May 29, 2022

Little Toby Walker - Little Toby Walker (2001)




The album

Little big (blues) man
I
n 2001, Toby Walker, well known here (1), was still "Little". Since then he rightfully dropped down this nickname for the simple reason that he is one of the most talented contemporary acoustic country blues (slide) guitar picker. A simple listen to the first track of this debut album, the jokingly titled "Take A Little Walk With Me" (little walk, Little Walker… he he he), would be enough to be convinced. But you just don't want to stop to this opening track. The 16 following songs are all in the same vein : a treat of finger-picked and slide old-time Delta country blues !

Like the pre-war bluesmen, Walker loves to sing and write story-telling songs, preferably humorous and if possible filled with sexual connotations. The album is full of them.

The tracklist features originals from Walker ("Take A Little Walk With Me", "Who's Gonna Be Your Sweet Man Tonight ?", "Full Figured Women" with "a nod to Taj Mahal" "Big Legged Women"), and personal versions of both old traditionals ("Stack O' Lee", "Irish Fiddle Medley", "Monkey In The Pool Room", "Sitting On Top Of The World" and "Catfish Blues") and songs from renowned bluesmen (Big Bill Broonzy, Blind Willie McTell, Scott Joplin, Sonny Boy Williamson II) or less famous artists (Bo Carter, Tampa Red, Sam Chatmon, Jack Owens).

The fourteen covers are seriously revisited by Walker. The case of "Kismet Rag" is a good example of Walker's talented adaptation work : Scott Joplin, who wrote this instrumental, was not playing guitar but… piano ! Still Walker, helped by the arrangement of Dick Fegy, makes it sound so natural on guitar.

Among the traditionals picked up by Walker, some have an interesting history. "Stack O' Lee", also known as "Stack-a-Lee", "Stagger Lee", "Stagolee" and other variants, is a traditional field holler about the shooting of Billy Lyons by a bad tempered mobster pimp and gambler named "Stag" Lee Shelton, in St. Louis (Missouri), at Christmas 1895. The blues rebel tradition has always shown an ambiguous fascination for outlaws and Walker sings it with very expressive intonations over a devilish guitar picking, insisting on the chorus phrase  "he's a baaad man, yes a baaad man Stack O' Lee".

Sonny Boy Williamson II
"Born Blind", better known as "Eyesight to the Blind", was recorded first in 1951 by Sonny Boy Williamson II aka Aleck "Rice" Miller. In 1957, he re-recorded it, this time under the title "Born Blind" backed in particular by Otis Spann (piano), Robert Lockwood and Luther Tucker (guitars), and Willie Dixon (bass). The song was covered later notably by B.B. King, Mose Allison, Mike Bloomfield, David Bromberg, Eric Clapton, and used by Pete Townshend in a musically much transformed version, for the Who's famous rock opera "Tommy". 

"Sitting On Top Of The World", was first recorded in 1930 by Walter Vinson & Lonnie Chatmon, from the Mississippi Sheiks, and later covered by numerous artists in different genres : blues (Big Bill Broonzy, Charley Patton, Howlin' Wolf in a Chicago blues styled electric version), folk, country (Milton Brown, Bob Willis, Willie Nelson), bluegrass (Bill Monroe, Doc Watson), rock (Cream). With such coverage the song became a standard of American folk music.

Note that the Chatmon (or Chatman) family, known as The Mississippi Sheiks from the 1930s, is very well represented on the album : in addition to "Sitting On Top Of The World", "All Around Man" was created by Bo Carter whose real name was actually Armenter Chatmon. His brother Sam would be the author of "The Lead's All Gone".

Jim Jackson
"Catfish Blues" a perfect example of the double-entendre art mastered by blues singers, is a famous traditional Delta blues song whose lyrics appeared for the first time in 1928 in "Kansas City Blues Part 3" sung by a popular black medicine-show entertainer and songster named Jim Jackson. Charley Patton recorded it as “Going To Move To Alabama” in 1929. A blues song actually titled "Catfish Blues" was recorded by Robert Petway in 1941. In the early 1950s, Muddy Waters adapted it as "Rolling Stone". Later, in the late 1960s, it was again covered by Jimi Hendrix.

