With The Devil You Know, Tommy Castro & the Painkillers deliver one hell of a treat

Tommy_Castro_Devil_You_Know (200x200)Having spent the past few decades toiling in the blues, San Francisco singer and guitarist Tommy Castro is something of what you might call a “devil you know” in the genre. Whether seeing him live or listening to one of his albums, fans know they can always rely on Castro to deliver a solid mix of blues, soul, and R&B sounds, including an abundance of hard-working grooves and superb lyrics.

A while back, we told you about Castro’s new, scaled-down band the Painkillers, a bit of a “devil you don’t know” to be sure, although early indications – such as the band’s 45 single “Greedy” – were that these guys were plenty impressive.

Fortunately, there’s no need to decide between the better of the two in this instance, with Castro and the band together in full force on their debut album The Devil You Know, released last week on Alligator Records. And, like the place the devil calls home, this one is a scorcher.

Joined by guests that include Tab Benoit, Marcia Ball, Joe Bonamassa, the Holmes Brothers, Samantha Fish, and Magic Dick, among others, the four-piece band tears through a baker’s dozen of high intensity, groove-filled tracks, including nine originals either penned or co-written by Castro.

????????It all kicks off with the devilishly good title track – a tough-as-nails guitar-driven rocker with such lyrics as “the devil that I know, is a cheater and a liar/ now why would I go jumpin’, from the pan into the fire?/ but if I do, you better get on your knees and pray/ when you dance with the devil, you only have hell to pay” – that sets the stage magnificently for what’s to come, from the slick uptempo R&B grooves – including some from Robert Cray keyboardist Jim Pugh on organ – of the soulful rocker “Second Mind”, all the way to the greasy closer “Greedy”, the lyrics of which present a scathing commentary on the evils of corporate excess.

Joe Bonamassa joins on guitar for a shuffling take on Savoy Brown’s “I’m Tired”, with other covers including the album’s breeziest number in J.B. Lenoir’s “The Whale Have Swallowed Me” – a swaying duet with R&B legend Johnnie Taylor’s youngest daughter Tasha Taylor that also features some gritty guitar and funky keyboards; a soulful, J. Geils-style work-up on southern rockers Wet Willie’s “Keep on Smilin'”; and a “Mojo Hannah” (the Neville Brothers, Marvin Gaye) with a Dr. John-ish twist, thanks in part to the addition of Marcia Ball on both piano and vocals.

“Center of Attention” is an unrelenting, in-your-face affair, while Alligator labelmates the Holmes Brothers lend some background vocals, and J. Geils Band’s Magic Dick some harmonica, for a similarly hard-driving “Two Steps Forward”. Castro’s rapping vocals on “She Wanted to Give It to Me” help give that track a bit of a J. Geils sound as well, with Tab Benoit adding some Cajun seasoning on both vocals and guitar for a mighty “When I Cross the Mississippi” – also featuring the great Mike Finnigan (Phantom Blues Band) on organ – and Samantha Fish sharing vocals with Castro on the rocking “Medicine Woman”.

The album closes on the somewhat familiar sounds of the band’s earlier singles, the pleasantly hypnotic “That’s All I Got” and of course “Greedy”, but not before making one hell of an impression. Castro’s vocals here are at perhaps their grittiest and most soulful ever, combined with some superb guitar; even the longest and most loyal of the larger Tommy Castro Band fans will have to appreciate – and no doubt be delighted by – the tightness and resulting sound of this fantastic foursome.

Like the old saying from which its title derives, The Devil You Know is better – than just about anything else you’ve heard lately, including from Castro himself. Certain to be among the, if not the, year’s best, The Devil You Know is one you’re going to want to stick with for a mighty long time.

