mixtapes for weathers and moods / music for good days and bad days


For nonstop listening of players' tracks you must login to DEEZER music site! / A lejátszók számainak zavartalan hallgatásához be kell lépned a DEEZER zeneoldalra.

A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Guy Davis. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Guy Davis. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2022. február 15., kedd

BLUE ORCHiD BLUES:MiX # 33 blues(y) songs from the BLUES_circle 2005-1994 (2h 16m)


BLUE ORCHiD BLUES:MiX # 33 blues(y) songs from the BLUES_circle 2005-1994 (2h 16m) The White Stripes, Taj Mahal, Shemekia Copeland, Lazy Lester, Sue Foley, Lil' Ed & the Blues Imperials, Taj Mahal, Little Mack Simmons, Guy Davis, Joanna Connor, Jimmie Vaughan


B L U E S    M U S I C (2h 16m)

if you want excitement PRESS SHUFFLE!


.BLUES_circle on deezer

BLUES_circle The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. 

2005-1994



With their unlikely but fascinating mix of arty concepts and raw sounds, the White Stripes were among the leaders of the early-2000s garage rock revival and helped define the sound of 21st century rock as the decade progressed. Jack and Meg White's clever use of limitations -- from their lineup to their instrumentation to their red, white, and black color scheme -- maximized their creativity, allowing them to bring a surprising number of facets to their seemingly back-to-basics approach. Meg's straight-ahead, minimalist drumming complemented Jack's freewheeling guitars and vocals perfectly, and their music touched on not only on obvious forebears such as the Gories and the Stooges, but also Son House and Blind Willie McTell's mythic blues, Led Zeppelin's riffs...
Blue Orchid 2:37
Instinct Blues4:16
According to Jack White, Get Behind Me Satan deals with "characters and the ideal of truth," but in truth, the album is just as much about what people expect from the White Stripes and what they themselves want to deliver. Advance publicity for the album stated that it was written on piano, marimba, and acoustic guitar, suggesting that it was going to be a quiet retreat to the band's little room after the big sound, and bigger success, of Elephant. Then "Blue Orchid," Get Behind Me Satan's lead single, arrived. A devilish slice of disco-metal with heavily processed, nearly robotic riffs, the song was thrilling, but also oddly perfunctory; it felt almost like a caricature of their stripped-down but hard-hitting rock. As the opening track for Get Behind Me Satan, "Blue Orchid" is more than a little perverse, as though the White Stripes are giving their audience the required rock single before getting back to that little room, locking the door behind them, and doing whatever the hell they want... 



One of the most prominent figures in late 20th century blues, singer/multi-instrumentalist Taj Mahal played an enormous role in revitalizing and preserving traditional acoustic blues. Not content to stay within that realm, Mahal soon broadened his approach, taking a musicologist's interest in a multitude of folk and roots music from around the world -- reggae and other Caribbean folk, jazz, gospel, R&B, zydeco, various West African styles, Latin, even Hawaiian. The African-derived heritage of most of those forms allowed Mahal to explore his own ethnicity from a global perspective and to present the blues as part of a wider musical context...
The Very Best of Taj Mahal
Señor Blues (Horace Silver) 6:44
Lonely Avenue (Doc Pomus) 3:26
Take a Giant Step (Gerry Goffin / Carole King) 4:37
Mailbox Blues (Taj Mahal) 3:31
Throughout his career, Taj Mahal has always been considered a bluesman, which is true enough, since the basis for everything he does has been the country blues, but he is not a traditionalist at heart, and he has always looked for ways to push the blues into new places and shapes. Adding at times rhythms and sensibilities that are drawn from reggae, ragtime, calypso, zydeco, and other genres, Mahal practices a kind of blues hybrid that is his alone, and he has been a huge influence on newer artists like Chris Thomas King and Corey Harris. This collection derives from the five albums he recorded with Private Records during the 1990s, and overlaps somewhat with The Best of the Private Years, released in 2000... 



