Episode 5, The BluesPowR Radio Hour

There’s no better way to enjoy these dog days of summer than listening to a hot new episode of our BluesPowR Radio Hour!

Featuring another hour and a half plus of great blues music, our July 2013 edition includes tracks from Taj Mahal, Beth Hart & Joe Bonamassa, Walter Trout, Mike Zito & The Wheel, Rory Block, Mud Morganfield, Quinn Sullivan, Trampled Under Foot, King King, Omar Dykes, Lurrie Bell, Popa Chubby, Frank Bang, and more.

Check it out today!

July 2013 playlist

Rhymes – Beth Hart & Joe Bonamassa
Forty Days And Forty Nights – Mud Morganfield
She’s Alright – Studebaker John’s Maxwell Street Kings
Getting There – Quinn Sullivan
You Never Really Loved Me – Trampled Under Foot
Low Down and Dirty – Walter Trout w/ Bernard Allison
Heart in Sorrow – Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee
Let Love In – King King
Don’t It Make You Cry – Ruff Kutt Blues Band
C’mon In My Kitchen – Kara Grainger
The Road Never Ends – Mike Zito & The Wheel w/ Delbert McClinton
Tommy’z Boogie – Tommy Z
Don’t Trust Yo Woman – Tail Dragger
I Look Good In Bad – Dayna Kurtz
Done Changed My Way of Living – Taj Mahal Trio
I Don’t Want Nobody – Popa Chubby
Blues and Trouble – Grand Marquis
Runnin’ with the Wolf – Omar Dykes
Blues Never Die – Lurrie Bell
Home – Tommy Malone
Make Me a Pallet on Your Floor – Rory Block
Burnin’ Up In The Wind – Frank Bang & The Secret Stash

Posted in BluesPowR Radio Hour | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Episode 5, The BluesPowR Radio Hour

Birthday BLOW-out: Howlin’ Wolf’s hidden charms

When we looked at our calendar and realized that today was the anniversary of the birth of blues great Chester Arthur Burnett, a.k.a. Howlin’ Wolf (1910, West Point, Miss.), we knew we’d have to do something to commemorate the occasion. With so many great songs to choose from, we had no doubts we’d be able to come up with one or two worthy candidates for our Blues Lyrics of the Week (BLOW) feature, but after a quick listen to the Wolf’s His Best, it occurred to us that there’s really only one way to go about this.

So here’s a quick rundown of some of our all-time favorite lines from the Wolf (not including the ones we’ve already brought you in “Wang Dang Doodle,” “I Ain’t Superstitious,” and “Goin’ Down Slow”), many either written or co-written by Willie Dixon, and more often than not involving the pursuit, praise, or loss of a woman. No matter how many times some of these songs have been covered through the years, no one has ever done them any better than the Wolf, with his tough, booming voice and powerful playing on harmonica.

Regardless of whatever else you’re doing today, do yourself a favor and make Howlin’ Wolf’s music a part of it.

“She’s hot like red pepper,
sweet like cherry wine.
I’m so glad she love me,
love me all the time.

She my little baby,
sweet as she can be.
All this love she got,
still belongs to me.

If you hear me howlin’,
callin’ on my darlin’,
who, who who wee.”
– Howlin’ for My Darling, Chester Burnett, Willie Dixon

“Her lips are sweet,
her legs are big.
Her looks can make you, dance a jig.

Her touch is so soft,
her heart’s so warm.
What knocks me out, is your hidden charms…
Ooh wee, what a baby,
ooh wee, what a baby.

When, I, hold, her, in, my, arms,
brings out all of her, hidden charms.”
– Hidden Charms, Willie Dixon

“How many more years,
have I got to let you dog me around?
How many more years,
have I got to let you dog me around?
I’d as soon rather be dead,
sleeping six feet in the ground.”
– How Many More Years, Chester Burnett

“Whoa oh, asked her for water,
Whoa oh, she brought me gasoline.
Whoa oh, asked her for water,
Whoa oh, she brought me gasoline.
That’s the troubledest woman
that I ever seen.”
– I Asked for Water, Chester Burnett

“Well all you girls think the days are done –
you don’t hafta’ worry, you can have your fun.
Take me baby for your little boy –
you’re gettin’ three hundred pounds of heavenly joy.
Cuz’ this is it,
this is it,
look what you gettin’.”
– Three Hundred Pounds of Joy, Willie Dixon

“When everybody’s, tryin’ to sleep,
I’m somewhere making my, midnight creep.
Ev’ry mornin’ when, the rooster crow,
somethin’ tell me, I’ve got to go.
I am, a back door man.
I am, a back door man.
Well the, men don’t know,
but, little girls understand.”
– Back Door Man, Willie Dixon

“Some folk built like this,
some folk built like that.
But the way I’m built,
don’t ya’ call me fat.

