around me, I guess I’m doin’ pretty good”, the rest of the song is the blues at its grooving best, with Keb providing guitar, banjo, harmonica, and tambourine in addition to vocals, and also featuring special guest Colin Linden on mandolin and helping out on hand claps.

“Woke up this mornin’, wrong side of the bed –
‘ever happened last night, you know, I’m feelin’ it in my head.
Lord have mercy,
and the day ain’t even begun.
Well, I got a bad, bad feeling
that the worst is yet to come.

Didn’t get no breakfast, didn’t get no lunch.
But I did get two weeks notice, they gonna’ close the factory up.
Lord have mercy,
and the day ain’t even done.
Well, I got a bad, bad feeling
that the worst is yet to come…

Got back to my house, open up the door.
She took everything I had, and the dog took a shit on the floor.
Lord have mercy,
even the bedbugs up and run.
You know, I got a bad, bad feeling
that the worst is yet to come.”
– “The Worst is Yet to Come”, Kevin Moore & Pete Sallis

Here’s hoping that you’re having a better week than this guy…

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Harping on the Taboo: Bob Corritore offers up album of blues harmonica instrumentals

bob_corritore_taboo (220x199)We’ve written here before about a few projects involving harmonica ace Bob Corritore, including some pretty impressive recent collaborations with the likes of one-time Muddy Waters Band guitarist John Primer (Knockin’ Around These Blues) and veteran blues singer Tail Dragger (Longtime Friends in the Blues). While Corritore doesn’t officially share the bill with anyone on his new CD Taboo (Delta Groove Music), he did manage to round up a rather nice line-up of guest performers for the all-instrumental album, including guitarists Jimmie Vaughan and Junior Watson, keyboardist Fred Kaplan, and saxophone player Doug James, to name just a few.

Born and raised in Chicago, Corritore has called Phoenix, Arizona, home for the past three decades – or at least as much a home as any place can be between his own appearances worldwide and lending his support and/or production talent to projects from a multitude of other blues players including in recent years Diunna Greenleaf, Mud Morganfield, and The Mannish Boys. Hardly what you’d consider a blues mecca, Corritore has also helped put the city of Phoenix on the blues map with his famous Rhythm Room club and a weekly blues show on local radio station KJZZ.

We were fortunate to see Corritore play along with Tail Dragger and pianist Henry Gray during our last visit to the Rhythm Room a few years back, though we haven’t yet had the chance to catch Corritore as the main attraction, which we can imagine being an awful lot like the set to which we’re treated on Taboo, a rich sampling of diverse, quality harmonica blues ranging from the often swinging to the slow, serene closer “Bob’s Late Hours”.

????????Kicking off the album’s dozen tracks is a delightful take on Willie Egan’s “Potato Stomp” that features Doug James on saxophone while Junior Watson, Fred Kaplan, and Richard Innes – who provide core backing for much of the album – establish the groove on guitar, piano/organ, and drums, respectively. Corritore’s harp adds an appropriately greasy element to the “Many a Devil’s Night” that follows, with Watson (who co-wrote the tune with Corritore) providing some Otis Rush-like guitar and Kaplan again turning in a fine performance on the ivories.

From there, it’s on to the quiet shuffle of “Ruckus Rhythm”, a Booker T and the MGs-ish “Harmonica Watusi” that’s guaranteed to have you moving your hips, and the creeping title track, the Lecuona/Russell jazz standard “Taboo”, here featuring some surf-style guitar strains. “Harp Blast” is exactly that, making for a swinging good time, followed by the unmistakable guitar stylings of Jimmie Vaughan on the breezy “Mr. Tate’s Advice”, also featuring Papa John DeFrancesco on organ and some soulful sax from James. That same group returns for the slightly rocking “Shuff Stuff” that comes a few songs later, but not before Corritore’s soft wailing harp trades licks with Kaplan’s piano and Watson’s guitar on “5th Position Plea”, followed by a jaunty “Fabuloco (for Kid)”, with the bouncing “T-Town Ramble” also helping to close out the album and giving Kaplan another nice chance to shine.

For a man seemingly just as content to share the stage and spotlight with others, Taboo serves as a nice reminder of all that Corritore is capable as a frontman, proving every bit on par with such names as Little Walter, Rick Estrin or Charlie Musselwhite, who in fact provides a rather nice testimonial on the album with words that include “Bob Corritore’s new CD is all instrumentals and each one is a jewel. He really nails the ’50s Chicago Chess sound, but also exhibits modern ideas…I enjoyed listening to every tune and you can bet I’ll be listening to them all again.”