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Ben Harper and Charlie Musselwhite Get Up for Grammy win

Gary Clark Jr. wins for best traditional R&B performance

BH_CM_get_up (2)Moments after performing “I’m In I’m Out & I’m Gone” from their Get Up! CD during tonight’s Grammy Awards pre-telecast, Ben Harper and Charlie Musselwhite got back up to the stage to accept this year’s award for blues album of the year, winning out over some fierce competition in James Cotton, Joe Bonamassa and Beth Hart, Bobby Rush, and a bunch of Musselwhite’s fellow harmonica players on the tribute album Remembering Little Walter.

Among other bluesy nominees, Gary Clark Jr. also picked an award – his first – for Best Traditional R&B Performance for “Please Come Home”.

Congratulations to all of this year’s winners and nominees!

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Nowhere but up for Sweden’s Julia & The Basement Tapes

Julia_Basement_TapesWith more than 250 acts from around the world converging on Memphis over the next few days for the annual International Blues Challenge (IBC), we’re looking forward to hearing about – and hopefully seeing a few videos from – some of the many talented blues individuals and bands involved in the competition. One group not competing this time around, but who we’d be surprised not to see at the IBCs at some point in the coming years is a band out of Sweden called Julia & The Basement Tapes.

Formed in late 2012, the four-piece ensemble of just-turned or soon-to-be twentysomethings has already put out an impressive 4-song EP, The Basement Sessions, that includes three original tracks plus a rocking cover of “Crossroads”. Vocalist Julia Tinglöf is bound to draw comparisons to current and past blues sirens such as Samantha Fish, Dana Fuchs, Joanne Shaw Taylor, and Janis Joplin, while guitarist Johan Borgh contributes some stellar guitar, including a bit of Derek Trucks-like slide, with Samuel Söderberg and Johannes Sidenqvist adding rhythm on bass and drums respectively.

Every song here is a good one in its own way, from the deep, seductive grooves and passionate vocals of the opening “Some Color” to Borgh’s scorching guitar solos on “Crossroads”, but if you only have time to sample some of the music from the EP, we might suggest you start with the money track, a Joplin-ish diddy called “Money” that you can find on both the band’s SoundCloud and YouTube pages (where you can also watch the band performing a few other originals along with covers like Elmore James’ “The Sky is Crying” and Freddie King’s “Going Down”). And then come back to listen to the rest.

If you like what you hear (and we’re betting you will), you’ll be pleased to know that the band is already writing songs for an album they expect to release later this year, which, if it sounds as good as their EP, may be all that this talented band needs to bring it up out of the basement and onto the world stage. Expect big things from this outfit; we certainly do.

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Rediscover the magic of Magic Sam on Live at the Avant Garde

Last week, we told you about Royal Southern Brotherhood’s latest, the live Songs from the Road CD/DVD set Live in Germany, recorded in Bonn in the fall of 2012. Here’s another terrific “new” live album – albeit of a much more traditional variety – that has all the trappings of an instant classic.

Recorded in June 1968 in Milwaukee, Delmark Records’ Live at the Avant Garde captures the great singer and guitarist Magic Sam Maghett at perhaps the pinnacle of his career, just one year after the release of his breakout West Side Soul album, still regarded as one of the seminal recordings of the blues. Unfortunately for us all, Sam’s life would be cut entirely too short when he died of a heart attack in December of the following year, leaving only one other studio album (1968’s Black Magic), a couple of collections, and a few posthumous live recordings to remember him by.

Magic_Sam_Avant_Garde (220x220)Joined by Robert “Big Mojo” Elem on bass and Bob Richey on drums, Live at the Avant Garde has Sam rolling through many of the tunes from his two studio albums along with a mix of covers from the likes of Muddy Waters (“Hoochie Coochie Man” and the gritty “Still a Fool”), Junior Wells (“Come On In This House”), Jimmy Rogers (“That’s All Right”), and B.B. King (the closing instrumental “Hully Gully Twist”), plus one other original in the sensational “Bad Luck Blues” with its pleading vocals, rich tempo changes, and pointed lyrics like “I’ve been down so long/ but I’m on my way back up again/ When I reach the top this time, baby/ whoa, you won’t be my friend/ you’re gonna’ wanna’ be my friend”.

