February 28, 2022

The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - East-West (1966)

Oldie but goodie

 1966 ! The beginning of the so inventive psychedelic music years, born with the "flower power" and the "discovery" of LSD, and opened ten years earlier by the beat generation (Kerouac, Ginsberg, Burroughs, Ferlinghetti ― 100 years old this year !) The year before Paul Butterfield and his brand new blues band played at the Newport Folk Festival, suddenly bringing Chicago electric blues to white audiences. A thundering revelation for Bob Dylan who suddenly decided to go electric too, asking the Butterfield’s band to back him during his set the next day !
Without the Chicago three Bs (Butterfield, Bloomfield & Bishop), the blues revival wouldn't have happened, or not so strongly, allowing black bluesmen to reach a new public and a much larger recognition.

This is the second album of the PBBB, and the last one featuring Bloomfield, who left shortly after its release to set a band called Electric Flag, which ended after only one album, then working with Al Kooper for sometimes before leading an erratic career due to his severe heroin addiction, until his death in 1981.
Harp master, singer and band leader Paul Butterfield also had an up-and-down career after the PBBB split, until his early death in 1987.
Elvin Bishop had a much more productive career after the PBBB, with the Elvin Bishop Group, then solo or in different configurations, and is still active on the blues scene.
M
ore directly devoted to blues than the first one, this album features a number of traditional blues like "I Got A Mind To Give Up Living", "All These Blues" and "Never Say No", and covers of Robert Johnson's "Walkin' Blues", Allen Toussaint's "Get Out Of My Life, Woman", and Muddy Waters' "Still A Fool" re-titled here "Two Trains Running". There's also the odd choice of "Mary, Mary", a pop song written by Michael Nesmith from the Monkees, fortunately revisited in a definitely blues style.
Then there are the two real jewels of the album : "Work Song", a nearly 8-minute revisited piece of Cannonball Adderley, and icing on the cake, the rightly titled "East-West", a 13-minute piece of ground-breaking psychedelia featuring the incredible Indian music-inspired solo of Bloomfield.

T
his innovative moment of psychedelic guitar certainly opened the way for the future early recordings and performances of acid rock bands, like the Grateful Dead ("Dark Star"), Quicksilver Messenger Service ("Who do you love ?"), Jefferson Airplane ("After Bathing at Baxter's"), Moby Grape, Vanilla Fudge or indeed, the Doors… Melodic lines were exploding off of their traditional shackles. On a series of shows at the famous San Francisco Fillmore Auditorium (aka Fillmore West), the song extended to nearly one hour, setting the trend for very long tripping instrumental stretches in acid rock.

Though largely dominated by Bloomfield's flamboyant guitar and Butterfield's harmonica, this album sees Bishop emerging from the shade to show his talent on guitar. From the three Bs, he'll be the only one to survive to the drug and booze venture of the PBBB.
Even if today this album may sound like an oldie because of the recording techniques poorer qualities of that time, it remains a goodie which opened durable new horizons in music. Be it for the sole "East-West" track, this album is worth listening and keeping in one's collection.

Things to read
"Blues, booze and debauchery: the agonizing story of Paul Butterfield", a 2021 article by Rob Hughes from the online mag Classic Rock : https://www.loudersound.com/features/blues-booze-and-debauchery-the-agonising-story-of-paul-butterfield


Videos
 > "Driftin' Blues", Monterey, 1967 (Elvin Bishop on guitar) : https://youtu.be/e3LEhfbKCSc
 > Woodstock, 1969 ("Buzzy" Feiten on guitar) :
- "Driftin' and Driftin'": https://youtu.be/7jSSBAWeUCo
- "Everything gonna be alright": https://youtu.be/VoqG3hif_dg
 
> Second reunion gig of members of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band at the Fenway Theater, Boston, in December 1971 (Paul Butterfield : harp & vocals - Mike Bloomfield (more likely Elvin Bishop) : guitar - Mark Naftalin : piano - John Kahn : bass - and Billy Mundi : drums) (23mn) : https://youtu.be/jTWP70FU-ew

> Reunion concert, Greek Theater, Los Angeles, 1978 (Mike Bloomfield ( ?) : guitar - Paul Butterfield : vocals/harmonica - Elvin Bishop : guitar - Mark Naftalin : keyboards - Sam Lay : drums - 'Jellyroll' Troy : bass) : https://youtu.be/_JooI-S42-c
> Paul Butterfield live at The Maintenance Shop, 1985 (43mn) : https://youtu.be/BQvHBLkSzUE