The last instrumental CD about which we were this excited was last spring’s offering from Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters (Just for Today), which you may recall our referring to at the time as perhaps “the best instrumental blues album we’ve heard. And not as in just this year. Possibly ever.” Taboo may not quite top that one, but it is certainly up there (not to mention how extremely gratifying it is to hear another such strong collection of blues instrumentals so close on the heels of Earl’s); this is one you’re definitely going to want to check out.

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Canada’s Matt Andersen soars again on Weightless

matt_andersen_weightless (220x220)If, as he sings so soulfully on the opening track of his new album Weightless (True North Records), Canadian singer and guitarist Matt Andersen has indeed lost his way, you wouldn’t be able to tell it by this project, which finds Andersen sounding just as impressive and on track as ever.

Of course, the New Brunswick native will be the first to acknowledge that he’s not a bluesman in the traditional sense, even after racking up such recent honors as top solo blues performer in both the Blues Foundation’s 2010 International Blues Challenge and the 2013 European Blues Awards, and three Maple Blues Awards (Canada’s equivalent of the Blues Music Awards) in 2012: “The blues is a big part of what I do, and in my solo show some tunes are straight-up blues, for sure. But I would never stand beside B.B. King and say, ‘I play blues, too’.”

Something of a mash-up of Joe Cocker, Marc Cohn, The Black Crowes, and Darius Rucker, with music that exhibits all the freedom and airiness of, say, the Tedeschi Trucks Band, Andersen is one of the best acts you may have yet to hear, something you’ll do well to rectify just as soon as you can.

Andersen’s debut on the True North label, Weightless is as uplifting and flowing as its title, starting on the creeping, soulful grooves of “I Lost My Way” with punchy horns and Robert Randolph-like pedal steel from Paul Rigby. That’s just the first of several highly infectious songs you’ll find here, along with the funky rhythms of the horn-laced title track, including such lyrics as “standing lost, but standing tall/ not afraid of the costs, afraid of the fall” just as Mike Stevens bursts in with a terrific harmonica solo, and the catchy rockabilly sounds of “City of Dreams”.

Once again, Andersen proves just as capable with the soft stuff, presenting such ballads as the peaceful “Let’s Go to Bed” about leaving the day’s troubles behind you, the quietly powerful “Drift Away”, the slow country sounds of “So Easy”, and a serene “Between the Lines”.

In between, you’ll find the passionate vocals and inspired lyrics of songs like the swaying “My Last Day” – one of several tracks to include superb female backing vocals from Amy Helm and Alanna Stuart, a Jackson Browne-sounding “Alberta Gold” with its Buddy Holly-like opening riffs, the breezy “Let You Down”, a gritty, heavy “The Fight” featuring Los Lobos’ Steve Berlin (who also produced the album) on piano, and the grooving, thought-provoking closer “What Will You Leave”, again offering some nice backing vocals and horns.

What Andersen leaves, of course, is another terrific collection of songs that, along with his earlier works, proves that Andersen deserves to be “found” by a whole new group of fans.

Related:
Canadian Matt Andersen mines some deep blues on latest CD

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Johnny Winter box set chronicles nearly 50 years of blues rock legend keeping True to the Blues

With five decades worth of hard-driving rock and blues under his belt, it’s hard to believe that there hasn’t been a definitive box set of Texas blues-rocker Johnny Winter‘s music before now. Perhaps it was precisely the daunting nature of compiling such a set that prevented it from it being done, but leave it to Columbia/Legacy to offer a remedy – and make it look quite easy in the process, as is the case with the recent 4-CD True to the Blues: the Johnny Winter Story, released in conjunction with Winter’s 70th birthday.

Winter_True_to_the_Blues (124x220)Featuring 56 tracks culled from 27 albums, the set offers a chronological mix of studio and live material spanning from Winter’s 1968 independent recording The Progressive Blues Experiment (released on Capitol Records the following year) to 2011’s Roots, a much anticipated follow-up to which is due out this summer with such guests as Eric Clapton, Ben Harper, Dr. John, and ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons, among others. While most of the songs here are ones that die-hard Winter fans will have heard throughout the years – with the exception of just a few tracks that were either previously unreleased or unavailable on CD, all from Winter’s performance at the 1970 Atlanta Pop Festival – it’s a real treat to now have all of these tracks together in one place.