Projecting a maturity beyond her years, blues singer Shemekia Copeland began making a splash in her own right before she was even out of her teens. Copeland fashioned herself as a powerful, soul-inflected shouter in the tradition of Koko Taylor and Etta James, yet also proved capable of a subtler range of emotions. Her 1998 Alligator debut, Turn the Heat Up!, featured a career-elevating version of "Ghetto Child," a classic by her father, renowned Texas blues guitarist Johnny Copeland, that has been part of her performance repertoire ever since...
Livin' on Love (Craig Fuller / Gary Nicholson) 4:03
When a Woman's Had Enough (Alan Mirikitani / Dennis Walker) 3:54
Talking to Strangers (Mac Rebennack) 4:06
This disc, which has Dr. John at the controls as a producer, brings together a mix that brings out the best for all those concerned and involved with this project. There is no weakness here, it is a straight-ahead use of all the strengths of Shemekia Copeland, daughter of Johnny Copeland. The songs were well selected to effectively show off all her potency as a vocalist. There are some many good writers that are also players on this disc that the tunes fit like gloves. There are strong contributions by John "Fingers" Hahn, Mac Rebennack, and Shemekia Copeland herself. The tunes, varied in style, are all based in the deep blues, and were selected for their capability to push her vocal talents to constant new personal pinnacles...  This disc shows us some new sides of this fine singer, while she stretches her limits and she more than holds her own while being in the company of such luminous musicians as accompany her on this disc. This disc seems a return to the blues burner she is capable of being. She does her daddy proud on this stellar disc.



Contrary to his colorful sobriquet (supplied by prolific South Louisiana producer J.D. Miller), harpist Lazy Lester swore he never was all that lethargic... While growing up outside of Baton Rouge, Leslie Johnson was influenced by Jimmy Reed and Little Walter. But his entry into playing professionally arrived quite by accident: while riding on a bus sometime in the mid-'50s, he met guitarist Lightnin' Slim, who was searching fruitlessly for an AWOL harpist. The two's styles meshed seamlessly, and Lester became Slim's harpist of choice...
Blues Stop Knockin' (Jay Miller) 4:28
Sad City Blues (J.D. Miller) 4:50
I'm Gonna Miss You (Like the Devil) 3:50
Not the most nimble harp player on the blues block, Lazy Lester nonetheless connects when he's backed by a sympathetic band, as he is on this recording, his first in three years. Aided immensely by guitarists Jimmie Vaughen and Derek O'Brien (who also produces) on all but one track, the 70-year-old Lester returns to his swampy Excello label past on this sturdy release. Although it was recorded in Texas, Lester effortlessly evokes his Louisiana roots in a set predominantly consisting of covers that feature his moody harmonica and deep, bluesy sound. With muscular songs and a band who knows their way around a muddy groove, Lester is in fine, low-key form throughout. Far from energetic, as his moniker implies, he sounds remarkably inspired throughout. When he hits his mark on the slow blues of "Sad City Blues" (featuring guests Sue Foley, Sarah Brown, and Gene Taylor) or connects on the Jimmy Reed-ish "Miss You Like the Devi," his quivering voice and unamplified harp evoke the sound of those great '60s songs he turned into models of the genre...


Sue Foley is a Canadian guitarist, singer, songwriter and bandleader based in Austin, Texas. Her trademark instrument is a pink paisley Fender Telecaster. She signed with Antone's Records for her 1992 acclaimed debut album Young Girl Blues, and followed with Without a Warning a year later. Foley's wicked lead guitar made her a rarity among blueswomen at the time.
Lightnin' Boogie 1:44
I Feel So Good 3:24
Me & My Chauffeur Blues 3:06
Foley was born in Ottowa, Ontario in 1968. She spent her early childhood in Canada longing for her father's guitar. She learned to play at age 13, became interested in blues from listening to the Rolling Stones and other blues and roots rock bands. She played her first professional gig at 16. After graduating high school, she relocated to Vancouver where she formed a band... She signed to Shanachie for 1998's Ten Days In November, then returned to live in Canada where 2000's Love Comin' Down won a Juno award. In 2001 Foley started a music history project called Guitar Woman based on dozens of interviews she conducted with the world’s leading female guitarists. Between 2001-2008, she wrote articles, organized and promoted concerts, and worked on a book... 