> Elvin Bishop at the Winterland Ballroom, San Francisco, 1973 (38mn) : https://youtu.be/rPjoWix9afA

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February 26, 2022

Clarence Spady - Just Between Us (2008)

> The album

Funky King of Spades 

W
arning ! If you dislike funk, keep going your way. If on the contrary, you appreciate funky rhythm'n'blues with a nice jazzy blues swinging guitar, this Clarence Spady excellent album might well be your treat.
Born in 1961 in Paterson, New Jersey, Spady grew up in Scranton, Pennsylvania, among parents who listened to soul and blues. His father played guitar as well as his uncle Fletchey who, Spady said once, “was a very good blues guitarist, in the manner of Otis Rush or Booba Barnes”, so that he began to play the instrument as early as… 5  !

After high school, Spady started his real musical education on the job, playing in several local bands, even accidentally getting involved in his first recording session as a sideman for the Jimmy Johnson's family band in the end of the seventies. The Johnsons' rhythm guitarist, Buddy Blackstone, probably saw Spady's potential and began to coached him.
Spady then joined touring local rhythm'n'blues bands, A Touch of Class then Greg Palmer’s band, for eight years, before leaving for Michigan where he played funk music in different bands for a couple of years. “I’ve always dug funk,” he comments. That, when listening to "Just Between Us", we've understood !
Back to Scranton, eager to find back his blues roots, he set up the West Third Street Blues Band, playing at night while working in the day as an excavator operator. He started to write songs for the group, that finally gave birth to his 1996 self-produced album “Nature Of The Beast”.
Despite a 1997 W. C. Handy Award nomination in the Best New Blues Artist category that brought him international attention and tour bookings, it took Spady another twelve years to put out "Just Between Us" in 2008.

Spady sings with a seducing soul voice. He's a gifted lyricist, a talented melodist and arranger, and a very elegant guitar master. Perfectly groovy on rhythm guitar, he is at the same time an elaborate subtle soloist putting out a very polished cool lightly jazzy playing. The presence of a Hammond B-3 organ (Benjie Porecki and Bob O’Connell) on every track colors the album with a tasteful churchy sound, and the whole structure of the album lays on the excellent funky bass work of Steve Gomes. More generally the production has been finely crafted in every detail.
Spady masters the art of composing groovy rhythms and hot funky riffs. Listen for example to "I'll Never Sell You Out", "King Of Hearts" or "Cut Them Loose", and you'll see (if I may use that verb in a musical matter).

This funky brand of impassioned, electrifying soul blues gathers strictly original Spady-penned songs. Some singularities deserve to be mentioned : the funky acid jazz sound of "I'll Never Sell You Out"; the melodic similarities between "Just Between Us" and Bob Marley's "No Woman No Cry"; the great Hammond and guitar work on the excellent jazzy blues "Be Your Enough"; the killing bass lines on "King Of Hearts", "Cut Them Loose", "24/7 Luv" and "Candy"; the psychedelic folk-rock twist of "E-Mail" ("I ended up writing it in the studio", Spady recalls) which also reminds the early Allman Brothers' style. As for Spady's refined and swinging guitar style, as said earlier, it shines from beginning to end.
Such an original and sophisticated work was justly rewarded with a second nomination in 2009, this time for a Blues Music Award as Soul Blues Album of the Year.

Discography
1996, Nature of the Beast (Evidence Music)
2008, Just Between Us (Severn Records)
2021, Surrender (Nola Blue )

Videos
- Unluggged
> On the Blues Society Of Central Pennsylvania (BSCP) New Year's Eve Virtual Jam on December 31, 2020 (42mn): https://youtu.be/3Vhu8PAVoSw
> On the BSCP Virtual Jam, on December 10, 2020 (42mn): https://youtu.be/J6pCafAYNFA

- The technician
> "The sky is crying" live at Terra Blues in October 2019: https://youtu.be/d89NYGmfB0Y

- Live
> At the River Street Jazz Cafe, Plains, Pennsylvania:
- in June 11, 2010 (complete 2h20 show): https://youtu.be/oKvSWqMO3vQ
- in November 16, 2013 (complete 2h40 show): https://youtu.be/Zn-YVSZ5BtY & (4h18 version): https://youtu.be/MWp1Rq9oCzg
> At the Chameleon Club during the 2019 Lancaster Roots and Blues Fest. (1h27): https://youtu.be/13r_h6mg1Vk
 