Because I’m built for comfort,
I ain’t built for speed.
But I got everything,
all that a good girl needs.”
– Built for Comfort, Willie Dixon

“I shoulda’ quit you
a long time ago.
I shoulda’ quit you babe
a long time ago.
I shoulda’ quit you
and went on to Mexico.”
– Killing Floor, Chester Burnett

Posted in Lyrics | Tagged , | Comments Off on Birthday BLOW-out: Howlin’ Wolf’s hidden charms

Taj Mahal, Shemekia Copeland, other blues faithful team to present True Blues

Not since the designation of 2003 as the “Year of the Blues” has the genre been more celebrated than it is on the newTrue Blues CD from Telarc, featuring solo and joint performances from blues greats Taj Mahal, Corey Harris, Guy Davis, Shemekia Copeland, Alvin Youngblood Hart, and harmonica ace Phil Wiggins.

TrueBlues (230x230)Recorded at venues throughout the United States – from Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York City and the House of Blues in Los Angeles, to Washington, D.C.’s Howard Theatre and the Ram’s Head Tavern in Annapolis, the 13-song live set is just one component of a multimedia celebration that also includes an upcoming companion DVD and an ongoing tour that features the same blues men and woman from whom you hear on the CD.

It all starts with a creeping take on the Willie Dixon/Muddy Waters classic “Hoochie Coochie Man” that has Guy DavisCorey Harris, and Alvin Youngblood Hart sharing vocals, accompanied by Phil Wiggins on harmonica. Despite how many hundreds of times you’ve heard this song, we doubt it’s ever been quite as lowdown as this.

Hart delivers some dark guitar and vocals on the hypnotic “Motherless Children Have a Hard Time” (Blind Willie Johnson) and Harris a slow and soulful “Everybody Got to Change Sometime” (Sleepy John Estes) before the Taj Mahal Trio steps in with a shuffling “Done Changed My Way of Living” that’s filled with some gritty and powerful strumming on guitar to match Mahal’s coarse vocals, including some hearty laughs and deep, occasionally Howlin’ Wolf-like growls, as he confidently works his way through lyrics from the opening declaration of “Used to be down, I ain’t down no more” to “L.A., L.A. women, keep me so damn tired/ well, you know they got a hand fulla’ gimmes, big mouth fulla’ much obliged” and “If you don’t love me, little girl, I know my mama do/ if you treat me bad, she’ll put a hurtin’, hurtin’ on you.” Indeed, if we had to peg just one star of this show, it would be Mahal, whose trio returns later in the program with a jazzy “Mailbox Blues” that also allows for some fine scatting from the blues master. (West Coast bluesman Hart would likely be our second pick, for his soulful vocals and feisty guitar work on the traditional “Gallows Pole” in addition to his earlier take on the Johnson tune.)

But truth be told, there’s really not a bad song in the bunch, with Davis also contributing a couple of superb tracks in “Saturday Blues” (Ishman Bracey) and a haunting “That’s No Way to Get Along” (Rev. Robert Wilkins); Wiggins, backed by Hart, offering the country gospel-sounding “Roberta” as well as a short solo instrumental “Prayers and Praises” featuring the bird-like warbling of Wiggins’ harmonica; and Harris delivering the slow and serene “C.C. Pill Blues.” Like many of the songs, this latter track is a bit more on the laidback side, but with lyrics such as “blues and trouble are my two best friends/ when my blues walks out, my trouble come waltzin’ in”, it’s hard to imagine things getting much bluer than this.

Shemekia Copeland‘s slow blues treatment of her father’s (Johnny Clyde Copeland) “Bring Your Fine Self Home” is remarkably patient and controlled, finding her backed by Wiggins, Harris, and Hart, with the same group trading vocals and solos to close out the album in a similar fashion as it started, this time on Robert Johnson’s “Ramblin’ on My Mind.”

If you like what you hear – which we can almost guarantee will be the case – we’d highly encourage you to check out both the upcoming DVD and these guys on tour, with dates already stretching into 2014, including, for our good friends in Pittsburgh, (don’t say we didn’t give you ample notice on this one) a January 25 performance at the Carnegie Music Hall in Oakland. With all that going on, we may just want to start calling this the “Year of the True Blues.”

Posted in Albums | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Taj Mahal, Shemekia Copeland, other blues faithful team to present True Blues

Episode 4, The BluesPowR Radio Hour

It’s been a busy past few months here at the blog, but we couldn’t let May pass us by without another edition of our BluesPowR Radio Hour, featuring new music from the likes of Ana Popovic, James Cotton, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Ronnie Earl, John Primer and Bob Corritore, Beth Hart and Jeff Beck, Bart Walker, and more.

Check out this playlist, and then check out the show.

Thanks as always for joining us, as we keep on living on blues power!

