I remember secretly copying “My Father's Eyes”, the opening song, on my daughter's Walkman as a little message of love when she was still a teenager more into the Spice Girls and other such pop stuff. She fell in love with it and soon asked me for the whole album ! Since then, this particular song has been our little secret bond. Today she's playing guitar and writing her own songs. I dare believe that's something I transmitted to her with the help of Clapton...
January 23, 2023
Eric Clapton - Pilgrim (1998, 2014 reissue)
January 20, 2023
Creedence Clearwater Revival - 1969 Live At Woodstock (2019, Remastered) / 1970 The Concert (2009, 40th Anniversary Remastered Ed.) + 1969 Willy And The Poor Boys (2008, 40th Anniversary Expanded Ed.)
January 19, 2023
Steve James – Live, Vol. I, Austin TX & Berkeley CA (2016) - Blues And Folk Songs, Vol. 1 (2018)
Departure of an acoustic roots blues goldsmith
Last January 6th was a sad day for acoustic roots blues lovers. That day guitar virtuoso Steven James Wright, better known as Steve James, put his instrument down, definitely, struck down by a lightning brain tumor. A great loss for blues. He was picking flat-top guitar or sliding on steel resonator guitar (aka dobro), mandolin and banjo, and singing with a powerful but at the same time fragile voice.
Born in New York City in 1950, he first discovered blues listening to his father's old 78-rpm discs from Leadbelly, Josh White or Meade "Lux" Lewis. Later, in Tennessee, he met and learned from great finger picking guitarist Sam McGee (1894-1975) and B.B. King's supposed cousin Furry Lewis (1893 or 1899-1981).
January 08, 2023
Bo Dollis & The Wild Magnolias - I'm Back At Carnival Time! (1990) / 1313 Hoodoo Street (1996)
Wild Injuns down in New Orleans (*)
The only words I know to describe such type of music are “New Orleans”. New Orleans and her Mardi-Gras and Carnival, New Orleans and her old dixie jazz, New Orleans and her jazz funerals and second line parades, New Orleans and her tribal rhythms, New Orleans and her swamp blues and bayou R'n'B, New Orleans and her Zydeco and Cajun music, New Orleans and her French creole culture, New Orleans the unique, New Orleans the Big Easy where music is a way of life, New Orleans the Big Funky, New Orleans the only city that could beget Bo Dollis & the Wild Magnolias !
Some characteristics make the Mardi-Gras Indians of New Orleans quite unique : strong Afro-Caribbean musical roots immediately identifiable in their rhythmic patterns (bass drum, congas, cowbell, tambourine…); incorporation of brass jazz; traditional lyrics in Creole French patois; constant call-response between the lead singer and the background vocalists; and last but not least sumptuous costumes as colorful as a party of tropical birds in the jungle.
January 05, 2023
Kirk Fletcher - I'm Here and I'm Gone (1999/2009)
Here and not gone
For a debut album it's a hell of a great album ! It's titled “I'm Here And I'm Gone” but the 24 years old Southern California native Kirk Fletcher is never gone since, active and acclaimed ! An exceptional guitar player and thrilling vocalist, Fletcher was lucky to find a talented producer, the excellent Jimmy Morello, who wrote more than half the songs and brought with him some of his pals : guitarist Alex Schultz, bassist Rick Reed, drummer Paul Fasulo, and John Marx, here on vocals.
Fletcher belongs to this new generation of bluesmen who do not limit themselves to one blues style but explore most of them and blend them together to forge their own personal signature. Fletcher debut album mixes jump, swing, boogie, Texas style, Chicago or Memphis sounds, infusing a rock'n'roll energy in many of the songs, and delivering long soulful guitar solos. The only kind of blues absent from the album is acoustic roots blues.
January 01, 2023
December 30, 2022
Travis "Moonchild" Haddix - I'm Afraid To Ask (2018) / Texas Toothpick (2020)
December 28, 2022
Boney Fields & The Bone's Project - Live At Jazz A Vienne (2008)
From his stand, trumpet player, singer, band conductor, master of ceremony Boney Fields is putting out a show that could almost make James Brown suddenly pass for a novice. Fields heats up the audience as much as his own musicians, like when he's directing Samb to slow down then re-accelerate the tempo at the end of the 13-minute long killer “Late Comer”.
December 27, 2022
The Rolling Stones - Blue & Lonesome (2016)
The happy accident
Who doesn't remember their famous version of Fred McDowell's “You Gotta Move” on “Sticky Fingers” in 1971 ? Long before that, on their very first album released in 1964, they had covered songs by Willie Dixon (”I Just Want To Make Love To You”), Jimmy Reed (“Honest I Do”) and Slim Harpo (“I'm A King Bee”). And Muddy Waters' “Just Can't Be Satisfied” on their second opus (1965).
From the beginning, blues was an old acquaintance of the Stones and continued to be, hidden and ready to set an ambush in most of the Jagger-Richards repertoire. In 2016, eleven years after their last studio opus, the band took the public by surprise, releasing a full album of blues covers.
December 24, 2022
The time has come..
with a sincere thought for those who are undergoing constant bombings and freezing cold,
and more widely for all who suffer in this damn world !