> At The Recovery Bank in April 2021 (1h18): https://youtu.be/OXQMh25n0zU
> On The Exchange just days after Clarence's new album, "Surrender", was released, May 2021 (1h15): https://youtu.be/qNOc5RTiEAg
> In 2016 at Arlo's Tavern
- Part 4 (with the incredible young Eamonn Hubert): https://youtu.be/RmHDHJfHNto
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February 23, 2022

David Kimbrough Jr. - Say You Don't Love Me: The Last Recordings Of David Kimbrough Jr. (2020)

> The album

Done got gone

I confess I'm quite troubled by this album, recorded in the fall of 2017 at David Kimbrough Jr.'s house in Holly Springs, in the North Mississippi Hills. Why? Precisely because I don't hear much Hill Country blues in this album, not even in the covers of his father Junior Kimbrough, one of the legendary figure of the style.  
David Kimbrough Jr., sometimes also named David Kimbrough III, has been presented many times as the real successor of his father's musical tradition, the "Cotton Patch Soul Blues" style, but his music has little in common with his father's style.

T
his posthumous album sounds like a raw demo tape, apparently without much post-production. Kimbrough sings and plays a simple acoustic-sounding Fender Stratocaster guitar on his front porch like he would do for a TV documentary report, or at a friends or family members gathering.
It's mainly a tribute from a son to his father through covers of Junior Kimbrough's "Done Got Old", "I'm Leaving You Baby", "Meet Me In The City", the "Lonesome Road/Lord Have Mercy On Me" medley and a previously unpublished song, "Say You Don't Love Me". David Kimbrough plays only two of his own compositions: "Half Past A Monkey's Azz" and "Poke That Pig".

U
nfortunately, despite few interesting guitar moments, the global result is not really enthralling, lacking that special spark that makes the music capture your mind and body. Where is the hypnotic heavy percussive style of the Mississippi Hills? Take a song like "Done Got Old". Besides Junior Kimbrough's original version, Buddy Guy made a more chilling cover on his 2001 album "Sweet Tea". Like a stream of water flowing over me without ever getting me wet, this album left me rather unconcerned.

D
avid Kimbrough died in July 2019 from cancer. Was this 2017 field recording session initially planned to be released as an album? Was it published posthumously as a form of testament? Or was its release motivated by plain commercial opportunism? In any case, this last known recording should have better remained in the Kimbrough family safe and stay there as a private souvenir of the late David Kimbrough...

< Junior Kimbrough
 

About the "Cotton Patch Soul Blues"

> Robert Kimbrough explains what is the Kimbrough style: https://youtu.be/8VoP-vzGqEU

Audio live shows
> North Mississippi Hill Country Picnic
 live raw audio recordings
 (legally free download under Common Public License):
- In 2011: https://archive.org/details/davidkimbrough2011-06-25

Around the album
> Video of the recording on the front porch on a rainy day, 2017, Holly Springs: https://youtu.be/tVr9DbBdPfQ ("Done Got Old")
> Album video trailer: https://youtu.be/80-izh3YSao

DK's live videos
> A few weeks before his death, at the Kimbrough ""Cotton Patch Soul Blues" Festival, The Hut, Holly Springs, Mississippi, May 19, 2019:
- "All Night Long": https://youtu.be/WJKkeKVNKUc
- "Baby, Come On With Me": https://youtu.be/brwz__FcfUY

> David Kimbrough at the Cotton Patch Blues Fest (65mn - there are a number of musicians in and out through the set, Kinny and Robert Kimbrough join in for the second half): https://youtu.be/4hMPs17gVjc

> On tour with David Gray:
- at the Spa City Blues Challenge, Hot Springs Arkansas, in 2012: https://youtu.be/jYl7F9POkzM
- at the Buffalo River Blues Challenge in 2012: https://youtu.be/iIW6_hnnVCY

> At the Mountain View Dulcimer Festival in 2012: https://youtu.be/GcY_lc1q6oA

> Obsessive rhythm at the Bikes Blues and BBQ 2011 Fest. in Fayetteville, Arkansas: https://youtu.be/9HAHTVZ34s8
 
> With the North Mississippi Allstars in Fayetteville, 2012: https://youtu.be/5muzG82M3LM

> With Duwayne Burnside at the Burnside Blues Cafe in 2011: https://youtu.be/1RPRlI5b2Hc

> With Kinney Kimbrough and Chris Chew at the New Daisy, Memphis, in 2010: https://youtu.be/-I3AMuNGbTU

> Fun on a picnic with R.L. Boyce (amateur shooting): https://youtu.be/_NxVtRf4qZA

David Kimbrough Jr had rebuilt
the Juke Joint of his father
that burned down in 2000.
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February 22, 2022

Band of Heysek feat. RL Boyce & Kenny Brown -Juke My Joint (2020)

> The album

Czech it out  !