Walker manages the "tour de force" of making these revisited covers sound as "new" as his own originals. His light hoarse singing is highly expressive. In finger-picking style as in slide, on regular acoustic or steel resonator guitar, the man's skills are impressive but without any showing-off which is the mark of a great guitar master. This first strike was indeed a master one. 


Toby Walker's web site  (https://www.littletobywalker.com) features several videos from his 2019 concert at the Our Times Coffeehouse, Garden City, NY. : https://www.littletobywalker.com/recent-concert-videos.html
Videos
Links to Walker's live shows are available on the page : https://onurblues.blogspot.com/2022/03/toby-walker-shake-shake-mama-2011.html
I invite you to visit them, if you haven't already.
I just add this one, previously unreleased on this blog : On line concert, 2020 : https://youtu.be/Di4ZLrYClnY

Following are live performances of songs from the album, sometimes completed with original versions by their creators :
"Texas Tornado" : → https://youtu.be/eQKQgWkPnVo
"Savannah Mama" : https://youtu.be/Py7uNXdxwIM
"Kismet Rag" : → https://youtu.be/QL8ITP3kbvA
"Full Figured Woman" : → https://youtu.be/38UP_9kV0s0
"Irish Fiddle Medley" : → https://youtu.be/QfcB9yhThnc
"Monkey In The Pool Room" : https://youtu.be/Laj8vNOWvK4
"Boogie Woogie Dance" : → https://youtu.be/2m6aoucWMLQ
"Born Blind" + "Keep your Lamps Trimmed and Burnin'"  (with wife Carol on upright bass): https://youtu.be/Xj49Y-tTUsk
As "Eyesight to the Blind"
by Sonny Boy Williamson II :
by B.B. King with ex-Pink Floyd David Gilmour : https://youtu.be/2ieI49hlOUw
by Eric Clapton : https://youtu.be/D6Td2BPrTbw
by Johnny Winter : https://youtu.be/KmkoH64h4Z8
by the Who in "Tommy" under the title "The Hawker" :
- in the 1969 album : https://youtu.be/iKCXGFn0Abg
- in the 1975 movie, by Eric Clapton : https://youtu.be/3FjPt1fZsSs
Incredible how much a song can evolve !
Johnnie Temple
"The Lead's All Gone" : https://youtu.be/glvwxz2JhgA
by Bo Carter (1931) as "My Pencil Won't Write No More" : https://youtu.be/Wdwu0I_vhXk
by Johnnie Temple (1935) as "Lead Pencil Blues" : https://youtu.be/Sfab0BHgkSo
"Sitting On Top Of The World" : https://youtu.be/n1PR5x7Mxzs
by Sam Chatmon : https://youtu.be/ueEQKZcXfjc
"Catfish Blues"
by Robert Petway : https://youtu.be/E9z7eCCRAtY
by Jimi Hendrix (1967) : https://youtu.be/ovieyGdSaig




Robert Petway

Sam Chatmon

The Mississippi Sheiks


Big Bill Broonzy

Howlin' Wolf
Johnny Winter



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May 28, 2022

Nathan & The Zydeco Cha Chas - I'm A Zydeco Hog: Live At The Rock'n'Bowl, New Orleans (1997

  The album

Hey toi ! Zydeco hot tout partout !
Nothing better than a live album to catch an idea of the highly energetic dancing power of a good Zydeco band on stage. This live from Nathan and his Zydeco Cha Chas is an irresistible example of what Louisiana people are lucky to dance to every Friday or Saturday night.

Well known here, singer-accordionist Nathan Williams and his brothers "Chuckie" on washboard and the excellent Dennis Paul on guitar (1), with Allen 'Cat Roy' Broussard on sax, Wayne Burns on bass, and Gerard St. Julien on drums, are kicking our ass bad with these fourteen hot tracks. You really wonder what kind of fuel these guys put in their engine ! Probably a magic brew secretly mixed by Tante Rosa !

