Ben Harper, Charlie Musselwhite cool as all get-out on Get Up!

It may just be that we aren’t all that hip, but we have to admit we’ve never paid a whole lot of attention to Ben Harper.

But when we heard last year that Harper was teaming with blues harmonica master Charlie Musselwhite on an early 2013 release, we were nonetheless intrigued.

Now, after hearing the duo’s Get Up! (out today on Stax Records/Concord Music Group), we’re even more so.

Musselwhite at 2011 Heritage Music BluesFest

Musselwhite at 2011 Heritage Music BluesFest

Having first met during a 1997 studio session for John Lee Hooker (after which the blues legend encouraged the two to continue to work together), West Coast guitarist-singer Harper and Mississippi-born Musselwhite (pictured here at the 2011 Heritage Music Blues Fest) have been looking to record this album for more than a decade, and we’re pretty sure that Hooker would be damn pleased with the result. Harper’s 12th studio album, Get Up! is a superb – and dare we say, hip – collection of ten original tracks ranging from the sensitive R&B-style vocals, acoustic guitar, and harmonica of “You Found Another Lover (I Lost Another Friend)” and haunting war anthem “I Ride at Dawn” to the defiant, hard-driving electric blues of “I Don’t Believe a Word You Say”.

Though not all that drastically different from the gritty harmonica and guitar sound we’ve heard from the likes of Moreland and Arbuckle in recent years, Get Up! perhaps brings things one step closer to the mainstream, finding the pair backed by a band of guitar, bass, and drums, with Harper’s vocals providing just the right amount of finesse and soul to make songs such as the slow, “Sitting on Top of the World”-like country blues of the closing “All That Matters Now” every bit as enjoyable as the no-holds-barred, manic vocals and guitar of “Blood Side Out” or shuffling rocker “I’m In I’m Out and I’m Gone,” which according to Harper includes “one of the greatest harmonica solos in history.”

Produced by Harper, who also wrote or co-wrote each of the songs in addition to providing guitar, slide, and vocals, the album opens on the relatively reserved, Robert Johnson-style “Don’t Look Twice” with falsetto vocals before moving into the aforementioned “I’m In I’m Out and I’m Gone” and the soulful acoustic gospel of a Bob Dylan-ish “We Can’t End This Way,” complete with hand-clapping and background singers, making the hard-hitting chorus and instrumentation of “I Don’t Believe a Word You Say” that follows all that much more abrupt and powerful. A few songs later comes the New Orleans-flavored funk of “She Got Kick,” buoyed by some lively piano, and that’s not even mentioning the gifted songwriting you’ll hear throughout the project, which includes such insightful gems as “You know it’s bad, when the ceiling says to the floor: I’ll trade you places, I can’t take it up here no more” (“Don’t Look Twice”); “Don’t know what to do without you, don’t know what to do with you/used to look at you with wonder, now I look at you and wonder” (“I Don’t Believe a Word You Say”); and “It’s been a long hard day, and a long hard night/been a hard year, it’s been a hard life” (“All That Matters Now”).

All told, Get Up! is a memorable and eclectic collaboration from two longtime friends that may just bring out the best from both, and the kind of blues that parents and children (at least the hip ones) alike can appreciate.

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Blues Lyrics of the Week: Check Your Ego at the Door

This may not be quite what blues guitar great Luther Allison had in mind when he said “Leave your ego, play the music, love the people,” but here’s one we’ve been enjoying from John Lee Hooker, Jr., and a Polish band called Daddy’s Cash, from their That’s What the Blues is All About collaboration.

“I got this drama, all around me
and it’s really crampin’ my style, oh.
I’m not surprised, no, no –
it’s been goin’ on for quite a while.
It’s time to let folks know
they gotta’ let it go,
If they wanna be in my show,
they got to check that, ego at the door…

You see pride goes before destruction,
it’ll make you fall or die.
If we would only humble ourselves,
we could all touch the sky.
You see there’s only room for one ego,
and that room belongs to me.
So I’m gonna let folks know
they gotta’ let it go,
If they wanna be in my show,
you got to check that, oh-oh-oh, ego at the door.”
Check Your Ego at the Door, John Lee Hooker, Jr.

