In 1992, for MTV's Unplugged Series, Slow Hand left his Stratocaster at home and brought his acoustic guitars and his musicians for this unusual experience for him. So unusual that he confessed later in a radio interview that he thought an album of it wouldn't have a chance to sell. Actually “Unplugged” was rewarded by an impressive number of Grammies and became the best-selling live album of all time, a real block-buster !
September 25, 2022
Eric Clapton - 1992 Unplugged (Deluxe Edition Remastered, 2013)
September 23, 2022
Special Billy C. Farlow : I Ain't Never Had Too Much Fun (1991) / Billy C. Farlow & Bleu Jackson - Blue Highway (1995) / Billy C. Farlow featuring Mercy - Alabama Swamp Stomp (2011)
From the Ozone to Alabama
Billy C. Farlow left the original Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen when they disbanded in 1976 (and immediately re-appeared the following year as the Commander Cody band, in fact the new name used by Cody for his post-Airmen solo career). In 1991 it sounds that Farlow who had penned some of CC&HLPA best known songs ("Too Much Fun", "Seeds and Stems " and the band's theme song, "Lost in the Ozone"), was apparently still under influence. Apparently only.
The first half of the album features some solid Texas and Nashville style rock'n'roll songs that would have fitted well the CC&HLPA repertoire : a Texas swing revisit of “Too Much Fun”, “Love Bandit” (which strongly reminds Dylan's famous “Isis” on his 1976 album “Desire”), “Sit On Daddy's Knee”, “Demon Lover” (starting with a very Rolling Stonian riff close to the intro of 1971 “Can't You Hear Me Knocking”).
September 19, 2022
Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen - Lost In The Ozone (1971)
Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen was founded in 1967 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, a renowned university town, by pianist George Frayne aka Commander Cody, and moved to Berkeley, California, in 1969. Around Cody were Billy C. Farlow (lead vocals and harmonica), Bill Kirchen (lead guitar and trombone), John Tichy (rhythm guitar), Andy Stein (fiddle and sax), Steve 'West Virginia Creeper' Davis (pedal steel guitar), 'Buffalo' Bruce Barlow (bass) and Lance Dickerson (drums), a joyful bunch of solid instrumentalists.
September 10, 2022
Doc Watson - Memories (1975/1993)
Country, bluegrass, folk, ragtime, blues… why bother to put a name on the kind of songs he plays as long as he plays them because they’re just a pure pleasure for the ears, the mind and the soul. His banjo and guitar picking mastery is amazing, and his voice is warm as a wood fire in an old cabin’s fireplace.
September 07, 2022
John Lee Hooker -1948-1998 King Of The Boogie (5-CD Box Set, 2017)
For blues fans, the problem is different : JLH discography is such a jungle that, unless you're a specialized musicologist, it's almost impossible to find your way between his numerous original early recordings (many of them recorded under different pseudonyms), his albums and the myriad of compilations of his work ! This is precisely the interest of this 5-CD 100-song box set which covers 50 years of JLH's endless boogie since his recording debuts in Detroit in 1948.
September 05, 2022
Big Mike Griffin - Sittin' Here With Nothing (1995)
September 04, 2022
Chris Smither - Live As I'll Ever Be (2000)
August 29, 2022
Jimmy Johnson - Every Day Of Your Life (2019)
► Get the album at the usual place...
August 27, 2022
Kokomo Arnold - The Story Of The Blues, Blues Archives Vol.11 (recorded 1936-38, released 2004)
► Get the album at the usual place...
Arnold was a very innovative user of the bottleneck, probably the fastest one ever to record, developing some unique rhythmic patterns of his own. His influence was notable on slide guitar players, particularly on Elmore James. The reason why he fell back into a relative anonymity after his brief but successful ten-year career is due to his growing disinterest for music !
August 20, 2022
Johnny Nicholas - Broke Again (1988, rel. 2007)
► Get the album at the usual place...