Of course, with that many tracks, you have to figure that John Dawson Winter III will have a little help along the way, with guests that include former Winter sidemen Rick Derringer and brother Edgar Winter as well as keyboardist Dr. John, bassist Willie Dixon, harmonica ace Walter “Shakey” Horton, and fellow guitarists such as Muddy Waters, Michael Bloomfield, Vince Gill and Derek Trucks.

The “Bad Luck and Trouble” that opens the set off The Progressive Blues Experiment LP is arguably every bit as good as anything Winter’s done since and makes for a stellar start to the collection, with Winter handling harmonica and mandolin in addition to guitar and vocals, followed by a driving Texas shuffle in “Mean Town Blues”, with Winter joined on both songs by Tommy Shannon on bass and “Uncle” John Turner on drums. Michael Bloomfield invites Winter to sit in during a December 1968 Super Session show at the Fillmore East, introducing Winter as “the baddest motherfucker, man…this cat can play” just before Winter tears into a stinging 11-minute cover of John Lee Hooker’s “It’s My Own Fault”, backed by Bloomfield on guitar and Al Kooper on organ.

Only three songs in, this set is already a doozy, and that’s before we even get to Winter’s self-titled debut album from Columbia, represented here through the scorching “I’m Yours and I’m Hers”, the slow blues of a “Mean Mistreater” featuring blues greats Willie Dixon on bass and Walter “Shakey” Horton on harmonica, the solo acoustic “Dallas”, and a blistering cover of B.B. King’s “Be Careful with a Fool”.

Winter’s rocking performance of “Leland Mississippi Blues” from Woodstock follows – with brother Edgar Winter on keyboards while Johnny dazzles the crowd playing both lead and rhythm guitar – along with a selection of tracks from Winter’s sophomore album on Columbia, the three-sided Second Winter (which also includes, well, a second Winter in the form of Edgar) including “Memory Pain” (“Serves Me Right to Suffer”), Bob Dylan’s “Highway 61 Revisited”, a smooth-vocaled, swinging “Miss Ann” (Little Richard) featuring Edgar on alto sax, and the boogeying “Hustled Down in Texas”. Live versions of “Black Cat Bone” and “Johnny B. Goode” recorded at The Royal Albert Hall close out the first disc, with plenty more good stuff to come on the set’s three remaining CDs, including Winter’s often unique take on such blues classics as “Rock Me Baby”, “Good Morning Little School Girl” (off Live at the Fillmore East), Elmore James’ “Dust My Broom” featuring Derek Trucks, another live version of “It’s My Own Fault” from the best-selling Johnny Winter And/Live album, J.B. Lenoir’s “Mojo Boogie”, and Lonnie Brooks’ “Don’t Take Advantage of Me”.

SONY DSCDisc two starts with a previously unreleased cover of Sonny Boy Williamson’s “Eyesight to the Blind”, as well as live versions of Winter’s “Prodigal Son” (also previously unreleased) and, for the first-time-on-CD, “Mean Mistreater”, all from 1970’s Second Atlanta Internatonal Pop Festival and featuring Rick Derringer on guitar, Edgar on drums, and Randy Hobbs on bass. As good as the rock numbers that follow are (such as the Derringer-penned “Rock and Roll Hoochie Koo” and “Still Alive and Well”, live versions of “Bony Moronie” and The Rolling Stones’ “Jumpin’ Jack Flash”, Winter’s own “Rock & Roll”, and southern rock anthems like “Guess I’ll Go Away”, “On the Limb”, and “Rollin’ ‘Cross the Country”), true to its title, it’s this set’s blues tracks that capture Winter at his best, including a handful on which Winter is joined by his childhood hero Muddy Waters and his band (James Cotton on harmonica, Pinetop Perkins on piano, Willie “Big Eyes” Smith on drums, Bob Margolin on guitar and Charles Calmese on bass) that originally appeared on Winter’s Nothin’ but the Blues album: the shuffling, “I Done Got Over It”-sounding “Tired of Tryin'”, a solo “TV Mama” with Winter on both his silver Resonator guitar and drums, and then Winter and Waters trading vocals on “Walkin’ Thru the Park”, as well as the real thing in a live version of Guitar Slim’s “I Done Got Over It” from the subsequent tour.