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The year in re-blues, part 2: presenting the BluesPowR Radio Hour

Just before the new year, you may recall we took a quick look back at some of the best of 2012. But since words themselves don’t always do justice to the great new music we heard and wrote about during the past year – and in celebration of The BluesPowR Blog’s recent three-year anniversary – we’re pleased to bring you a little something new for 2013: The BluesPowR Radio Hour!

The inaugural edition of the show highlights some of the best music of 2012, including songs from such legends as Buddy Guy, Muddy Waters, and Taj Mahal, to rising stars like Oli Brown and Joanne Shaw Taylor, as well as segments devoted to second generation bluesmen and women helping to keep the music alive as well as our popular Blues Lyrics of the Week feature.

So grab your favorite beverage, turn on the sound, and sit back and enjoy this special two-hour edition of our new BluesPowR Radio Hour!

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San Fran harp player Big Bones helps remember Paul Pena with some vintage blues by the Bay

About a decade back during a visit to the world-famous Biscuits & Blues club in San Francisco (which, true to its name, offers up some tasty food as well as music), we picked up a Joe Louis Walker-produced CD compilation entitled Mean Street Blues featuring tracks from some of San Francisco’s top blues talents, including Tommy CastroAlvin Youngblood HartSista MonicaLavay Smith & Her Rod Hot Skillet Lickers, and Mark Hummel, to name just a few, with several of the songs (Hart’s and Hummel’s among them) having been recorded during performances at the blues club. Also included in that group was a catchy tune from a local harmonica player named Big Bones, who we had the good fortune of hearing in person at the club a few years later during a birthday celebration for Muddy Waters drummer Francis Clay.

After checking out a bit more of Big Bones’ music in the form of his early 2003 CD So Low, we discovered that Bones was also offering a recording from a 1991 show he did at the Freight and Salvage Coffee House in Berkeley, California, with blind singer-guitarist Paul Pena, who some may recognize as the writer of the Steve Miller Band hit “Jet Airliner” (here‘s Pena singing the tune on the Conan O’Brien show in 2001) or perhaps as the subject of the Genghis Blues film documenting Pena’s participation in a Tuvan throat singing competition. Pena was also an accomplished blues musician, having played with T-Bone Walker‘s band for several years, as well as the likes of B.B. King and Bonnie Raitt, and recorded two quite impressive albums of his own in Paul Pena and New Train, with songs like “Something to Make You Happy” and “Gonna Move” later being covered by the likes of the Derek Trucks BandSusan Tedeschi, and Taylor Hicks in addition to Miller’s success with “Jet Airliner.”

Needless to say, the combination of Big Bones and Pena on the Freight and Salvage-set Giant Killers CD makes for one hugely enjoyable recording – in fact, one of our favorites – as they (also joined by Alvin Youngblood Hart on mandolin) roll through such tunes as “Hangin’ Around Foolin’ Around” (the first of the songs we heard from Bones on that San Francisco compilation) and the harmonica-driven, mostly instrumental “Folk Music,” Robert Johnson‘s “Terraplane Blues” and “Hellhound on My Trail,” Lightnin’ Hopkins‘ “Bring Me My Shotgun,” Jimmy Reed‘s “Bright Lights,” Charley Patton‘s “Tom Rushen Blues,” and the Mississippi Sheiks‘ “Sitting on Top of the World.” So we were of course delighted when Bones emailed us recently to let us know that more music from Pena, Big Bones, and Hart is now available on a new CD entitled Paul Pena with Delta by the Bay, from a performance at the Freight and Salvage recorded a year and a half after the show captured on Giant Killers.