Lil' Ed & the Blues Imperials were among the premiere party bands to come out of Chicago during the '70s and '80s. Often compared to Elmore James and Hound Dog Taylor, fiery, flamboyant slide guitarist Lil' Ed Williams and his group have continued to play dedicated, rough-edged, and hard-rocking dance music, establishing an international reputation that has lasted into the new millennium... Following its third album, the group went on hiatus for a few years, during which Lil' Ed Williams released two albums on Earwig, 1996's Keep on Walkin' with Dave Weld and 1998's Who's Been Talking with Willie Kent. In 1999 the band reconvened and released Get Wild...
Singing Slide 3:07
Too Late (J.B. Hutto) 4:52
The Cannonball (Lil' Ed Williams) 3:32
from Get Wild 1999
After disbanding his group to take time off to clean up his life, Lil' Ed re-formed the Blues Imperials for this 1999 entry, his first for Alligator since What You See Is What You Get. The good news is that the time off had totally reinvigorated Ed's playing, singing, and songwriting, as he ultimately turned in a great batch of originals infused with blistering raw energy. The only non-originals out of the 14 tracks assembled here are nice takes on "Too Late" and "Pet Cream Man," both tunes written by Ed's uncle and principal inspiration, the late J.B. Hutto. Call this a comeback album if you must, but if great, raw Chicago blues is your thing, consider this one great album, period.


One of the most prominent figures in late 20th century blues, singer/multi-instrumentalist Taj Mahal played an enormous role in revitalizing and preserving traditional acoustic blues. Not content to stay within that realm, Mahal soon broadened his approach, taking a musicologist's interest in a multitude of folk and roots music from around the world -- reggae and other Caribbean folk, jazz, gospel, R&B, zydeco, various West African styles, Latin, even Hawaiian...
Taj Mahal 
The Calypsonians 6:28
Sacred Island (Moku La'a) 5:15
The New Hula Blues 4:44
Sacred Island is an album by the American blues/world artist Taj Mahal and the Hawaiian music group the Hula Blues Band, released in 1998. The album peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard Blues Albums chart... The Edmonton Journal wrote that "the sounds of tenor, baritone, and Liliu ukuleles, Hawaiian steel guitar, pan pipes and slack-key guitars combine with the main man's National dobro and harmonica to create a wonderful musical trip thru the islands." The Dayton Daily News thought that "a gentle Calypso backbeat snakes its way through the project, creating a warm, laid-back, breezy feel." The San Diego Union-Tribune noted "the shock of hearing [the] first song: 'The New Calypsonians' sounds a bit like a gruff-voiced Mose Allison singing reggae at Don Ho's lounge."...



... ‘Little’ Mack Simmons was one of the stalwarts of the Chicago club scene; he taught himself harmonica as a youngster and in the early 50s occasionally worked with bluesmen on the St. Louis, Missouri, club circuit, before settling in Chicago in 1954. Since the late 60s he recorded for many small local labels, and sometimes larger companies such as Checker. In 1967 he received a three-year prison sentence for a drugs offence. He ran his own label recording studio and club from time to time and recorded blues, gospel (he was known for a time as Reverend Mac Simmons) and soul...
Trouble No More (Muddy Waters) 5:46
Fever (Eddie Cooley / John Davenport) 4:56
All Around the World (Titus Turner) 4:51
from Somewhere On Down The Line / Rec. July 19, 1997 & July 21, 1997 (1999)
While there's little startling about this 1999 collection of predominantly acoustic covers from the Chicago harpist/vocalist, the band and Simmons consistently find a low-key groove that's intoxicating. Simmons sings with easy authority, a sort of less lascivious Sonny Boy Williamson, and his band supports him with an effervescent, entirely unpretentious upbeat blues that leaps out of the speakers. Even warhorses like Little Willie John's "Fever" (which features an absolutely mind-melting piano solo from someone named Tyler Yarema) and Little Milton's "All Around the World," both of which have been covered to death, find unexpectedly fresh interpretations here. With leisurely, moving vocals that deliver emotionally without unnecessary effort, Simmons dances with the melodies, and his inspired performance makes this a successful album. The primarily acoustic format keeps the sound airy and uncluttered, as Simmons shifts from blues to gospel to R&B with deceptive ease... 