Clocking in at just over a hour, the set revisits such West Side Soul gems as Junior Parker’s “Feelin’ Good” (which Sam delivers in something of a John Lee Hooker-ish fashion), Otis Rush’s “All Your Love (I Miss Loving)”, a shuffling “Don’t Want No Woman” (Don Robey) – with its own rather pointed lyrics (“You used to boss your man, a better one than I/ before I let ya’ boss me, I’d lay down and die/ I don’t want no woman, tellin’ me how to live my life/ well, I’m gonna’ leave you baby/ cuz’ I don’t want no wife”), the slow blues of B.B. King’s “I Need You So Bad”, the breezy, Sam Cooke-sounding original “That’s All I Need” and of course Jimmy McCracklin’s “Everynight Everyday”, all set off by Sam’s smooth vocals and stinging guitar work.

From Black Magic, there’s the opening cover of the Freddie King intstrumental “San-Ho-Zay” and the uptempo, Junior Wells-style original “You Belong to Me”; it’s all of course exquisite, but perhaps nowhere is Sam any better than on such numbers as the slow, smoky blues of the creeping “It’s All Your Fault Baby” (Lowell Fulson) off Black Magic, the aforementioned “That’s All Right”, “Bad Luck Blues”, and “Everynight Everyday”, and the boogeying instrumental “Lookin’ Good,” another of the tunes from his West Side Soul.

Almost 50 years after his death, Magic Sam has again proven his nickname true, providing us with yet another seminal recording in Live at the Avant Garde.

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Royal Southern Brotherhood keeps rockin’ with live two-disc set

RSB_live_coverWith members whose surnames include Allman, Neville and Zito, it’s no surprise that Royal Southern Brotherhood‘s 2012 self-titled debut album was such a standout. After some pretty terrific solo releases from each of the principals (Cyril Neville‘s Magic Honey, Mike Zito‘s Gone to Texas, and Devon Allman‘s Turquoise) earlier in the year, the band – which also includes Charlie Wooton on bass and Yonrico Scott on drums – closed 2013 with what just may be the strongest of the projects yet, in the form of a live CD/DVD set.

Like each of the previous installments in Ruf Records’ popular Songs from the Road series, Royal Southern Brotherhood’s Live in Germany does an excellent job capturing the band live and in action, working through all but two of the songs from the band’s first album. Kicking off on the reggae-tinged “Fired Up!” that features Neville on main vocals as well as some superb guitar work from Allman, the band moves to the slow, Zito-led Southern rocker “Hurts My Heart”. As on the album, Neville, Zito and Allman share on lead and supporting vocals throughout the program, creating a depth and diversity of sound that’s flat-out unrivaled.

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In fact, it’s Allman’s turn on the mic for the hard-driving “Gotta Keep Rockin'” that follows, before switching back to Neville and then again Allman, respectively, for the softer “Moonlight Over the Mississippi” and “Left My Heart in Memphis”. A gritty, 13-minute take on “Fire on the Mountain” alone makes this set well worth the price of admission, with the Neville-led “Sweet Jelly Donut” also serving as a rather nice treat. Recorded at Harmonie in Bonn, Germany, in October 2012, the show also includes performances of “Ways About You”, “New Horizons”, and “All Around the World” from the album debut before the band closes with a superb cover of the Rolling Stones’ “Gimme Shelter”.

Though it adds only one additional track – albeit a mighty strong one – beyond the CD in the form of a rocking, Allman- and Zito-sung cover of B.B. King’s “Sweet Little Angel”, the hour and 13 minute, Blues Music Award-nominated DVD provides a nice chance to observe further the intricacies of the band in action, including, for example, Allman’s inspired guitar playing on “Hurts My Heart” and the passion with which Neville sings such tracks as “Moonlight Over the Mississippi”. Also included are a 10-minute interview featuring an unusual but fun “unplugged” performance of “Fired Up!” from Allman, Neville and Zito and a separate bass and drum solo track from Wooton and Scott.