Although there is a bit of overlap between the songs you’ll hear on the two sets (with “Folk Music,” “Tom Rushen Blues,” “Sitting on Top of the World,” “Swing Low Sweet Cadillac” and Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee‘s “Hole in the Wall” all found on both CDs), we’re not complaining – all are fine songs and work just as well with the five new tracks on Delta by the Bay as they did on Giant Killers.

penaDBTBThe new album has Pena starting the night solo on the folksy “Taking Your Love Down,” and already, it’s a pleasure to hear Pena’s deep, nasaly voice again. From there, he moves to a song from “one of my very good friends and, in my opinion, probably the greatest lyricist of our time” Jackson Browne with “Our Lady of the Well,” allowing Pena to show the more sensitive side of his vocals, before digging into the first of the bluesier numbers in Big Joe Williams‘ “Brother James.”

Things only get better from there, as Pena welcomes Big Bones and Hart to the stage, introducing the set-up as “an instrumentation that used to be used a long time ago, back when the blues were just developing back in the deltas of Mississippi…We’re gonna’ try to present you with the kind of sound they used to get back then without all the scud and everything that you get from an old 78 record,” and then proceeding to do just that with a downright beautiful rendition of Patton’s “Tom Rushen Blues” that features some terrific playing from all.

The upbeat, harmonica-driven instrumental “Folk Music” follows, with Bones taking over on lead vocals for several songs, and Pena and Hart providing some nice call-and-response, backing and harmony vocals on tracks like “Hole in the Wall” and one of the most soulful versions of “Sitting on Top of the World” you’ll likely ever hear. Bones’ deep vocals also work quite well on the slow blues of “This Road” before Pena takes back the mic for a non-boozy adaptation of Peetie Wheatstraw‘s “More Good Whiskey” in a heartfelt “Good Love Will Come Back to Me” and a closing “Swing Low Sweet Cadillac” that allows you to hear the deepest registers in Pena’s voice.

If you haven’t already gathered, there’s lots to like about this project: in addition to offering up some tight and highly entertaining playing, the respect and admiration these three phenomenal blues talents display for one another is impressive, with Pena at one point acknowledging Bones as “the number one harp player in the Bay area” and Bones returning the compliment by describing Pena as “one of the veterans of the blues…a man that’s synonymous (with the blues) everywhere, and right here especially at the Freight and Salvage.” On behalf of blues fans everywhere, thanks to Bones for helping to keep the music and legacy of Paul Pena alive.

Currently, the CD is only available in MP3 form on Big Bones’ (who also performs in a much more funkified fashion under his real name of PJ Norris) website, where you can also find the Giant Killers and Bones’ own So Low CDs.

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Blues Lyrics of the Week: Tired of Bluesmen Cryin’

Here’s one we’ve been meaning to get to for a while, the title track off bluesman Tas Cru‘s latest CD. Inspired by a comment from a young blues fan who “noted that she likes the blues but gets weary of bluesmen crying about all of their misfortunes,” it’s a hard-driving number featuring Cru’s famous Tejano cigar box slide along with some rather tongue-in-cheek lyrics, but we’re not at all tired of it.

Tas_Cru_TOBC (200x200)Plus, we have to say we really dig the album’s cover!

“I’m tired of bluesmen cryin’
just ’cause some woman left them cold.
So tired of bluesmen cryin’
just because some woman left them cold.
I’m sick of all that cryin’ ’bout losin’ everything they own.

My baby, she don’t love me,
tears be rollin’ down my face.
My baby, she don’t love me,
no tears be runnin’ down my face.
I got me nine or ten more women
just linin’ up to take her place…

You say what about the children,
who’s gonna’ feed that family?
Gotta’ find some dadda –
ain’t but one child lookin’ like me.