Episode 4
Can’t You See What You’re Doing to Me – Ana Popovic, Can You Stand the Heat
Girl You Bad – Bart Walker, Waiting on Daylight
She Gives Me a Thrill – Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup, Sunny Road
He Burned that Bridge – Janet Ryan, Mama Soul
Blues is Good For You – James Cotton, Cotton Mouth Man
Blue As Can Be – Austin Young & No Difference, Blue as Can Be
You Don’t Love Me – Andy Poxon, Tomorrow
Rush Hour – Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters, Just for Today
It Wasn’t Real – Gina Sicilia, It Wasn’t Real
Little Boy Blue – John Primer & Bob Corritore, Knockin’ Around These Blues
Shape I’m In – Sterling Koch, Let it Slide
Soul – Matt Baxter and Jake Sampson, Haunted
I’d Rather Go Blind ft. Jeff Beck – Beth Hart, Bang Bang Boom Boom
Fine Time – Ron Dziubla, Nasty Habit
Patrol Wagon Blues – Duke Robillard, Independently Blue
I Smell Trouble – Linda Valori, Days Like This
London Blues – Alan Wilson, The Blind Owl
Don’t Pass Me By – Jason Elmore & Hoodoo Witch, Tell You What
Lucky Man – The Mighty Mojo Prophets, Flyin’ Back From Memphis
Hold Me – The Fabulous Thunderbirds, On the Verge
Write Me In Care Of The Blues – Lisa Bialis, Singing In My Soul

Posted in BluesPowR Radio Hour | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Episode 4, The BluesPowR Radio Hour

Smithsonian Folkways delivers another classic in Classic Harmonica Blues

Folkways_Classic_Harmonica_Blues (230x230)Hard as it may be to imagine a worthy collection of blues harmonica that doesn’t include the likes of James Cotton, Little Walter, Sonny Boy Williamson, Junior Wells, or Big Walter Horton, leave it to the good folks at Smithsonian Folkways to come up with one, in this case, Classic Harmonica Blues from Smithsonian Folkways, out today. To be clear, never does the label attempt to position or pass off this record as any kind of “best of” compilation – just one comprised of quality classic recordings: something they accomplish quite nicely. (If you’re looking for more of the former, we might suggest you check out a recent double CD set called Mississippi Saxophone on the Blues Boulevard label, which includes tracks – and often more than one – from each of the artists noted above, in addition to Howlin’ Wolf, Jimmy Reed, Billy Boy Arnold, Sonny Terry, Charlie Musselwhite, and Kim Wilson, among others.)

Culled from the collections of Folkways Record founder Moses Asch as well as the Smithsonian’s own Folklife Festival, Classic Harmonica Blues includes 20 tracks from a dozen different harmonica players. Combined with the absence of some of the more popular names in blues harmonica mentioned above, a few may be tempted to dismiss this set for its lack of variety in artists – along with four tracks featuring Sonny Terry and three from Doctor Ross, the CD includes two songs each from Eddie Burns, Phil Wiggins, and Charlie Sayles, accounting for a total of 13 of the collection’s tunes – but that, my friends, would be a mistake. Despite the initial appearance of repetition among artists, the tracks here offer a remarkably impressive diversity, ranging in style from the Piedmont and Delta-to-Midwest traditions to jug and washboard bands and street corner performances, finding the contributions of these repeat acts interspersed with songs from the likes of the Memphis Jug Band, Jazz Gillum, John Sebastian, and the Chambers Brothers, making for a rather interesting variety of songs, including eight previously unreleased tunes from the Folklife Festival reels.

Opening on the shuffling country blues of Doctor Ross, the Harmonica Boss‘ “Theme Song” (harkening back to his radio show on Helena, Arkansas’ KFFA) from a 1987 festival performance, the album moves to a studio-recorded vocal duet from Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee in “Heart in Sorrow,” with McGhee’s smooth, expressive vocals on the repeating chorus of “I ain’t got no lovin’ baby now” perfectly complementing the plaintive wails of Terry’s harmonica.

A 1957 field recording of “Take Your Fingers Off It” is the first of several jug or washboard band numbers you’ll hear on the compilation, reuniting the surviving members of the famous Memphis Jug Band more than 20 years after the group first recorded the song. Later in the disc, Geoff Muldaur (mandolin and vocals), Paul Rishell (guitar), and Annie Raines (harmonica) join with John Sebastian (guitar) of Lovin’ Spoonful fame and Fritz Richmond on jug for “Minglewood Blues,” with the disc closing out on a double-entendred “Custard Pie” that may not exactly be clean but is certainly good fun, with Sonny Terry on harmonica and vocals, backed by a lively washboard band.