It’s hard to imagine there’s anyone not already familiar with this uber-talented band, but this set pretty much ensures that won’t remain the case much longer. A Blues Music Award nominee for DVD of the year, there’s a good chance these guys have just what it will take to capture that crown during the May awards, even up against such deserving projects as Joe Bonamassa’s An Acoustic Evening at the Vienna Opera House.

But don’t just take our word for it; instead, do as Neville himself invites on the band’s performance of “New Horizons” and “come on along with RSB now”. You’ll be damn glad you did.

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All routes lead to Lancaster for city’s inaugural Roots & Blues festival

There’s an old saying from blues great Willie Dixon that “the blues are the roots and the other musics are the fruits”. Regardless of whether you happen to personally agree with that statement, you can rest assured that there’ll be plenty of roots music to take in at this new eastern Pennsylvania  festival.

LRB poster low rez (181x280)We have to admit that we were pretty disappointed when we saw the news a few weeks back that there will be no 2014 offering of the Chesapeake Bay Blues Festival, always one of our favorites. But that news was tempered somewhat by our discovery of a new festival here in the northeast, which, unlike the Annapolis event and many others here in this region of the country, doesn’t even require that you wait until spring or summer for it, taking place in just a little more than a month smack dab in the middle of Amish country in Lancaster, PA.

In its initial year, the Lancaster Roots & Blues Festival features an impressive two nights of music (Friday, February 21st and Saturday, February 22nd) on nine stages across five different venues. What first caught our eye about this festival was the inclusion of Saturday night headliner Johnny Winter and James Cotton, but there’s plenty of other blues on the bill as well, including such names as Chris Thomas King, Sugar Ray & the Bluetones, the Heritage Blues OrchestraSamantha FishLonnie ShieldsBig Joe and the DynaflowsSteve Guyger and the ExcellosTom Principato, Italy’s Gennaro Porcelli, and Clarence Spady, among others. Add to that others like Edgar Winter, Loudon Wainwright III, Bill Wharton the Sauce Boss, a rare reunion of ’80s rockers Tommy Conwell & the Young Rumblers, and an eclectic mix of soul, zydeco, country, folk, jazz, reggae, indie, and swing acts, and you have the makings of what promises to be a pretty entertaining weekend.

If anything, this festival may actually offer a bit too much in the way of its line-up: we’re racking our brains trying to figure out how we might catch some of Johnny Winter and James Cotton on the Robert Johnson Stage, Big Joe and the Dynaflows in the Grand Salon, and Steve Guyger and the Excellos at the Federal Taphouse – all scheduled during the 10 p.m. hour on Saturday night. And that’s not even considering that Dr. Harmonica and Rockett 88 will be playing in the Lizard Lounge at 10:45 p.m. Fortunately, we’ll be able to catch Clarence Spady – also slotted for a 10 p.m. Saturday performance in Steinman Hall – when he plays the previous evening, but clearly, some tough decisions are going to need to be made by blues fans throughout the weekend, presenting a challenging situation for us but most likely a good sign for festival organizers, who – in regards to the scheduling of the event – hopefully haven’t jinxed anything by noting on their successful Kickstarter project page that no snow storms have affected the Lancaster region on this weekend for at least the past 30 years. But, if it does snow, the festival will still go on, with all of the stages located indoors and within walking distance of one another.

The drive for us to get to this one won’t be much shorter than Annapolis (where the Chesapeake Bay Blues Festival is held), but something tells us that the rewards will be just as fruitful. Hope to see you there!

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Charlie Musselwhite preaches the blues on Juke Joint Chapel

Musselwhite_Juke_Joint_Chapel (220x220)It’s been one hell of a year for blues harmonica journeyman Charlie Musselwhite. With two albums recently nominated in both the coming year’s Grammy and Blues Music awards, the Mississippi-born Musselwhite is showing no sign of letting up just yet, with his newest project Juke Joint Chapel (Henrietta Records) set for release Tuesday.