Updating the rural blues tradition for the modern era, Guy Davis was among the most prominent ambassadors of African-American art and culture of his generation, additionally winning great acclaim for his work in the theater... though raised in the city, Davis was frequently regaled with stories of Southern country life as a child, and over time became so enamored of the music of Blind Willie McTell, Skip James, Mississippi John Hurt, and others that he taught himself guitar. As a 13-year-old experiencing his first Buddy Guy concert, Davis' own fate as a bluesman was sealed, especially after he learned his distinctive fingerpicking style from a nine-fingered guitarist he met on a train traveling from Boston to New York some years later...
I Got the Power (Guy Davis) 4:53
When You Got a Good Friend (Robert Johnson / Traditional) 3:15
Thanksgiving Day (Guy Davis) 2:46
From the infectious opening notes of "Georgia Jelly Roll" through the stomping sounds of the closing "New Shoes," Call Down the Thunder is honest, raw, from-the-gut blues music, imbued with the joy of a gospel meeting. Guy Davis is a master storyteller, penning ten of the 13 songs included here. His slide playing is exceptional and at times very reminiscent of Robert Johnson.


Since releasing the aptly titled Believe It! for Blind Pig in 1989, Chicago-based guitarist and singer/songwriter Joanna Connor has revealed herself as a virtuoso stylist in modern electric blues, R&B, and blues-rock. Her take-no-prisoners playing style joins fiery single-string runs to dazzling, rough-and-ready slide guitar pyrotechnics in an approach at once incendiary and deeply soulful...
Never Been Rocked Enough (Delbert McClinton / Troy Seals) 
Rock & Roll Gypsy: 
Fire (Jimi Hendrix) 2:52
 Connor is also an accomplished vocalist and songwriter. 1996's Big Girl Blues drew accolades for its raw, house-rocking approach... moved to Worcester, Massachusetts. She benefitted from her mother's huge collection of blues and jazz recordings, and was taken to see musicians like Taj Mahal, Bonnie Raitt, Ry Cooder, and Buddy Guy in concert. She got her first guitar at age seven and devoted herself to blues and roots rock. At 16, she began singing in Worcester-area bands .. Her 1989 debut for the Blind Pig label, Believe It! got her out of Chicago clubs and into clubs and festivals around the U.S., Canada, and Europe. From the beginning, Connor proved herself a road warrior, touring on her own, in package revues, and as a hired gun with other artists. 1992's Fight registered on the blues charts in several countries. 1993's Living on the Road and Rock and Roll Gypsy (1995) were cross-licensed by Germany's Ruf Records label; they cemented her reputation as a headliner and radio staple across the continent... 



Jimmie Vaughan is a Texas blues guitarist responsible for opening up the national market for roadhouse blues and R&B during the late 20th century. With his tough, lean style, he co-led the Fabulous Thunderbirds with vocalist Kim Wilson between 1979 and 1987. In 1990, he and younger brother Stevie Ray Vaughan cut Family Style. He launched his solo career with 1994's Strange Pleasure...
Don't Cha Know (Jimmie Vaughan) 4:20
Two Wings (Dr. John / Mac Rebennack / Jimmie Vaughan) 4:25
Just Like Putty (Paul Ray / Jimmie Vaughan) 4:07
Jimmie creates a distinctive blend of soul-inflected blues-rock. His voice is cool and earnest, while his guitar-playing is tastefully reserved and sharp; underpinning and accentuating the songs with trebly licks not dissimilar to Lightnin Hopkins or Albert Collins. His poised, easy sound is filled out by mainstays such as Bill Willis, who fills in the bass on the Hammond pedals, and a soulful harmony of male backing vocals... Strange Pleasure is a creative and textured solo-debut, full of feeling and allowing Jimmie to explore a surprisingly versatile range of moods and good-vibes...