I'm not going to paraphrase what's perfectly explained in the double presentation featured on Blue Dragon. I will just add that since the collapse of the Soviet Empire and the subsequent tearing down of the Iron curtain, East European people could freely open their ears to western musics, and more particularly American ones, be it jazz, rock, R'n'B, hip hop, folk, country, and of course blues. Western albums became commercially accessible to anybody, instead of being illegally smuggled in by a few risk-taking connoisseurs.
The young Czechs, those born between let's say 1975 and 1980, who were in their teens when their country got full independence, are no exception. So it is for the three members of Band of Heysek. Not only could they get blues albums, but blues artists started to come for live concerts and festivals.
That's what happened in 2018 when they toured some Eastern European countries with vintage Mississippi bluesmen R.L. Boyce, Kenny Brown and Robert Kimbrough. These probably enjoyed their musical company enough to invite them to perform at the legendary unique "North Mississippi Hill Country Picnic" festival the following year. On this occasion they did an impromptu recording session with Boyce and Brown that gave the present album.

I
f you like R.L. Boyce, you'll like this album because, to be frank, it is a R.L. Boyce album. Incidentally it's often listed as "R.L. Boyce & Band of Heysek feat. Kenny Brown", which I find more representative of the album's content. Personally I would even dare : "R.L. Boyce & Kenny Brown feat. Band of Heysek", but that wouldn't be very fair.
"Juke My Joint" is 100% R.L. Boyce's music style and sound, and singing. He and his accomplice Kenny Brown enjoyed a good time jam with a band of talented Czech youngsters who appreciate their music, admire them and were totally subjugated by the two Mississippi veterans. (Also, such a meeting brings a light of hope in a time of nationalist and xenophobic, not to say racist, rejection of all that is "foreign", something only music can do. But that's a different topic that doesn't quite fit here. Or does it...)

Kenny Brown (left) & R.L. Boyce.
It's a very enjoyable electric Hill Country blues album featuring eight raw, heavy and greasy Hill Country slow boogies that will cling to your ears like a leech  for some 42 minutes. The opening "Angry Man", a sorrowful mid-tempo lament, sets the tone for the whole album : repetitive hypnotic songs, Boyce's vintage stormy sound, crackled by lightnings of guitar by Kenny Brown and Jan Švihálek, and tormented lyrics co-written by Boyce and Švihálek. It sounds as natural and spontaneous as a juke joint improvised jam (hence the title of the album). Special mention to the final "No more boogie" for its humorous title considering it is precisely a boogie. "No mo'… no mo'… no mo'…" laughs Boyce at the end. As far as I'm concerned, I wouldn't mind getting mo' !

Videos

Band Of Heysek recording sessions
> Band Of Heysek, R.L. Boyce & Kenny Brownin "Let Me Take You To My Place" (2019 recording session of "Juke my Joint") : https://youtu.be/BCcVQVAETa0
> R
ecording session for the
2019-issued album "I'm Glad I Met You": https://youtu.be/IXJNtMIo24Q

Band of Heysek live

> In  2017 (90mn) : https://youtu.be/uGgdl7YKzdw
> In 2018 : https://youtu.be/oXfxvet4SWc
> In 2021 (65mn) : https://youtu.be/0FrUBIMU-u0
> In Sarajevo (Bosnia) in 2017 : https://youtu.be/3YQsmy2egjo


R.L. Boyce

> With Lady Jama at the R.L.Boyce Picnic 2021 in Como : https://youtu.be/78ItWcFGueM
> At the R.L. Boyce Picnic 2020 in Como : https://youtu.be/obssFL_afqw
> At the Montreal Jazz Festival in 2018 : https://youtu.be/UGqoCdCM154






[Click on pics to enlarge]






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February 19, 2022

Fred McDowell - 1962 Fred McDowell (1989)

"Mississippi" Fred McDowell's natch'l blues

H
is grave is just a simple headstone on a rectangle of dry dirt, in a mournful open cemetery field planted with just a few trees, near Como, on the edge of the Mississippi Hill Country, also home of R.L. Boyce and the late Jessie Mae Hamphill, her grandfather Sid and local legend "Otha" Turner. The front side of the headstone simply decorated by a small picture of the tenant bears the inscription : "Mississippi Fred" McDowell - Jan. 12, 1904-July 3, 1972, and just below : Ester Mae McDowell – 1906-1980, while the rear side reads the lyrics of his song "You got to move" (unfortunately not on this album) : “You may be high, You may be low, You may be rich, child, You may be poor, But when the Lord gets ready, You got to move.” So he moved to this Northern Mississippi plain graveyard after cancer silenced both his unique roots voice and slide guitar.
 