Among the more recognizable of the tunes you’ll hear along the way are such classics as Sonny Boy Williamson II’s (Aleck Rice Miller) “Nine Below Zero,” performed here by Eddie Burns during the 1987 Folklife Festival; Sonny Boy (John Lee) Williamson’s “Good Morning Little School Girl” done by Doctor Ross, the Harmonica Boss, also from a 1987 performance; and an “I Feel So Good” (Big Bill Broonzy) that finds guitarist and singer Warner Williams joined by Jay Summerour on harmonica. Northerner Charlie Sayles offers a slightly funky take on Sonny Boy II’s “Bye Bye Bird,” while Phil Wiggins gets a little help from some friends on a July 1991 performance of “Sweet Home Chicago,” including Delta legends Johnny Shines and Robert Lockwood Jr. both on guitar and vocals and Henry Townsend on piano. Eddie Burns finds his way back to the festival stage with a stripped-down solo take on Sonny Boy II’s “One Way Out” that helps to keep the focus squarely on Burns’ harmonica skills; it’s a far cry from the Allman Brothers cover of the same tune, but not in a bad way.

Sonny Terry’s other contributions consist of a solo performance of the Piedmont standard “Crow Jane Blues” and another pairing with Brownie McGhee on the swinging “Boogie Baby,” with Doctor Ross, the Harmonica Boss also hitting on his own 1953 hit “Chicago Breakdown” during a 1987 festival performance. Of the other recurring artists, Phil Wiggins is paired with his good friend John Cephas on guitar and vocals for a dogged “Dog Days of August” and Charlie Sayles offers a gritty street corner original in “Train Piece” from the 1977 festival.

The set also includes two pretty nifty instrumentals: an upbeat “Gillum Blues” from Jazz Gillum that features blues great Memphis Slim on piano and a short but beautiful take from Roscoe Holcomb on the British ballad “Barbara Allen Blues,” while Neal Pattman offers some deep southern harmonica and vocals with a field recording of “Low Down Blues” and the Chambers Brothers provide an early rock, Yardbirds-flavored “Hooka Tooka” to help round out the compilation.

As usual with Smithsonian Folkways recordings, the liner notes that accompany the collection are informative and extensive, making this a terrific little piece of blues history. And with the Memorial Day holiday fast approaching, we can’t think of a more American way to enjoy the long weekend than listening to these genuinely classic selections. Indeed, when it comes to blues harmonica, this is a darn good set to have.

Posted in Albums | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Smithsonian Folkways delivers another classic in Classic Harmonica Blues

Where did you come from, Cotton Mouth Man?: Blues harp legend James Cotton strikes a personal chord with new Alligator CD

Cotton_mouth_manAs far as we can tell, blues harmonica giant James Cotton has never published a memoir, nor has anyone yet written a book on the life of this extraordinary bluesman, who’s been playing since age nine. And with the release today of Cotton’s latest album Cotton Mouth Man (Alligator Records), such a literary work may never be necessary, as remarkable a job as the now 78-year-old Cotton and producer Tom Hambridge have done in documenting the man’s life, not on printed page, but in the same manner Cotton has been expressing himself for nearly seven decades, through his music. Many of the songs on Cotton Mouth Man speak directly to Cotton’s roots – the title track, “He Was There,” “Mississippi Mud,” and “Bonnie Blue” being perhaps the most obvious examples – with Cotton and Hambridge having collaborated on the writing of seven tracks (while Hambridge also helped to pen the other five original tracks).

As someone who’s known and worked with many other blues greats throughout the years (having learned to play harmonica from Sonny Boy Williamson II, toured with Williamson and Howlin’ Wolf, and spent 12 years in Muddy Waters‘ band before venturing out on his own), it’s perhaps only fitting that Cotton has invited a few friends along on this particular ride, with guest appearances from Keb Mo, Gregg Allman, Warren Haynes, Joe Bonamassa, Ruthie Foster, and Delbert McClinton. As great as each of their individual contributions may be, never do these guests detract from the real star of the program in Cotton, who, even in his later years, remains the best blues harmonica player around.

The album opens on a shuffling title track that features six-string hotshot Joe Bonamassa on guitar and longtime Cotton band singer Darrell Nulisch on vocals, with Hambridge’s drums providing a driving beat. After relinquishing singing duties to the likes of Nulisch several years ago following a bout with throat cancer, it’s good to hear a bit more of Cotton’s voice this time around, from his introduction of the next song with a croaky “Midnight Train to Mississippi,” to his response of “That was me” after a lyric about his having played both Fillmores and Carnegie Hall on “He Was There,” to personally handling the vocals on the closing “Bonnie Blue.”

But it’s Gregg Allman who supplies the soulful vocals on the fast-moving “Midnight Train”, starting with some train-like harp from Cotton, before Keb Mo takes over on mic for the slow Delta blues of “Mississippi Mud”. The pace picks up again with a Bo Diddley-like “He Was There” that again features Nulisch on vocals and some particularly nice playing from Chuck Leavell on piano, one of several supporting players who help make an already impressive project all the more solid.