Ta Ka Tak ! Ta Ka Tak  ! Ta Ka Tak  ! beats the killing drums-washboard pair. "Hey toi, fais 'tention ! Ayaya" answers Nathan at the beginning of "Hey Bebe". The lyrics are reduced to a litany of shouted words : "Lafayette ! Baton Rouge ! New Orleans !" The accordion chops it down bad. A kind of rhythmic orgasm gets hold of you.

French Creole gets the main share of the lyrics in the first half of the album and the great Clifton Chenier is duly honored with two covers (the sad nostalgic "Grand Prix" and the high tempo "Josephine C'est Pas Ma Femme").

Even the slower more sorrowful numbers, enlightened by Broussard's sax and Dennis Paul's guitar, are still rocking ! Impossible to catch back your breath. "Va danser 'tit Zydeco là ! Take yous shoes off" advise Nathan ("Tout Partout"). Wayne Burns (this one really deserves his name !) puts out a hot bass solo on "Josephine". "Hey Chuckie, allez" shouts Nathan to his washboard rubbing brother. Denis Paul cooks a killing jazzy rhythmic riff on "Zydeco Hog". The band moves to a blues that seriously swings ("Slow Horses And Fast Women"). "Oh 'tite fille, oh Yie Yi" goes Nathan on the next track. The band doesn't lose the beat… one bit. "Zydeco Boogaloo ! Hey toi !" It's time to celebrate uncle Sid "El Sid O's" Williams (1). "Cochon c'est bon, les soucis c'est pas bon ! Hay hay ! Hoink hoink !" philosophizes Nathan on the humorous "Everything On The Hog".

"Stomp Down Zydeco" does exactly what the title announces. Cramps start to cripple your legs. Not even time to recover a little on the melancholic "Why You Wanna Make Poor Cha Cha Cry?",  "You Got Me Baby Now You Don't" comes next with exulting sax and rhythm guitar from Dennis Paul, definitely a top guitarist as confirmed on the closing "Zydeco Road".

Infernal tempo, pirouetting accordion, groovy guitar, soul sax, hey toi ! don't be surprised if you lost weigh when you arrive at the end of the "Zydeco Road" ! Everything's good on the hog, everything is great with Nathan & His Zydeco Cha Chas ! Just another bite, pleeeeeeeez ! 

 
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Bloodest Saxophone - Texas Queens 5 (2019)

The album

The Texas belles and the Sa(x)murais
An incredible album born from the improbable reunion of a Japanese horn-led retro jazz band, Bloodest Saxophone (just their name is a promise !), with the great soul voices of five Texas-Louisiana blues belles ! Something you wouldn't even dare imagine. The producers who took up this crazy challenge had a brilliant idea : the result is astonishing !

The saxophones samurais and the soul ladies jump and swing like hell. This album, by its intensity, its wild swing and the ladies' soulful vocals, is perspiring eroticism. You can feel the sweat moistening the girls clothes and plastering them on their bodies in a highly sexy way.

Bloodest Saxophone
The instrumental “Pork Chop Chick” is the only original piece of the album, written by... tenor sax player Koda Shintaro. A great piece of jump that sounds fully at home among the album's typically American jump blues oldies dug out from the 1950s & 60s repertoire from musicians like Louis Jordan, Willie Dixon, Johnny Adams, Rufus Thomas, Amos Milburn, Lafayette Thomas, Roscoe Robinson, etc. It's jazz, it's soul, it's blues, it's rhythm'n'blues, it's God knows what, and past the first songs you don't care anymore because all this swing fills your entire self with a huge load of almost animal satisfaction.

Jai Malano
Apart from the jubilant jazzy jungle shuffle “Pork Chop Chick”, some outstanding tracks knocked me out : “Walking the Dog” and “I Done Done It” sung by the exciting Jai Malano, the calypso-tinged “Run Joe”, “The Grape Vine” with its special vocal texture, or the bonus "Cockroach Run" featuring an intense guitar duel… But let's be honest, all tracks are fantastic.