But years before that unfortunate day, he had become a major figure of Mississippi country blues and a master of "bottleneck" guitar (he first used a pocketknife for a slide, later a polished beef rib bone, before finally settling on a self-shaped glass bottleneck around his ring finger). His music was basically rooted deeply in the Hill Country style, but he blended it with some traditional Delta blues forms.

His "Mississippi" nickname is peculiar since he was born just across the state line in Rossville, Tennessee, east of Memphis, and finally didn't settle down around Como before the end of the 1930s or beginning of the 1940s, after a bit of a hectic working life through cotton fields and plants, or in the hard times, hoboing and busking in the streets like many of his fellow bluesmen at that time.
This itinerant early life probably explains that he was exposed to and influenced by several styles of blues, and that he became a fine observer of social life around him. Playing for tips wherever he could  in his teens and twenties, he managed to settle down and then performed at dance parties, picnics and other social gatherings from the 1930s to the 50s.
Until 1959 when ethno-musicologist Alan Lomax "discovered" him and made some "field recordings" of him, released on disc in 1960. McDowell suddenly came out from the shadows of his Como farm to the lights of the folk revival, especially after his performance at the 1964 Newport Folk Festival.

The present album has some similarities with Lomax's work three years earlier : it was taped at McDowell's home in 1962, in front of friends and neighbors, not in a studio. And what is unbelievable is the quality of the recording when you know it was done by two university students walking on Lomax's path without any commercial project. That idea came only in 1989, seventeen years after McDowell's passing, when one obscure UK. company specialized in reissue of old blues and R'n'B albums, Flyright Records, released it. But, chronologically, it's McDowell second recording.
A real jewel : McDowell is playing and singing so naturally. And so wonderfully. He sounds exactly as he was usually playing at festive gatherings in his Como area, apparently not at all disturbed by the presence of the tape recorder.
His blues was more percussive than the traditional Delta one, influenced by African and old European rhythms specific to the Hill Country blues roots, like the Fife & Drums music. McDowell's performances helped define the Hill Country blues guitar sound, influencing later artists such as the two R. L., Boyce and Burnside, or Junior Kimbrough.

 < Fred McDowell Blues Trail marker in Como..

Through twenty magnificent pieces, this miraculous early home-recorded album already summarizes all of McDowell genius as an acoustic slide guitar blues performer. Featured are his extraordinary wild version of "Shake 'Em On Down"; the superbly slide played "On The Frisco Line"; "I Rolled And I Tumbled", his own version of the famous "Rollin' and Tumblin'"; the social revolt of "Red Cross Store Blues" and "John Henry"; and his great renditions of "Good Morning Little School Girl", "Milk Cow Blues", "Highway 61", "Someday Baby" or the iconic "Kokomo Blues", to name a few. McDowell performance, sometimes discreetly punctuated in the background by appreciations and laughter from the audience, takes the listener down in bygone rural Mississippi for a highly enjoyable and fascinating lesson of authentic country blues.

It's only seven years later, in 1969, that he recorded with an electric guitar, probably a first for a Mississippi country blues musician. The album's title, "I Do Not Play No Rock'n'Roll", sounded like a musical pledge though, claiming loud and clear that he was playing "strict natch'l blues" and only that (another fantastic album I strongly recommend anybody to listen). That didn't prevent The Rolling Stones to record a memorable version of "You got to move" in 1971, on the "Sticky Fingers" album.

One year after this homage from a world famous white British rock band, at "only" 66, McDowell's time had come and he definitely had got to move. But thanks to an album like this, he hasn't moved too far...