That of course doesn’t leave a whole lot of time to track down a copy to stuff in your favorite blues lover’s stocking (or your own), but take it from us that this one is every bit worth the trip out, even for those of you who might have thought you were done with your shopping.

Recorded at the Juke Joint Chapel of Clarksdale, Mississippi’s Shack Up Inn, the 12-song collection captures Musselwhite at what many consider to be his best: live, rolling through a mix of such blues classics as Little Walter’s “It Ain’t Right”, Eddie Taylor’s “Bad Boy”, Billy Boy Arnold’s “Gone Too Long”, Shakey Jake Harris’ “Roll Your Money Maker”, and the Duke Pearson instrumental “Cristo Redentor”, along with several of Musselwhite’s own classics like “Blues Overtook Me”, “Blues Why Do You Worry Me?”, and the rocking, John Lee Hooker-inspired boogie “River Hip Mama”. Musselwhite’s playing is, as usual, inspired, ranging from the playful (such as the “C.C. Rider” riffs he sneaks into the opening solo of “Bad Boy”) to the fierce attacks of “Strange Land” to the mellow tones of the closing “Cristo Redentor”.

????????Matt Stubbs contributes some terrific work on guitar, with Mike Phillips and June Core completing the band on bass and drums, respectively, helping to give the album an old-style, Paul Butterfield kind of sound. Indeed, every track here is a good one, virtually ensuring that you’ll be seeing Musselwhite’s name among blues awards nominees again next year.

Here’s one Christmas Eve service blues faithful are going to want to be sure not to miss!

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Ursula Ricks offers some down-home soul-blues on My Street

Okay, we admit it: we hadn’t really heard much about soul/blues singer Ursula Ricks either before receiving a copy of her debut album My Street (Severn Records), despite having spent quite a few years bouncing around the same Baltimore/D.C. suburbs where Ricks has been performing now for some 20 years. But hers is a name we won’t be forgetting anytime soon, with Ricks turning out one of the year’s most pleasant surprises in My Street.

ursula_ricks_my_street (220x199)The first thing that strikes you about Ricks is her deep, sandpapery voice, which ranges from the tough, gritty approach of the swampy opener “Tobacco Road” – featuring The Fabulous Thunderbirds’ Kim Wilson on harmonica – to the slow, passion-filled R&B vocals of the “Sweet Tenderness” that follows.

From there, Ricks – backed by a house band that includes Wilson’s T-birds bandmate Johnny Moeller on guitar – takes things a little deeper with a funky cover of Bobby Rush’s “Mary Jane”, which also sets the stage quite nicely for the album’s groovy title track, featuring some particularly splendid work from Kevin Anker on keyboards.

The addition of strings as well as the guitar of special guest “Monster” Mike Welch combine with Ricks’ strong vocals and lyrics (such as “called a liar, blamed for theft, too many days with nothin’ left”) to make the haunting “Due” one of the album’s very best tracks, with Welch also staying on for the slow-grooving “Right Now”.

With its Paul Pena-like sound and lyrics, “The New Trend” is a breezy tune accompanied by a serious message, before Ricks goes back into R&B mode with the steamy, strings- and horn-laced grooves of “Make Me Blue”, a soulful cover of Curtis Mayfield’s “Just a Little Bit of Love”, and the greasy closer “What You Judge”.

Blending the blues, soul, R&B, and funk, Ricks offers a unique and captivating sound that might best be described as a cross between Shakura S’Aida and Jonny Lang, with our sole complaint about the album being that it includes only ten songs.