Perhaps the most rocking of the numbers is a gritty “Something for Me” that finds Warren Haynes on both vocals and guitar, while the talented Ruthie Foster contributes some passionate vocals (and Cotton perhaps the bluest harmonica you’ve heard) on a smoldering “Wrapped Around My Heart” and Delbert McClinton brings some soul on a “Hard Sometimes” that he also co-wrote with Hambridge. “Saint on Sunday” and “Young Bold Women” offer a few more romping tracks with Nulisch on mic, leading up to a splendid cover of Muddy Waters’ “Bird Nest on the Ground” (written by Maurice Dolliver and Monk Higgins) before Keb Mo returns, this time with his guitar, for a “Wasn’t My Time to Go” that features Leavell on Wurlitzer and such reflective lyrics as “so many good friends of mine have come and gone, I’m still blowin’ and goin’, and carryin’ on.”

That’s followed by yet another barnburner of a tune in “Blues is Good for You” before Cotton’s hoarse vocals close out the album with the “hometown blues” of “Bonnie Blue,” a fond look back over a life that began on the Mississippi cotton plantation of the same name, with Cotton joined only by Colin Linden on Resonator guitar.

A superb follow-up to Cotton’s 2009, Grammy-nominated Giant, Cotton Mouth Man is sure to follow suit, as Cotton blasts and blows his way from song to song with appropriate force and finesse, depending on the mood. As we’ve noted before and probably will many times again, when it comes to blues harmonica, there’s simply no one better than Mr. Superharp himself. Should Cotton one day authorize or decide to dictate his own biography, we look forward to reading the many stories we’re sure the blues master has to relate, but until then, we have to say we’re pretty darn content hearing from him in song.

Posted in Albums | Tagged , | Comments Off on Where did you come from, Cotton Mouth Man?: Blues harp legend James Cotton strikes a personal chord with new Alligator CD

Guitarist John Primer, harmonica ace Bob Corritore team for Knockin’ Around These Blues

While it may have been the guitar that dominated much of the past month here on our blog – between our coverage of Eric Clapton’s Pittsburgh show, the Crossroads Guitar Festival, and new albums from both Ronnie Earl and Ana Popovic –  the next few weeks are looking to be particularly good ones for blues harmonica fans, with an upcoming release from harp master James Cotton and a pretty neat harmonica-themed collection of classics from Smithsonian Folkways.

But we can’t think of a better segue between these two sub-genres of the blues than the album we’re talking about today, from former Muddy Waters and Magic Slim band guitarist John Primer and ubiquitous harmonica man Bob Corritore, who together make a delightful pairing on the new Knockin’ Around These Blues (Delta Groove Music).

Primer_Corritore_knockin (230x206)From the opening “The Clock” (Jimmy Reed), you can tell this one is going to be special – not that you’d expect anything less from these respected and familiar veterans of the blues, but this is even better than one could imagine, as the pair breezes through such early numbers as the slow “Blue and Lonesome” (Little Walter), the Primer original “When I Get Lonely,” and Lil’ Son Jackson’s “Cairo Blues” before things really start to get good with the passionate vocals and gritty harmonica of “Leanin’ Tree.” That’s followed by an instrumental “Harmonica Joyride” that is precisely what its name promises, before they dive into a superb version of Robert Lockwood Jr.’s “Little Boy Blue” that features forceful vocals from Primer as well as a nice piano solo from Barrelhouse Chuck, one of the many stellar backing musicians you’ll hear on this project, along with Billy Flynn and Chris James on guitar, Bob Stroger and Patrick Rynn on bass, and Kenny “Beedy Eyes” Smith and Brian Fahey on drums.

The shuffling, Willie Dixon-penned “Just Like I Treat You” and a solid “Man or Mouse” help to bring the album to its conclusion, with the slow blues of Lightnin’ Hopkins’ “Going Back Home” closing the album in a most appropriate fashion.

Primer’s guitar and vocals are both in fine form throughout, and Corritore’s harmonica licks plentiful, so even though there are only ten songs to enjoy here, there’s never a doubt that you’re getting your full money’s worth, including plenty of solos from not only Primer and Corritore, but many of the other talented band members as well.

Knockin’ around indeed, but this splendid collaboration between two true legends of the blues is also guaranteed to knock your socks off.

Posted in Albums | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Guitarist John Primer, harmonica ace Bob Corritore team for Knockin’ Around These Blues

Blues Lyrics of the Week: Gin House Blues

This slow but soulful blues tune recorded by such artists as Nina Simone, The Animals, and British band Amen Corner is one of our new favorite old songs after hearing it again from Andy Fairweather Low and Eric Clapton at this month’s Crossroads Guitar Festival.