2022. február 12., szombat

002 RADiO lemonex / SELECTiON from 2022 The Blues Music Awards nominees of BLUES FOUNDATiON 69 songs/5h

RADiO lemonex / SELECTiON from 2022 The Blues Music Awards nominees of BLUES FOUNDATiON

BLUES MUSIC 69 songs/5h


2022 Blues Music Awards Nominees:

Album of the Year

Tommy Castro
- A Bluesman Came To Town from Tommy Castro Presents A Bluesman Came To Town 2021

Chris Cain
- As Long As You Get What You Want from Raisin’ Cain 2021

Sue Foley
- Pinky's Blues from Pinky's Blues 2021
Wee Willie Walker and The Anthony Paule Soul Orchestra
- Heartbreak from Not In My Lifetime 2021

Altered Five Blues Band
- Guilty of a Good Time from Holler If You Hear Me 2021 best Blues album Nominee



Song of the Year

“Somewhere”, written by Tommy Castro & Tom Hambridge / Tommy Castro Presents A Bluesman Came To Town 2021
“Real Good Lie”, written by Christine Vitale, Larry Batiste, & Anthony Paule / Not in My Lifetime 2021
“I’d Climb Mountains”, written and performed by Selwyn Birchwood / Living In A Burning House 2021
“Holler If You Hear Me”, written by Jeff Schroedl & Mark Solveson (performed by Altered Five Blues Band) / Holler If You Hear Me 2021
“Fragile Peace and Certain War”, written and performed by Carolyn Wonderland / Tempting Fate 2021

Best Emerging Artist Album

                        
GA-20                    Gabe Stillman
GA-20 - Sitting At Home Alone from Try It...You Might Like It: GA-20 Does Hound Dog Taylor 2021 

Gabe Stillman - No Time for Me from Just Say The Word 2021
Rodd Bland and the Members Only Band - (Get Your Money) Where You Spend Your Time (feat. Jerome Chism) from Live on Beale Street: A Tribute to Bobby "Blue" Bland 2021 
Memphissippi Sounds - Crossroads from Welcome To The Land 2021 
Veronica Lewis - Is You Is My Baby from You Ain’t Unlucky 2021

Blues Rock Album

Damon Fowler
- Some Things Change from Alafia Moon 2021
The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band - Too Cool to Dance from Dance Songs for Hard Times 2021
Mike Zito - Resurrection from Resurrection 2021
Popa Chubby - Boogie For Tony from Tinfoil Hat 2021
Jeremiah Johnson - Muddy Black Water from Unemployed Highly Annoyed 2021

Best Acoustic Album

Eric Bibb
- Whole World's Got The Blues from Dear America 2021
Catfish Keith - Red Night Gown from Land of the Sky 2021
Maria Muldaur - Got The South In My Soul from Let’s Get Happy Together 2021
Hector Anchondo - Let Loose Those Chains from Let Loose Those Chains 2021
EG Kight - You're Drivin' Me Crazy from The Trio Sessions 2021

Contemporary Blues Album

Christone "Kingfish" Ingram - 662 from 662 2021
Curtis Salgado - Damage Control from Damage Control 2021
Altered Five Blues Band - Full Moon, Half Crazy from Holler If You Hear Me 2021
Chris Cain - Hush Money from Raisin’ Cain 2021
Tommy Castro - Women, Drugs and Alcohol from Tommy Castro Presents A Bluesman Came To Town 2021

Traditional Blues Album

Guy Davis - Badonkadonk Train from Be Ready When I Call You 2021
Bob Corritore - Spider in My Stew from Spider in My Stew 2021
Eddie 9V - Don't Come Around This House from Little Black Flies 2021
Sue Foley - Hurricane Girl from Pinky's Blues 2021
R.L. Boyce  - Boogie w/ R.L. Boyce (Live) 2021