Lauren Cervantes & Angela Miller
Our five plumpy queens ― Diunna Greenleaf, Lauren Cervantes, Angela Miller, Jai Malano and Crystal Thomas ― are truly great singers, lead or background, radiating soulfulness from head to toe. Behind them our Japanese swingers are incredibly inspired and let out an impressive explosion of saxes and jazzy blues guitar (Shuji's), leaning on their top rhythm section duet. On a few tracks, they receive the welcome help of Nick Connolly on keyboards, Kaz Kazanoff on tenor sax, and Johnny Moeller on guitar. The whole gang is rolling down the swing like clockwork. It's high voltage stuff !

Hats off for our Japanese. If you know what traditional Japanese music sounds like, you'll understand what I mean ! 


Bloodest Saxophone
Koda “Young Corn” Shintaro : tenor sax
Coh “Colonel Sanders” : trombone
Osikawa Yukimasa : baritone sax
Shuji “Apple Juice” : guitar
The Takeo “Little Tokyo" : upright bass
Kiminori “Dog Boy” : drums & congas

http://bloodest-saxophone.com/

Live videos
Jai Malano & Bloodest Saxophone, Austin, 2017 : https://youtu.be/Y32-cbt932A
Crystal Thomas with Bloodest Saxophone
Crystal Thomas & Bloodest Saxophone  :
https://youtu.be/AkMbEsn4POE
https://youtu.be/l0zuf8yEgU0
https://youtu.be/0cg1gZtCjOI
Bloodest Saxophone's "Pork Chop Chick" : https://youtu.be/Y5_VjkXU4IY
Bloodest Saxophone & Big Jay McNeely : https://youtu.be/JRCZwXzXk7o
Bloodest Saxophone & Jewel Brown :
https://youtu.be/-hfTFaXhPv4
https://youtu.be/YkGYPXeJgWI
Bloodest Saxophone (a playlist) : https://youtu.be/YkGYPXeJgWIh
Diunna Greenleaf & Lurrie Bell : "Queen Bee", Denmark, 2015 : https://youtu.be/hMzwt_oBNSg
Diunna Greenleaf

Diunna Greenleaf & Mike Goudreau Band (1-hour show), Montreal Jazz Festival, 2018 : https://youtu.be/vgz9EKeXjMo
Diunna Greenleaf & her Blue Mercy Band guesting Bob Margolin (78-mn concert), Italy, 2009 : https://youtu.be/ExPetcVd3Jk


Crystal Thomas & Koda Shintaro
Jai Malano
Diunna Greenleaf
Lauren Cervantes & Angela Miller
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May 26, 2022

Al Copley & The Fabulous Thunderbirds - Good Understanding (1993)

► The album

Copley and the fabulous roomful of birds
Blues and jazz pianist Al Copley (known to have been the Original Blues Brothers piano player and arranger) has put out a fine album, that might be considered as "minor" which would be an unforgettable mistake.

He teamed again with his old "compadre" guitarist Duke Robillard, with whom he had co-founded the legendary Roomful of Blues band in 1967, and members of an other famous group from Texas, The Fabulous Thunderbirds : harmonicist Kim Wilson (co-founder of TFT with Jimmie Vaughan in 1974), drummer Fran Christina and bassist Preston Hubbard, both former members of ROB also before joining TFT.

Duke Robillard
A line-up of such quality couldn't produce any ordinary work, even if the album was recorded in a one-night impromptu session in Holland while Copley and TFT were both touring Europe. With additional help from Jose Avila on bongos and Vinzenz Kummer on upright bass on two tracks, this gangs of blues veterans rolls down some tasty piano-driven blues with a serious twist of New Orleans style.

Kim Wilson with Bob Dylan
Jump, romping boogies, slower jazzy blues… Copley, who is equally an appealing blues singer, was smart enough to leave sufficient space for his accomplices to express their talents. Both Wilson on harmonica and Robillard on guitar are excellent in their tasteful interventions, backed by the Hubbard-Christina pair providing guaranteed clockwork rhythmic foundations.