When it comes to picking up a copy of My Street, we can’t think of any better way to put it than Ricks herself sings on one of these terrific tracks: “Get up, get out, and do it right now”.

lou_pride_aint_no_more_love (220x192)And if you’ve got room for a bit more soul-blues, you might also check out another new release from Severn, the final album from the late Lou Pride entitled Ain’t No More Love in This House. Recorded just before Pride’s death in June of 2012, the album includes four original tracks that are among the disc’s strongest – including the swaying title track, the funky, horn-laced “She Boom Boom Me” featuring some particularly inspired playing from guitarist Johnny Moeller, the soft soul ballad “We Can Do What We Want” with Caleb Green accompanying on vocals, and the soulful, swinging “Love Come Got Me”. Combined with such covers as a groovy Sam Cooke-sounding take on “I Gotta Move On Up” (Luther Allison), the funky creeper “I Didn’t Take Your Woman” (reversing genders on the Ann Peebles classic “I Didn’t Take Your Man”), an R&B version of the reggae number “Never”, and a soulful adaptation of the 1980s Simply Red tune “Holding Back the Years”, Ain’t No More Love in This House is as fine and special a farewell as one can possibly imagine.

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Joanne Shaw Taylor lets it burn on Songs from the Road live CD/DVD set

JST_songs_from_road (220x220)We’ve written here a few times before about the British-born, now U.S.-based blues rocker Joanne Shaw Taylor.

And we’ve also told you about Ruf Records’ popular Songs from the Road series, including a recent set from fellow Brit guitar slinger Oli Brown.

So it shouldn’t come as all that much of a surprise that you get a pretty terrific result when you put the two together in one project, as Ruf has done quite nicely with Taylor’s Songs from the Road CD/DVD set, recorded at London’s The Borderline club earlier this year.

Featuring 11 tracks ranging from the breezy and soft “Beautifully Broken” and “Diamonds in the Dirt” to the driving “Tied and Bound” and playfully funky “Kiss the Ground Goodbye” – all showcasing Shaw’s husky vocals and thick guitar, the CD presents live versions of songs from all three of Taylor’s studio albums, beginning with a trio of cuts off Taylor’s latest, Almost Always Never. The stinging opener “Soul Station” is followed by a “Tied and Bound” that includes some particularly intense guitar solos from Taylor before the band softens the tone a bit with “Beautifully Broken”.

JSTstill1From there, Taylor reaches back to her debut album White Sugar with a powerful, ten-minute take on “Watch ‘Em Burn”, then moving to the title track from her sophomore project Diamonds in the Dirt.

Jimi Hendrix’s “Manic Depression” is one of two cover songs on the CD (mixed and produced by the talented Jim Gaines), along with the slow, smoky blues of Frankie Miller’s “Jealousy”, a studio version of which can be heard on Almost Always Never.

Taylor returns to her 2009 White Sugar album for both “Kiss the Ground Goodbye” and the tender, catchy “Just Another Word”, shifting back to Diamonds for the rocking closer “Jump That Train” before returning with an encore in the form of the smoldering lead track from White Sugar, “Going Home”. It’s either somewhat fortuitous or extremely well-planned that this same song which for so many served as the introduction to Taylor (by virtue of it appearing first on her debut album) happens to be the last track they hear here, providing a terrific reminder of just how far Taylor has come in short time.

The 14-song DVD adds a handful of other favorites, largely from Taylor’s most recent album – represented through the breezy “You Should Stay, I Should Go”, heartfelt “Almost Always Never”, and quiet and sensitive “Lose Myself to Loving You” – but also including Diamonds‘ gritty “Let it Burn” and the slow blues of White Sugar‘s “Time Has Come”, leaving out only “Manic Depression” from the CD.

In addition to longer and more frequent solos from Taylor than you’ll hear on her albums, this live set also provides the opportunity to see the energy and passion with which the somewhat elusive (at least for those of us in Pittsburgh) Taylor and her band, particularly bassist Joseph Veloz, perform.

Like most of the other sets in the Ruf series, this Songs from the Road is one well worth checking out.