Soul Blues Album

Gerald McClendon - If That Ain't the Blues from Let’s Have A Party 2021
Zac Harmon - Deal with the Devil from Long As I Got My Guitar 2021
Wee Willie Walker and The Anthony Paule Soul Orchestra - Darling Mine from Not In My Lifetime 2021
Dave Keller and Katie Henry - The Kiss I Want  from You Get What You Give 2021
Tia Carroll  - Move On from You Gotta Have It 2021

B.B. King Entertrainer

Tommy Castro - You To Hold On To from Tommy Castro Presents A Bluesman Came To Town 2021
Eric Gales - You Don't Know the Blues from Crown 2021
Mr. Sipp (Castro Coleman) - Let's Have A Good Time from Sippnotized 2021
J.P. Soars - Let Go of the Reins from Let Go of the Reins 2019
Sugaray Rayford - Dark Night of the Soul from Somebody Save Me 2019

Band of the Year

Anthony Paule Soul Orchestra  with Wee Willie Walker - Til You’ve Walked in My Shoes from Not In My Lifetime 2021
J.P. Soars and the Red Hots - Minor Blues from Let Go of the Reins 2019
Lil’ Ed & the Blues Imperials - I’ll Cry Tomorrow from The Big Sound of Lil' Ed & The Blues Imperials 2016
Sugaray Rayford Band - Invisible Soldier from In Too Deep 2022
Tommy Castro & The Painkillers - I Got Burned from Tommy Castro Presents A Bluesman Came To Town 2021

Acoustic Blues Artist

Eric Bibb - Talkin' 'Bout A Train, Pt. 2 from Dear America 2021
Kevin Burt - Stone Crazy from Stone Crazy 2020
Guy Davis - I Thought I Heard The Devil Call My Name from Be Ready When I Call You 2021
Doug MacLeod - This Road I'm Walking from Break the Chain 2017
Keb’ Mo’ - Good To Be (Home Again) from Good To Be... 2022

Blues Rock Artist

Albert Castiglia
- I Been up All Night from Up All Night 2017
Tommy Castro  - Blues Prisoner from Tommy Castro Presents A Bluesman Came To Town 2021
Tinsley Ellis - Your Love's Like Heroin from Ice Cream In Hell 2020
Ana Popovic - Object of Obsession from Live for Live 2020
Joanne Shaw Taylor - Can't You See What You're Doing To Me from The Blues Album 2021

Contemporary Blues Female Artist

Vanessa Collier
- Bloodhound from Heart on the Line 2020 
Thornetta Davis - Can We Do It Again from Honest Woman 2016 
Ruthie Foster - Woke up This Morning from Live at the Paramount 2020 
Danielle Nicole - Save Me from Cry No More  2018
Carolyn Wonderland - Broken Hearted Blues from Tempting Fate 2021

Contemporary Blues Male Artist

Selwyn Birchwood  - Rock Bottom from Living In A Burning House 2021
Chris Cain - Down On The Ground from Raisin’ Cain 2021
Christone “Kingfish” Ingram - Something In The Dirt from 662 2021
Kenny Neal - Ain't Gon' Let the Blues Die from Bloodline 2016 
Mr. Sipp (Castro Coleman) - Gonna Be Alright from Sippnotized 2021


2019. október 29., kedd

29-10-2019 BLUES:MiX # 33 blues(y) songs from the BLUES circle 2017-2007


Fabrizio Poggi and Guy Davis
29-10-2019  BLUES:MiX # 33 blues(y) songs from the BLUES circle 2017-2007 # Guy Davis, Fabrizio Poggi, Joe Bonamassa, Kevin Selfe, Chris Duarte Group, Lurrie Bell, Shemekia Copeland, Ry Cooder, Buddy Guy, Davy Knowles & Back Door Slam, Julian Fauth, Tommy Castro


B L U E S    M U S I C

if you want excitement PRESS SHUFFLE!



BLUES_circle The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. 