So tired of bluesmen cryin’
just ’cause some woman left them cold.
Yea, I’m sick of all that cryin’ ’bout losin’ everything they own.
Yea, I’m tired of bluesmen cryin’ about breakin’ up their happy home.
(I’m tired of it all)
Tired of bluesmen cryin’ just because their woman’s gone.
I’m tired of bluesmen cryin’ ’cause their woman is gone.”
– Tired of Bluesmen Cryin’, Tas Cru

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Blues Lyrics of the Week: The Blues Rolls On

Another year may be passed, but Elvin Bishop sure wasn’t fooling around when it came to writing the lyrics of this song, the title track off his 2008 The Blues Rolls On

“The blues is just a blessin’ from a long time ago,
a thing people can feel deep down in their soul.
It was here before we were born,
it’ll be here when we’re gone.
It’s real life in a song –
the blues rolls on…

Now when I was just a young boy,
I went crazy for the sound.
Would keep on diggin’ the blues
’til my moustache dragged the ground.
It’ll be here from now on,
yea, the groove is too strong –
the blues rolls on.”
– The Blues Rolls On, Elvin Bishop

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As Christmas approaches, some Ho! Ho! Hoey for blues fans

This summer, we told you about a Kickstarter campaign from rock guitarist Gary Hoey, who you may recall was seeking funds for an album of all blues songs. Having achieved 135% funding for the project, it’s been more a question of when than whether the album would get done, the answer to which we’re happy to report is now, in the form of Deja Blues (Wazoo Music Group).

We must admit that we haven’t listened to all that much Hoey since our days on college radio (where we probably played more than our share of Hoey’s mega-hit “Hocus Pocus”), in part perhaps because Hoey hasn’t focused a whole lot on blues, tending to be much more associated with surf-rock and other flashy, often instrumental, guitar displays, in addition to having made somewhat of a name for himself with his Ho! Ho! Hoey series of Christmas albums.

That said, Hoey has untapped a mostly new direction for himself with Deja Blue, with sounds that rival the likes of Joe Bonamassa, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Gary Moore, and Sonny Landreth, among others.

The opening “Boss You Around” captures nicely the soul-filled playing and effects that have helped make Hoey famous, combined with some effective organ and coarse, ZZ Top-style vocals, both also provided by Hoey (accompanied throughout the album by only Matt Scurfield on drums in addition to a few special guests). One of those guests appears on the boogeying “Boot Mill Blues” that follows, with James Montgomery providing some gritty harmonica to complement Hoey’s partially distorted vocals and rich guitar work.

“Almost Over You” features Jon Butcher on guitar and is one of several fine slow blues numbers you’ll find here, along with the Joe Bonamassa-ish “Stranger” and the simmering title track – the album’s sole instrumental – before Hoey is joined by Frank Hannon on slide guitar for a driving “Got to Believe” that’s part Sonny Landreth, part 80s rock.

The swinging “She’s Walking” rounds out the guest appearances, with Johnny A. this time on slide, even though Hoey clearly doesn’t need any help in that department, as proven by his own Derek Trucks-like slide work on the catchy “Hold Your Head Up High” that closes the album.

In addition to eight originals, Deja Blues also includes covers of two songs with which most blues guitar fans will be familiar: a spirited and youthful take on the Don Nix classic “Going Down” (Freddie King, Peter Green) and a fiery version of Albert King’s “Born Under a Bad Sign.”

A splendid foray into the blues for Hoey, this may be one of the most intriguing blues releases of the year – and a perfect one for Santa’s elves to think about including in the stocking of their favorite blues fan(s).

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Blues Lyrics of the Week: Thank You for Giving Me the Blues

With Thanksgiving right around the corner, and some big name blues acts coming to town in the days just prior (Tommy Castro and his new band the Painkillers will be playing Moondog’s Tuesday night, while the King of the Blues himself, B.B. Kingwill grace the Benedum Center stage on Thanksgiving eve), there’s a whole lot to be thankful for, not the least of which is the music that keeps the readers of this blog going in both good times and bad.

Co-written by Grady ChampionZac Harmon and Christopher Troy, this grittily soulful, Blues Music Award-nominated song off Champion’s Dreamin’ album combines some pretty impressive guitar work with a bit of testifying we can all appreciate.

“Many, many years ago,
they said the blues was the devil’s music,
but I don’t think so.
Cuz’ the devil can’t make ya’ feel this good,
and those blues have to be sent from heaven’s front door.