 Illustrated discography :
https://www.wirz.de/music/mcdowell.htm

 Rare videos 
> A 14mn documentary about McDowell (University of Mississippi), 1969 : https://youtu.be/gEmqzkkCQBY or https://youtu.be/TnMGpn6qA3Y
> Live in 1969 (the introductory incrusted lines are not quite true about McDowell being "highly typical of the Delta blues style") :
- Part I : https://youtu.be/ZMr_JcW1qAs
- Part II : https://youtu.be/myctFmIkc5A
> Performing "John Henry" around 1962: https://youtu.be/54GNI2K3-ec
> "Goin Down to the River", around 1964: https://youtu.be/9TyzAAwJnIw
> "Louise"  (from the DVD "Legends of Bottleneck Blues Guitar") : https://youtu.be/JU_UJwN3WnE
> Fred McDowell (from 0.00 to 15:25) and Big Joe Williams : https://youtu.be/dYsFVNWpAQI

> "You Gotta Move" by The Rolling Stones : https://youtu.be/8Uhh3a48XPA


Fred McDowell’s grave near Como.

_____________________

February 17, 2022

Mike Munson - Mike Munson (2013)

 
Boy from the North Country

Winona is located on the Mississippi West bank in the South-East corner of Minnesota (also Bob Dylan's home state), about a 100 kms from Mineapolis. This rough cold region is the home residence of country blues musician Mike Munson.
It's also in the north of Minnesota that the Mississippi springs off the Ataska Lake. For Mike Munson, the way was simple to reach the Mississipi Delta and Hills Country, the land of the music styles he has made his own : all he had to do, physically and mentally, was to follow the river down.

This musical voyage took him on the path of the late Fred McDowell, Jessie Mae Hemphill and Jack Owens. This one, from Bentonia, had known Skip James and Henry Stuckey, the father of the Bentonia blues. Owens was dead, but Jimmy "Duck" Holmes, the last living master on the Bentonia style, was and is not.

At the 2017 Bentonia Blues Fest.
Very recently I was praying for "Duck" to find a disciple to whom he could transmit the endangered Bentonia blues style (1). I think my wish was granted long before I formulated it. "Duck" mentored Munson who is now possessed by the haunting spirit of Bentonia. He even recorded his 2018-released album, "Rose Hill", live at the famous Blue Front Cafe of "Duck", and released on Holmes newly launched Blue Front label.

The album we're reviewing here is Munson's first studio work, not well known because self released, but definitely rooted in blues. It includes many original blues compositions like "Spike", "Too Far Gone", "Black Bird", "Wanda's Farm", "Sad and Lonely" (where a bass drum brings a local Amerindian color) and the melancholy ballad "Over Now". He also pays his dues to the music's Mississippi roots, for example with "Empire Builder", the stomping "Good Gal Said", the swampy cover of "Pony Blues" or the heavy "What's The Matter". It's so well done, with such a sound unity, that it's almost impossible to see any difference between his self-penned songs and his covers.

Munson is a guitar virtuoso mixing skilled fast finger-picking and masterful slide guitar in a fluid combination of grinding rhythms. Blending his North-Midwestern roots with the Mississippi influences brought back from his numerous travels there, Munson masters blues composition and performance, and his personal vocal signature fits his often dark compelling lyrics.

This traditional country blues album is not 100% Bentonian, though the influence can be strongly felt, but it certainly is 100% Mississipian. With such a CD, Mike Munson has established himself as an evangelist for the roots blues.

(1) See "Jimmy 'Duck' Holmes - Gonna Get Old Someday" on Blue Dragon, and  The last of the Bentonians here.

Interview
With Mike Munson for the Imbibe Sessions: https://youtu.be/PyqpSUlQBjc

Videos

> At the Jimmy "Duck" Holmes' Blue Front Cafe in 2019: https://youtu.be/FdNTnUaCXto

> 1h40 show in Granite Falls (Minessota), 2020 : https://youtu.be/w8QnqVm9Aig

> On Prairie Public channel in 2017: https://youtu.be/zcLbHMw0wbk

> At The Great River Shakespeare Festival, Winona Sate University, in 2016:
- "Shake Em On Down": https://youtu.be/OpKHPZpgMaM

- "To Far Gone": https://youtu.be/LwtDkFimTSQ

- "Empire Builder": https://youtu.be/Ke8j1ryfR7I

- Untitled: https://youtu.be/pcl0CmZTvB0

> Playing Howlin Wolf's "Who's Been Talkin'?" at Ed's Bar, Winona, in 2011: https://youtu.be/541n--k92QY

> "Too Far Gone": https://youtu.be/hOAseYlFMiA

> "Over Now": https://youtu.be/vJOcMzIoAYU

 

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