Still Copley's piano dominates. Alternating fast rocking tracks with lower tempo ones, Copley opens up by hammering down his keyboard on the late Professor Longhair's instrumental jumping killer "Doin' It" straight from New Orleans setting up the mood with the band in good hot rocking order behind him, featuring exotic bongo work from Avila, great jazzy solo licks from Robillard and breathless harmonica from Wilson. To catch back their breath, the gang goes through a long slower and jazzier blues ballad, Copley's own composition "Sunshine Moonlight", before switching again to jumping blues on "Another Woman" (another Copley's original).

A
mos Millburn's "Bad Bad Whiskey" comes next, a slow-tempo swinging number sung by Copley in an appropriate kind of staggering manner. To sober up the band rushes through a next Copley's original a la Fats Domino, the notable instrumental piano boogie "Run Riot (Rog's Romp)". The pace slows down again with two tracks : the pounding "What Do I Do ?", a Copley's composition again, and the soulful "A Man And The Blues", written by the obscure George Guy, superbly sung by Copley.

The following "Love Will Heal Me Too", the last of Copley's five originals, has an obvious Dr John's lazy jazzy twist. The album closes on Willie Dixon's "Good Understanding", a Chicago blues which gave the album its title and is leaving large spaces to Wilson and Robillard.

A blues dish to savor due the good understanding between the fine musicians who cooked it... ■

Interviews
On The Caswell Cooke Show, 2020 (some sound problems) : https://youtu.be/LBnAjQxlUog
On "Food For Thought", 2021 (skip the first uninteresting 12"00  + poor sound) : https://youtu.be/VfICiKIuWLU

Live videos
Al Copley
With Lino Patruno's European Jazz Stars, Lugano (Switzerland), 1986 : https://youtu.be/ZCvLqxKE32g
With drummer George Green, Internationale Jazzwoche Burghausen, Wackerhalle (Germany), 1988 : https://youtu.be/oPhgbOxD2WY
Montreux Jazz Festival, 1993 : https://youtu.be/7f9CAgdwxsg
Al Copley Trio, Festival de Montauban (France), 2008 : https://youtu.be/FL3luUkW1Ss
At Le Moulin de Santeny (France), 2010 :
The Al Copley Band, Blues on the Beach, Westerly (Rhode Island), 2010 :
At The Reigen, Vienna (Austria), 2011 : https://youtu.be/_LbbFbyZNHU
At The Triad, NYC :
On "Gramma's Attic", 2016 : https://youtu.be/hOSuNtCr3k
With The Cartells and Friends, 2020 : https://youtu.be/rVrocTm-FIo
With Rich Lataille and Greg Piccolo, original members of Roomful of Blues and now key members of The Founders, 2021 : https://youtu.be/-AQwaMhlXuk

Roomful of Blues
Reunion Show, Knickerbocker Cafe, Westerly (Rhode Island), 2016 (Duke Robillard, Greg Piccolo, Al Copley, Rich Lataille, Doug James, Tony Lamb) : https://youtu.be/_IA8C9sPx-o
At Narrows Center for the Arts, 2021 : https://youtu.be/NORJbp0CkCo

A must : Earl King & Roomful of Blues, Montreux Jazz Festival, 1987, with Earl King (guitar & vocal), Porky Cohen (trombone), Rich Lataille (alto sax), Greg Piccolo (tenor sax), Doug James (baritone sax), Bob Enos (trumpet), Ronnie Earl (guitar), Paul Tomasello (bass), Junior Branthey (piano), John Rossi (drums) : https://youtu.be/rHz1z3rH1fY

The Fabulous Thunderbirds
Kim Wilson and TFT, The Funky Biscuit, Boca Raton (Florida), 2022 : https://youtu.be/gt1QflYxFnU 

TFT live in London, 1985 (Kim Wilson : vocal, harmonica - Jimmie Vaughan : guitar - Preston Hubbard : bass - Fran Christina : drums) : https://youtu.be/or5VMZR5R
                                                Kim Wilson & Buddy Guy

Duke Robillard
Rhythm and Roots Festival, Charlestown (Rhode Island) : https://youtu.be/UcZrhqDe0NY

Blues in June, Norman (Oklahoma), 2013 : https://youtu.be/stGX-Fb7jnI





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