There won’t be no crossroads,
and I won’t be sellin’ my soul.
I said, there won’t be no crossroads,
and I won’t be sellin’ my soul.
But when I sing my blues,
I know the Lord my god put it in my soul.

I wanna’ thank you
Thank you, for giving me the blues
Thank you, thank you
Thank you
Thank you, for giving me the blues
Thank you
Thank you, for giving me the blues
giving me those blues
Thank you, for giving me the blues
– “Thank You for Giving Me the Blues,” Grady Champion, Zac Harmon, and Christopher Troy

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Give it up now… for Gary Clark Jr. on Blak and Blu

We’ve talked quite a bit here before about the rising star of Austin bluesman Gary Clark Jr., who you may recall being hailed as nothing less than “the future of the blues” during this spring’s Red, White and Blues performance at the White House and who, according to The New York Times, “may be the next Hendrix.”

Gary_Clark_Jr_Blak_and_Blu (200x200)On his new album Blak and Blu out today, Clark easily satisfies – and indeed surpasses – such expectations, with an electricity and dynamism that’s rivaled, at least in recent history, perhaps only by the Tedeschi Trucks Band. While not strictly a blues record, weaving in R&B, hip hop, soul, and other sounds along the way, Clark’s debut on the Warner Brothers label offers exactly the kind of crossover appeal that can help to make the blues popular again, much the way fellow Texan Stevie Ray Vaughan did a few decades back.

IMG_0685 (2) (200x199)Never mind that half the songs here are updates on some of those one can hear on earlier (but often hard-to-find) albums from Clark, including “Bright Lights,” “Please Come Home,” and “The Life” off Clark’s self titled EP, “Travis County,” “Numb,” and “Things are Changin'” off 110, and “When My Train Pulls In” off Worry No More, several of which also of course appeared on Clark’s 2011 The Bright Lights EP. Newer fans since Clark’s break-out at the 2010 Crossroads Guitar Festival (where we snapped this picture of Clark with host Eric Clapton) will likely not yet be familiar with these tracks unless they’ve had the good fortune to see him perform, and in most instances (with the exception perhaps of the psychedelic “Numb,” to which we tend to prefer the straight-ahead bluesier sound of the 110 version), the updated cuts sound at least as good as, if not better, than first recorded, especially when buttressed by five more originals plus a tasty nine and a half minute medley of Little Johnny Taylor’s “If You Love Me Like You Say” (Albert Collins) and a reinterpreted “Third Stone from the Sun” (Jimi Hendrix).

Kicking off on the swinging sounds of the album’s first single, the 28-year-old Clark exudes all kinds of coolness and confidence on the punchy, horn-laced “Ain’t Messin ‘Round,” complete with its “play it cool” falsetto chorus in addition to the first of many ripping guitar solos you’ll hear throughout the album.

IMG_0661 (106x180)From there, he’s on to the slow rocking blues of the nearly eight minute “When My Train Pulls In,” filled with a mix of Zeppelin- and Hendrix-like riffs, followed by the smooth R&B sounds of the album’s title track – including trumpet from Clark himself – and the familiar yet still entrancing “Bright Lights.” “Travis County” is a romping country rocker featuring some Chuck Berry-like grooves, while “The Life” sees Clark taking a much more hip hop tone before launching into a Doyle Bramhall II co-written, Prince/Lenny Kravitz-ish “Glitter Ain’t Gold (Jumpin’ for Nothin’)” that includes Clark on congas and percussion.

Outside of the aforementioned “If You Love Me Like You Say/Third Stone from the Sun” and the gritty, shuffling “Crossroads”-style closer “Next Door Neighbor Blues” (which could well be the best of the bunch, consisting only of Clark on drums and acoustic guitar and co-producer Mike Elizondo on percussion), the disc’s remaining songs all allow Clark to demonstrate his softer side, from the falsetto vocals of the slow-danceworthy, Smokey Robinson-like “Please Come Home” to the gentle breeziness of “Things are Changin'” and the fuzzy R&B sway of “You Saved Me.” Even on these lighter numbers, Clark still finds room to shine on guitar, proving that, no matter whether he’s rocking or killing it softly, you can always expect plenty of rhythm to accompany the blues of this up-and-comer.