That album came just after Winter played on and produced Waters’ comeback album Hard Again, one of four Waters projects (along with I’m Ready, King Bee, and Muddy “Mississippi” Waters – Live) that Winter would produce, three of which would go on to receive Grammy Awards. Years later, Winter commented: “At the time, I’d been playing more rock and roll than I really wanted to play. Working with Muddy convinced me that I could make it as a blues player”.

And that’s exactly what we hear at the start of disc four, on songs like “One Step at a Time”, Jimmy Reed’s “Honest I Do”, and the back-porch blues of “Nickel Blues” from the 1978 White, Hot & Blue album (with Edgar on piano, Pat Ramsey on harp, and Pat Rush on guitar, among others) before moving quickly through Winter’s mid-1980s releases on the Alligator Records label with “Don’t Take Advantage of Me” (Guitar Slinger), “Master Mechanic” (Serious Business), and “Mojo Boogie” (3rd Degree) and early-90s albums on Virgin Records with an “Illustrated Man” (Let Me In) featuring Dr. John on piano, and a cover of T-Bone Walker’s (another of Winter’s earliest influences, in addition to Elmore James, Hubert Sumlin, Robert Johnson, and Chuck Berry) “Hard Way” (Hey, Where’s Your Brother?). The set closes with two tracks from Winter’s 2011 Roots CD – Chuck Berry’s “Maybellene” featuring Vince Gill and “Dust My Broom” with Derek Trucks – that prove, despite the toll of 70 years, that Winter still very much has it.

Other highlights of the collection include a sweltering 18-minute reprise of “Mean Town Blues” from Live at the Fillmore East that closes out the second disc, a live “Harlem Shuffle” that includes Edgar lending a hand on both saxophone and vocals, and another take of “Highway 61 Revisited”, this one from the 1992 Bob Dylan 30th anniversary concert celebration at Madison Square Garden that saw Winter backed by a house band of G.E. Smith, Steve Cropper, Booker T. Jones, Donald “Duck” Dunn, Anton Fig, and Jim Keltner, while songs such as “Honest I Do” and 1974’s “Hurtin’ So Bad” (Saints & Sinners) – with Edgar on alto sax, piano and organ, not to mention some fine trumpet and tenor sax from two other horn players – serve as a great reminder of what Winter is capable when he chooses to soften the tone a bit.

Produced by Jerry Rappaport and executive produced by Johnny’s current guitarist and manager Paul Nelson, the set includes testimonials on Johnny from some 20 other guitarists/musicians, ranging from Gregg Allman and Carlos Santana to Billy Gibbons, Angus Young, and Pete Townshend, with whose comments we’ll close: “They’ve put Johnny Winter in a box! Not his first time in a box, but every time – he survived. This music proves a white man with white hair can really play the blues.”

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The BluesPowR Radio Hour is back!

Check out the spring edition of our BluesPowR Radio Hour, featuring new music from the likes of Tommy Castro and the Painkillers, Billy Branch & the Sons of Blues, The Robert Cray Band, Downchild, Damon Fowler, Eden Brent, Matt Schofield, Charlie Musselwhite, Joe Louis Walker, and more, plus a few classic tracks from Magic Sam and Johnny Winter with the Muddy Waters Band.

We know it’s been a while since our last show, but we think you’ll agree: this one was well worth the wait!

Playlist
I Done Got Over It – Johnny Winter w/ Muddy Waters and James Cotton
When I Cross The Mississippi – Tommy Castro and the Painkillers
Slow Moe – Billy Branch & the Sons of Blues
Due – Ursula Ricks
Good Feelings – Dan Sowerby
I Need A Woman – Downchild
Just Got to Know – Los Lobos with Robert Cray
Nobody’s Fault But Mine – The Robert Cray Band
Breaking Up Somebodies Home – Matt Schofield
Blues Overtook Me – Charlie Musselwhite
Til She’s Lovin’ Someone Else – Josh Hoyer and The Shadowboxers
Grit My Teeth – Damon Fowler
She Boom Boom Me – Lou Pride
Tendin’ to a Broken Heart – Eden Brent
Bad Luck Blues – Magic Sam
I Want The World To Know – Nick Moss Band
Sallie Mae – Ray Fuller & the Bluesrockers
I’m Gonna Walk Outside – Joe Louis Walker
Fade To Grey – Trevor Sewell

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