2017-2007




Updating the rural blues tradition for the modern era, Guy Davis was among the most prominent ambassadors of African-American art and culture of his generation, additionally winning great acclaim for his work in the theater. 
Fabrizio Poggi is a singer and harmonica player Grammy Awards nominee who has received the Hohner Lifetime Award, and has been two times Blues Music Awards nominee, Jimi Awards nominee, and during his long career has recorded twenty two albums. He has performed in the US and Europe with The Blind Boys of Alabama, Garth Hudson of The Band, Steve Cropper, Charlie Musselwhite, Ronnie Earl, John P. Hammond, Marcia Ball, Guy Davis, Eric Bibb, Flaco Jimenez, Little Feat and many others.
Guy Davis, Fabrizio Poggi
Hooray, Hooray, These Women Are Killing Me (Sonny Terry) 2:56
Baby Please Don't Go to New Orleans (Big Joe Williams) 4:52
from Sonny & Brownie's Last Train 2017
...“Brownie and Sonny were two musicians whose work will never surpassed, let alone improved on,” says Guy.
While that might be true, this writer is old enough to have experienced those giants on multiple occasions in my youth and, more recently, been blessed with the good fortune of catching Davis and Poggi in concert, too. Even though they deliver much of the same material as their predecessors, they achieve a level of intimacy that Terry and McGhee never approached – possibly because of personal differences...

Blues-rock guitarist who got his start with the band Bloodline before launching a solo career.Guitar mastermind Joe Bonamassa, a young player with the childhood dream of playing music similar to legends like Stevie Ray Vaughan, Eric Clapton, and Jimi Hendrix, was 22 when he inked a deal with Epic.
Joe Bonamassa
This Train (Joe Bonamassa / James House) 4:20
Blues of Desperation (Joe Bonamassa / James House) 6:27
What I've Known for a Very Long Time (Joe Bonamassa) 5:33
from Blues Of Desperation 2016
Despite its hardscrabble title -- a sentiment mirrored by the deeply etched black & white cover art -- 2016's Blues of Desperation is very much a continuation of the bright, varied blues-rock heard on Different Shades of Blue. On that 2014 album, Joe Bonamassa made a conscious decision to pair with a bunch of Nashville songsmiths to help sharpen his original material, and he brings most of them back for Blues of Desperation, too. The tenor of the tunes is somewhat heavy -- there are lonesome trains, low valleys, no places for the lonely -- and the production also carries a ballast, something that comes into sharp relief on the Zep-flavored title track but can be heard throughout the record...

Kevin Selfe has been electrifying audiences nationwide since breaking into the blues scene in 2006. His growing stature as a captivating story teller and passionate performer are surpassed only by his deft mastery of blues guitar. Having relocated to Portland, OR, the Virginia native is now a leading light in the Pacific Northwest’s robust blues revival.
Kevin Selfe
Buy My Soul Back (Kevin Selfe) 4:52
Bluesman Without the Blues (Kevin Selfe) 3:21
Virginia Farm (Kevin Selfe) 4:02
Pig Pickin' (Kevin Selfe) 4:48
from Buy My Soul Back 2015
Multi-talented Kevin Selfe and his band, the Tornadoes, have been wowing audiences from their adopted home base of Portland, Ore., for the better part of a decade, but should make waves nationally with Buy My Soul Back, a thoroughly modern album that delves into themes that regularly run through the blues.
Originally from Roanoke, Va., Selfe discovered the blues late in life, when he was a student in meteorology at North Carolina State University. His roommate, a bass player, introduced him to the works of Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf and Elmore James, and, by the time he graduated with honors, changed his path in life from TV weatherman to dyed-in-the-wool bluesman.

2019. szeptember 22., vasárnap

22-09-2019 BLUES:MiX # 33 blues(y) songs from the BLUES circle 2014-2019


22-09-2019 BLUES:MiX # 33 blues(y) songs from the BLUES circle 2014-2019 # Doyle Bramhall II, Larkin Poe, Cedric Burnside, Billy Branch & the Sons of Blues, Eric Gales, Handsome Jack, Guy Davis, Fabrizio Poggi, Joe Bonamassa, Kevin Selfe, Chris Duarte Group


B L U E S    M U S I C

if you want excitement PRESS SHUFFLE!

LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM
http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971

BLUES_circle The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. 


