Post Tagged with: "Blues"

Vinyl

Junior Wells – Pleading the Blues (1979)

by Nick DeRiso The year was 1959. The occasion was a “Battle of the Blues” at the Blue Flame Club in Chicago. Young harmonica player Junior Wells — who got his start as Little Walter Jacobs’ replacement in Muddy Waters’ band back in ’52 — probably didn’t imagine he wouldRead More

Vinyl

Eric Bibb – Good Stuff (1997)

by S. Victor Aaron Son of little-known folk singer Leon Bibb, Eric Bibb grew up listening and meeting musicians like Pete Seeger and Bob Dylan — and his uncle, pianist and composer John Lewis of the Modern Jazz Quartet. Eric has become more of a name in folk and bluesRead More

Vinyl

Bob Margolin – Down in the Alley (1993)

Bob Margolin makes fine use of delay-time rhythm, a mean slide scream, and the duo and trio ideas that were so successful for his old boss, Muddy Waters.

Vinyl

Roomful of Blues – Watch You When You Go (2001)

They haven’t taken more than a week off since Nixon’s first term. They’ve withstood disco, fathering a rafter-shaking, swing-blues style that saw its own too-fey-by-half revival. (Did you ever notice that all those bands a few years back had names with the word Daddy in them?) So it is thatRead More

Gatemouth Brown, delightfully cantankerous bluesman: Something Else! Interview

Gatemouth Brown, delightfully cantankerous bluesman: Something Else! Interview

The late Louisiana blues legend Gatemouth Brown could be a grouchy man. How grouchy? Let’s find out.

Vinyl

Sunnyland Slim, Shakey Horton, Little Brother Montgomery, Memphis Slim – Chicago Piano, 1951-58 (1993)

By Nick DeRiso It you’re interested in Delta piano stylings, as seen through the sieve of Chicago’s mean streets, here’s a great place to begin your journey. Issued by Stan Lewis’s hip-shaking local indie label, “Chicago Piano, 1951-58” features Sunnyland Slim, Little Brother Montgomery, Memphis Slim and others. You MayRead More

Robert Cray - 'Strong Persuader' (1986)

Robert Cray – ‘Strong Persuader’ (1986)

One well-placed guitar note might be all Robert Cray hits, while others would play three or four.

Vinyl

Forgotten series: Ike Turner – 1958-59 (1993)

by Nick DeRiso It’s been more than 50 years since Stan Lewis opened Stan’s Record Shop in downtown Shreveport. From his vantage point at the the top of Texas Avenue (I used to sneak down there after class), he would go on to create a once-lucrative business, then see theRead More

Vinyl

Lists: Blues harmonica players Little Walter, Sonny Boy Williamson, Paul Butterfield