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Coming up on the Crossroads; double DVD, CD sets capture some of world’s best guitarists at Clapton’s fourth Crossroads festival

Crossroads_Festival_cover (220x220)Having been fortunate enough to attend both nights of Eric Clapton‘s Crossroads Guitar Festival this spring, we’ve been eagerly awaiting the highlights DVD that customarily follows, scheduled for release next Tuesday. For the first time, some of the music will also be available as a two-CD set, a nice thing to have, at least until you get the chance to watch the two DVDs, which contain all 29 songs from the CDs plus 16 others, among them, Booker T., Steve Cropper, Keb’ Mo’, Blake Mills, Matt “Guitar” Murphy and Albert Lee performing Albert King’s “Born Under a Bad Sign”, Clapton and Andy Fairweather Low on Low’s “Spider Jiving”, Robert Cray, B.B. King, Clapton, and Jimmie Vaughan on “Everyday I Have the Blues”, Clapton with Kurt Rosenwinkel on Tommy Johnson’s “Big Road Blues”, Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’ joining up for “Walkin’ Blues”, and Jeff Beck and Beth Hart on Freddie King’s “Going Down”.

Looking back over our notes from the festival, we have to say that the folks at Rhino Records did a nearly perfect job of capturing all of the weekend’s biggest moments, from that early offering of “Born Under a Bad Sign” and the “Green Onions” that followed, John Mayer and Keith Urban‘s take on The Beatles’ “Don’t Let Me Down”, a rare solo acoustic performance from Gary Clark Jr. with “Next Door Neighbor Blues”, and Buddy Guy, Robert Randolph, and Quinn Sullivan on “Damn Right, I’ve Got the Blues”, to Clapton joining the Allman Brothers Band for “Why Does Love Got to Be So Sad”, John Mayer and Doyle Bramhall II doing Bramhall’s father’s “Change It” (written for Stevie Ray Vaughan), Gregg Allman, Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks with an acoustic cover of Neil Young’s “The Needle and the Damage Done”, Vince Gill, Keith Urban and Albert Lee taking on the Rolling Stones’ “Tumbling Dice”, Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’ on both “Walkin’ Blues” and “Diving Duck Blues”, Clapton and Keith Richards on “Key to the Highway”, Andy Fairweather Low and Clapton on “Gin House Blues”, Beck and Hart’s “Going Down”, and Clapton’s rousing “Got to Get Better in a Little While”, in addition to appearances from Sonny Landreth, Earl Klugh, and Los Lobos, among others.

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Keith Richards and Eric Clapton

From the blues perspective, there were of course several other songs we would have loved to also see captured on the DVD, including the festival opening “Drifting Blues” from Clapton; Cray and King trading vocals on “Sweet Sixteen”; Taj Mahal both on harmonica and sharing vocals with Gregg Allman on an Allman Brothers Band performance of “Statesboro Blues” that also included Los Lobos guitarists David Hidalgo and Cesar Rosas; Guy, Randolph and Sullivan with “Someone Else is Steppin’ In”; Keb’ Mo’ and Taj Mahal with “That’s Alright”; and Beck and Hart’s cover of “I Ain’t Superstitious”, but one can hardly complain when so many of these artists are already pretty fairly represented on the DVD. Perhaps the most disappointing omission, however, is that of Los Lobos with Robert Cray on vocals for Jimmy McCracklin’s soulful Stax-era “Just Got to Know”, over which the producers apparently instead chose the band’s “I Just Got to Let You Know”, also featuring Cray (although we’d be lying if we said that part of us isn’t secretly hoping it’s a mislabelled track and that the McCracklin cover shows up instead).

Either way, it looks like this Crossroads DVD (and CD) set will be another well worth adding to your collection, with plenty of good stuff to see and hear.

And for those looking to either catch up to the 2013 edition or revisit some favorite performances from past years’ festivals, we can’t think of a better way to get in the mood for next week’s Crossroads releases than by tuning in to Palladia this weekend, where they’ll be running highlights from Clapton’s 2004, 2007, and 2010 festivals throughout both Saturday and Sunday.

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