“Stay away from me, yea,
‘cuz I’m in my sin.
Stay away everybody
‘cuz I’m in my sin.
If this joint is raided,
somebody give me some gin.

Lord, I don’t want no clothes,
I don’t even want no bed,
for to lay my head.
I don’t want no clothes,
I don’t even want no bed,
to lay my head.
Just fill me with good liquor
and I’ll be good to you instead.

When I’m feelin’ high,
I ain’t got nothin’ else to do
but lay my head.
When I’m feelin’ high,
I ain’t got nothin’ else to do
but lay my head.
Fill me with good liquor
yea, and I’ll be good to you instead.”
Gin House Blues, Fletcher Henderson & Henry Troy

 

Posted in Lyrics | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Blues Lyrics of the Week: Gin House Blues

With fourth guitar festival, Clapton and friends deliver plenty of blues at the Crossroads

Having attended two of the three previous Crossroads Guitar Festivals (the first in Dallas, as well as the most recent in Chicago), we weren’t all that sure what to think about last fall’s announcement of the 2013 installment of the renowned festival. Sure, the line-up was solid enough, as is always the case, but in addition to the moves to both a new city and an indoor arena (in NY’s famed Madison Square Garden), the 2013 event would also for the first time be spread out over two nights rather than taking place during a single full day. This of course led to a whole range of new questions and decisions for interested fans, among them, which artists would be performing which night? which, if any, might play both nights? and would the second night of performances be worth an additional night’s hotel in one of the world’s most expensive cities, on top of the premium ticket prices?

For Crossroads faithful such as ourselves, there was really only one way to get the answers to these questions, and we’re pleased to report that the past weekend’s affair was, collectively, the best Crossroads yet, featuring superb performances from host Eric Clapton, other established acts like the Allman Brothers Band, Buddy Guy, Jeff Beck, Taj Mahal, Booker T. and Steve Cropper, Robert Cray, and Vince Gill, and such rising stars as Gary Clark Jr., Doyle Bramhall II, Quinn Sullivan, and Philip Sayce, along with a whole lot in between, from John Mayer, Earl Klugh, and Sonny Landreth to Keb Mo, Robert Randolph, and Jimmie Vaughan.

To see more photos from the festival, please visit our BluesPowR Gallery

IMG_4191 (220x185)

B.B. King

An acoustic set from none other than Clapton himself ensured that the weekend started on a bluesy note, with Clapton accompanied only by a few band members for the opening “Drifting Blues.” Longtime Clapton collaborators Andy Fairweather Low and Doyle Bramhall II joined in for the next song – Low’s “Spider Jiving” – with its chorus of “won’t someone take away these blues.” From there, they moved to “Tears in Heaven,” followed by a “Lay Down Sally” on which Clapton also welcomed Vince Gill, before closing the twenty minute set with “Wonderful Tonight.”

Booker T.Steve Cropper, and Keb Mo grooved through a few instrumentals, along the way adding Blake MillsMatt “Guitar” Murphy, and Albert Lee to their ranks, with the highlights of the set coming in a Keb Mo-sung “Born Under a Bad Sign” that we hope (for your sake as well as ours) is included on the coming highlights DVD, followed by the MGs hit “Green Onions.”

Robert Cray and his band were the next to take the stage, kicking off on “Great Big Old House” from their latest album Nothin but Love, before welcoming the King of the Blues, B.B. King, for “Let the Good Times Roll” and a “Sweet Sixteen” that saw Cray and King trading vocals. Things only got better from there, with Cray inviting both Jimmie Vaughan and Clapton to join them for a terrific “Everyday I Have the Blues.”

IMG_4253 (220x165)

Gary Clark, Jr.

After a song from Sonny Landreth on the side stage, it was current Clapton sideman Bramhall’s turn to shine, backed by horns and background singers as he worked through songs like “Green Light Girl” before bringing on, first, Citizen Cope for “Bullet and a Target,” and then adding Gary Clark Jr. for a knock-out “Son’s Gonna Rise,” with Bramhall finishing on the mesmerizing “She’s Alright.”