2014-2019






Austin, Texas-based guitarist who gained fame in the '90s as Eric Clapton's right-hand man and who pursued a blues-rock career of his own. 
Doyle Bramhall II
Hear My Train a Comin' (Jimi Hendrix) 5:08
Mama Can't Help You (Doyle Bramhall II / Kz Jones) 4:22
The Veil (Doyle Bramhall II / Kz Jones) 4:53
from Rich Man 2016
Doyle Bramhall II put his solo recording career into hibernation following the 2001 release of Welcome, choosing to concentrate on his thriving career as a sideman and producer...  Bramhall channels all this experience into Rich Man, his first album in 17 years and also his best. The key to the success of Rich Man is how he loads up the album with thick, funky rhythms, pushing soul over blues over the course of its 13 tracks... By closing the album with a slow, churning rendition of "Hear My Train a Comin'," he consciously reconnects with blues-rock, but early in the record he's riding mellower Southern soul grooves and concentrating on tight songwriting. And that's the trick of the album: it starts expansive and keeps expanding, taking in all the sounds and styles he's played over the last 17 years.

Southern roots rock group led by Rebecca and Megan Lovell, formerly of the Lovell Sisters. Southern roots rockers Larkin Poe were formed around core members Rebecca and Megan Lovell, formerly the Lovell Sisters. A bit edgier and rockier than the Lovell Sisters, Larkin Poe's electric and slide guitar riffs quickly earned them comparisons to the Allman Brothers.
Larkin Poe ‎
Come On In My Kitchen (Robert Johnson) 2:11
Black Betty (Traditional) 2:44
Preachin' Blues (Son House) 3:21
Tom Devil (Traditional) 2:44
from Peach 2017
...But it’s through the release of their own records that the Larkin Poe female duo truly brandish their musical pedigree. And in Peach, they have a strong contender for Southern crossover album of 2017. With blues at its core, the album is a diverse work that incorporates opposing modern and traditional sounds onto a single record without ever sounding dissonant or contrived... Larkin Poe’s mantra seems to be “if it sounds great, then it goes on an album.” It’s one that fans and critics seem to agree works perfectly – with labels like “the little sisters of the Allman Brothers” being thrown around the music press. Peach proves beyond any reasonable doubt the Lovells are worthy of that accolade.

Cedric O. Burnside is an American electric blues drummer, guitarist, singer and songwriter. He is the son of blues drummer Calvin Jackson[3] and grandson of blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist R. L. Burnside. Amongst many others, Burnside has played drums, either live or on record, with R. L. Burnside, Jessie Mae Hemphill, John Hermann, Kenny Brown, Richard Johnston, Jimmy Buffett, T-Model Ford, Paul "Wine" Jones, Widespread Panic, Afrissippi, and the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion.
Cedric Burnside
We Made It 3:34
Please Tell Me Baby 3:37
Death Bell Blues 4:36
I'm Hurtin  2:49
from Benton County Relic 2018
It's always an event when a new Cedric Burnside album is released, for many different reasons. First and foremost, to remind us all of the huge contribution that the Mississippi Hill Country sound has given, in the last half a century and beyond, to the fundamentals of Blues in its entirety, through artists like R.L. Burnside, Mississippi Fred McDowell or Junior Kimbrough, for example.
Another good reason is that Cedric Burnside is one of the very few artists left in the world capable to recreate perfectly the Hill Country sound and atmospheres, thanks to his instinctive, inner ability to adapt the mood and the vibes of the Hill Country Blues to his personal tales about life, loss, fears and hopes.
Living temporarily aside the Cedric Burnside Project, the Mississippi Award-winning multi-instrumentalist and singer/songwriter has decided to go solo on his brand new album, called Benton County Relic, a record where Burnside digs even deeper than he has ever done on past records, from a lyrical perspective, into events that impacted his personal life in the last couple of years. Events that the American artist has been able to translate, lyrically and sonically, through twelve brand new songs of an impressive depth of intensity and raw honesty, two aspects that have always been at the core of Burnside's musical vision.