Produced by Elizondo (who also provides bass, fuzz guitar, keyboards, and/or percussion on several tracks), label chairman Rob Cavallo, and Clark, Blak and Blu also features J.J. Johnson (Tedeschi Trucks Band, John Mayer) on drums and Zac Rae on keyboards/organs, each of whom helps make this much-anticipated project from Clark one that will be remembered – and played – for a very long time.

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Longtime friends in the blues reunite for Tail Dragger, Bob Corritore CD release party

We spent a few days in Phoenix for meetings last week, but you know what they say about all work and no play… So we were pretty pleased to learn that harmonica player Bob Corritore was having some friends in to his Rhythm Room blues club over the weekend, the occasion being a CD release party for his Longtime Friends in the Blues album with Chicago bluesman Tail Dragger. Here’s what we wrote about the CD a few months back.

SONY DSC

Joining Corritore and Tail Dragger for the two nights of shows were most of the other musicians from the album, including legendary blues pianist Henry Gray on keyboards and vocals, San Diego guitar duo Chris James (lead) and Patrick Rynn (bass), and Brian Fahey on drums. We had the pleasure of catching the group on its second night, where they worked through songs not only from Longtime Friends, but such classics as “Sweet Home Chicago,” “Baby Please Don’t Go,” and “I Just Keep Loving Her,” as well as music from each of the artist’s catalogues.

To view more photos from the show, visit our BluesPowR Gallery

Starting with the core group of Corritore, James, Rynn, and Fahey (together billed as the Rhythm Room All-Stars), the band helped get the dancing going early with cuts like Snooky Pryor’s “Someone to Love Me” and the Rob Stone co-written “I Need to Plant a Money Tree,” with James handling vocals in addition to lead guitar. Curiously, the floor was empty for one of the swingingest songs of the nights, Little Walter’s “I Just Keep Loving Her,” which featured solos from everyone in the band before the 87-year-old Gray took the stage with some boogie woogie piano. Despite his age, Gray’s vocals and playing both remain sharp, as demonstrated on such tunes as “It Ain’t No Use” and a bit later in the night with “The Twist” and “Sweet Home Chicago.”

Soon, the band welcomed Tail Dragger to the stage, beginning on “Sitting Here Singing My Blues” and “Don’t Start Me to Talking” before making his way around the dance floor through songs like “Stop Lying” and “Tend to Your Business,” all the while playing to the women in the crowd with his Howlin’ Wolf-like vocals and moves like Mick Jagger in a cowboy hat.

SONY DSCAfter closing the first set on the slow blues of “Be Careful” and a short break, during which we had a nice opportunity to chat with bassist Patrick Rynn about some of the musicians he and James have worked with over the years, the future of the blues, and an upcoming album, the All-Stars got things started again with a few songs from James and Rynn’s previous projects, including “Money Don’t Like Me,” a “Mona” that featured both Corritore on maracas and a nice solo from Fahey on drums, the title track off their Stop and Think About It album, and “Mister Coffee.”

It was at this point that Louisiana’s Gray returned on both vocals and piano for a few songs, soon also trading vocals with Tail Dragger on Sonny Boy Williamson’s “Sugar Mama.” From there, it was on to Howlin’ Wolf’s “Ooh Baby (Hold Me)” with its “Killing Floor”-ish melody, a “She’s Worryin’ Me” that found Tail Dragger crawling the floor, and “Baby Please Don’t Go” before Dragger helped close the show, well past midnight, with a little more Wolf-like moaning.

This was – we’re somewhat ashamed to admit – our first chance to see any of these musicians live, but after a set like this, we’d pay good money to see any of them again. As talented as each is individually, we can’t think of a better way to have heard them all for the first time, during the kind of show you’ll only find at Corritore’s Rhythm Room.

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