IMG_4331 (165x220)

Buddy Guy

Ernie Ball Crossroads guitar contest winner Philip Sayce contributed a wild, energetic “Steamroller” before Earl Klugh helped to settle things back down with some instrumental jazz, providing a rather nice segue to the set that followed from the Kurt Rosenwinkel Band, including Clapton on vocals for the sensitive “If I Should Lose You” and Tommy Johnson’s rollicking “Big Road.” Gary Clark Jr. played a rare solo set (on both guitar and drums) that included “Don’t Owe You a Thing,” followed by a half-hour performance from John Mayer that started on “Who Says” (which happens to include one of my favorite lyrics in “I don’t remember you looking any better, but then again, I don’t remember you”), and then moved to “Slow Dancing in a Burning Room” and “Queen of California” before Mayer invited first-time Crossroads artist Keith Urban to join him in a cover of The Beatles’ “Don’t Let Me Down” that helped both shift the evening to a whole new level of awesome and warm up the stage for bluesman Buddy Guy and his band, accompanied by 14-year-old Quinn Sullivan and pedal steel guitarist Robert Randolph. Of course, there’s no better way for Buddy to kick off his set than with “Damn Right I Got the Blues,” which he followed with a clever “Let the Doorknob Hit Ya” that included nice solos from both Sullivan and Randolph, before finishing up on “Someone Else is Steppin’ In.”

IMG_4367 (220x165)

Taj Mahal w/ Allman Brothers Band

Master of ceremonies Dan Aykroyd donned his shades to sing and play some harmonica, joined by Keb Mo on guitar for “Got My Mojo Working” in honor of Muddy Waters’ 100th birthday this month, with headliners the Allman Brothers Band taking the stage at the four-hour mark. After kicking off with “Ain’t My Cross to Bear,” the band welcomed Taj Mahal and Los Lobos guitarists David Hidalgo and Cesar Rosas for an exciting “Statesboro Blues” that featured Taj both on harmonica and sharing vocals with Gregg Allman. From there, they moved to “Black Hearted Woman,” then brought Clapton back onstage for the final time that evening with another show-stopping number in “Why Does Love Got to Be So Sad.” There was only one way out for the band from here, closing out their 45-minute set and the first night of the festival on a splendid “Whipping Post.”

After a full day’s break, we were pleased to see that many of the same artists – and perhaps fans – returned to Madison Square Garden for a sold-out Saturday night, which began on the largely instrumental slide stylings of Sonny Landreth. A few songs in, Landreth introduced “one of the greatest musicians I have ever known,” Derek Trucks, who joined on “Cherry Ball Blues” and “Congo Square.”

IMG_4476 (204x220)

Jimmie Vaughan

Doyle Bramhall II followed with a short acoustic set, bringing on John Mayer for “Change It,” a song written by Bramhall’s father for friend Stevie Ray Vaughan. Coincidentally, Vaughan’s brother Jimmie happened to be the next act to take the stage, starting on the always-chilling “Six Strings Down” about the death of his brother and many other blues guitar players, made somewhat less haunting this particular night by the sweet voice of Susan Tedeschi singing along just next to us in the aisle.

Newcomer Blake Mills did a few songs next, first solo, then partnering with Derek Trucks on “Save the Last Dance for Me,” followed by an intriguing set from Los Lobos. Starting on a rocking “Burn It Down” that allowed us to again hear from Susan Tedeschi (this time on the stage where others could also appreciate it), the set also included guest appearances from Robert Cray – providing some terrific vocals on “Just Got to Know” as members of his own band cheered him on from the audience – and Clapton.

Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks delivered another solid performance on the side stage, beginning with “Old Friend,” before being joined by Gregg Allman for both Neil Young’s “The Needle and the Damage Done” and the Allman Brothers Band’s own “Midnight Rider.” For being a bunch of country guys, Vince GillAlbert Lee, and Keith Urban put on a rather rocking show, including Lee on vocals for Ray Charles’ “Leave My Woman Alone,” Urban tackling the Stones’ “Tumbling Dice,” and Gill and Lee trading vocals on “Setting Me Up.”

Despite our best efforts, we didn’t get to see Taj Mahal and Keb Mo when they toured together a few years back, so it was nice to have the chance to see them team up for even a short set, digging in on “Walking Blues,” followed by Taj on vocals for “Diving Duck Blues,” and then Keb doing “That’s Alright,” making for one of our personal favorite sets of the festival.

IMG_4633 (220x165)

Jeff Beck

Gary Clark Jr. returned to the stage, this time with his own band, for a thumping set that we’re pretty sure blew the roof off the Garden on the very first song, “When My Train Pulls In,” quieting it down just a bit with “Please Come Home,” then capping off the performance on “Bright Lights.” After a few instrumentals, Jeff Beck invited Beth Hart to join him on vocals, bringing a whole different energy to his set with “I Ain’t Superstitious” and a superb “Going Down.”

76-year-old Buddy Guy did a short acoustic set of “74 Years Young” and John Lee Hooker’s “In the Mood” before it was time for the evening’s closing act in Clapton himself. When the lights came up, though, Clapton wasn’t alone, with surprise guest Keith Richards providing a nice introduction for Clapton as the two launched into “Key to the Highway” with Richards on vocals as well as taking the first solo. From there, Richards announced it was time to “rock it up” a little, then proceeding to deliver “Sweet Little Rock n’ Roller,” after which Keith was replaced by a guitarist from another well-known band in Robbie Robertson, who started on “He Don’t Live Here No More” followed by “I Shall Be Released” “for some old friends.”

Keith Richards & Eric Clapton

Keith Richards & Eric Clapton

With Robertson’s exit, Andy Fairweather Low stepped into the coveted guest spot, taking the lead on a delightful “Gin House Blues” that included a burning solo from Clapton before turning it over to the festival host, who, with his band, tore through many of the best songs from their current tour in a “Got to Get Better in a Little While” that simply gets better every time we hear it, “Crossroads,” “Little Queen of Spades,” and “Sunshine of Your Love,” with Clapton also slipping in a “see you in three years” to provide hope that this wouldn’t be the last chance we’d all have to witness the type of mastery and unique pairings we did these past two nights.

As good as it was to see Clapton perform these songs the weekend before during his tour stop in Pittsburgh, he and his band were even more spectacular this time around, with a full weekend of guitar talent apparently helping even him achieve new heights. Indeed, about the only thing that could have made his set any better would have been the inclusion of “Badge,” but we’re certainly not complaining, as Clapton clearly accomplished not one, but two, pretty remarkable feats on the weekend, putting in both his own best Crossroads set in addition to the best Crossroads festival overall.

And that’s not even mentioning the finale, which saw nearly all of the evening’s guitarists (save perhaps for Richards and Beck) return to the stage to jam and take a solo on Joe Cocker’s “High Time We Went.”

Anyone who might be starting to think that Clapton’s Crossroads festivals are the same from one to the next will want to be sure to check out the upcoming DVD of this latest installment. Not only has the festival continued to feature some of the most masterful pairings we’ve ever seen, but the two-night structure this time around also allowed for a much greater diversity of performances from many of the artists – particularly those who played both nights – than previously possible, including, for example, both acoustic and electric acts from the likes of Clapton, Buddy Guy, Gary Clark Jr., John Mayer, and the Allman Brothers.

Seeing either night of the festival would have been enough to ensure that you’d leave happy, but experiencing both nights was nothing short of priceless. See you in three years, indeed.

Photos from both nights of the festival can be viewed in our BluesPowR Gallery

IMG_4776 (450x338)

Posted in Shows | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on With fourth guitar festival, Clapton and friends deliver plenty of blues at the Crossroads

Guitar Week continues: Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters’ Just for Today more like one for the ages

image001 (1) (225x203)We’ve had several instrumental blues albums cross our desk in recent weeks, including the latest releases from both guitarists Tinsley Ellis (Get Up!, Heartfixer Music) and Ronnie Earl (Just for Today, Stony Plain Records). As much as we enjoyed listening to the former, we have to say that Earl’s recording may just be the best instrumental blues album we’ve heard. And not as in just this year. Possibly ever.

Starting on the swinging shuffle of “The Big Train” that’s guaranteed to make you want to jump aboard, the band – the same one with which Earl has played for the past 13 of the Broadcasters’ 25-year history – move to a slow, patient (as in nine-and-a-half-minutes) “Blues for Celie” that couldn’t be more beautiful, with some of the most soulful and inspired guitar playing we’ve heard beginning right around the 6:45 mark, also accompanied by some fine organ from Dave Limina. Jim Mouradian (bass) and Lorne Entress (drums) round out the quartet.

Recorded live at three different venues in Earl’s home state of Massachusetts, the album – released this week – captures sounds from the guitarist that stretch from B.B. King and Buddy Guy to Stevie Ray Vaughan (as on the slow blues of “Heart of Glass”), Nick Moss, and Jeff Beck (check out “Miracle”), not to mention the superb tributes to a few who came before him in the lively “Robert Nighthawk Stomp,” the Chicago blues stylings of an Otis Rush-inspired “Rush Hour,” and an eight-and-a-half minute “Blues for Hubert Sumlin” that’s pure joy, as blistering at times as it can be subdued, but always deep, and full of notes that hang longer than even the most die-hard Pittsburgh Pirates fan.

Throw in a terrific piano boogie in “Vernice’s Boogie,” soulful and unique covers of standards such as “Ain’t Nobody’s Business,” John Coltrane’s “Equinox,” and Etta James’ “I’d Rather Go Blind” – the album’s sole vocal track, featuring Diane Blue‘s heartfelt singing – and other originals that include a gritty but vibrant “Jukein'” and the peaceful closer “Pastorale” that, between its shades of “Little Wing” and Earl wishing the audience a happy spring at its end, could easily serve as the official song of the blossoming of the coming season – and you’ve got an album that, for having so few words, shows a truly remarkable amount of character.

Despite its title, Just for Today is destined to become a classic, capturing Earl and his Broadcasters sounding better than they – and many others – ever have.

Posted in Albums | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Guitar Week continues: Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters’ Just for Today more like one for the ages