Buddy Flett (born Bruce Mechlin Flett in 1951) is a survivor : he spent several years recovering from a nasty viral encephalitis which required a medically-induced coma followed by a month-long intensive rehabilitation in hospital. He contracted the virus while on a blues cruise playing with the famous Mississippi-Arkansas bluesman Hubert Sumlin (1931-2011), his master, his mentor, his friend, himself mentored by the legendary Howlin' Wolf during the two decades spent as his first guitarist…
May 23, 2023
Buddy Flett - Rough Edges (2013)
May 17, 2023
Special Bruce Katz : Bruce Katz Band - Crescent Crawl (1992), Mississippi Moan (1997), Three Feet Off The Ground (2000), Homecoming (2014), Bruce Katz - Solo Ride (2019)
Almost every music aficionado knows about Jazz-fusion, a new hybrid form of jazz developed by the musicians who accompanied Miles Davis on his legendary innovative album “Bitches Brew” in 1969. It was then called “jazz rock” and rushed like a tsunami through the 1970s. Similarly, the mix of blues with rock logically became the blues-rock genre. Another tsunami.
Well, Bruce Katz invented Blues-fusion, an original style of bluesified jazz or jazzified blues : soul and funk Hammond B-3 organ jazz à la Jimmy Smith, retro stride piano style, explosive boogie-woogie and swing…
May 12, 2023
Ronnie Earl, Pinetop Perkins, Calvin “Fuzz” Jones & Willie “Big Eyes” Smith - Eye To Eye (1996)
Chicago blues magic
Drummer Willie “Big Eyes” Smith was the first to join Muddy Waters in 1961, followed by Perkins who took over Otis Spann's seat behind the piano in 1969, and by bassist Calvin “Fuzz” Jones who got on board in 1970 (his real nickname would be originally “Fuzz Box”). Perkins, Jones and Smith backed Waters for many years before leaving to form the Legendary Blues Band in June 1980 with harmonicist Jerry Portnoy.
May 09, 2023
Jimmy Witherspoon with The Duke Robillard Band (rec.1995, rel. 2000)
Spoon's voice is so hoarse that you wonder if he's gonna make it to the end of each song. Actually he died from throat cancer two years after this 1995 live recording in a Vancouver club. But the then 75-year old veteran never lets his voice fail him.
May 08, 2023
Lonnie Brooks - Live From Chicago : Bayou Lightning Strikes (1988)
Brooks' groove
May 06, 2023
Fenton Robinson - Somebody Loan Me A Dime (1974, 1990)
Robinson's mellow… dic blues
May 02, 2023
The assassination of Blue Dragon
Autopsy of a murder
Blue Dragon was going to celebrate its eighth birthday this month, the cream of blues-influenced music blogs, always posting original albums far from the mainstream, under the strict management of its two impassioned blog-masters. Blue Dragon was my exclusive partner since January 2022, and we had a great time all along.
This decision from the Big Brother of the blog world is all the more unjust that it certainly results from repeated denunciations by malevolent blog visitors who didn't accept BD's very strict rules, first of all the engagement not to share the albums with anybody or any other blogs. Some didn't want to abide and found nothing else to have their mean petty revenge than to destroy an eight-year work. Just disgusting !
How else to explain that while Blue Dragon went through its difficult last months, so many similar blogs have lived their life quietly without any hassle from the copyright patrol ?
From last August Blue Dragon started to receive infringement notices from a mysterious London office, and seeing some posts put back to draft without notice (nor any real logic) directly by Blogger/Google. When contacted for explanations, none of these entities ever answered !
Without its partner, Onurblues' future is uncertain. I'm presently thinking about a way to continue with a different concept... I'll keep you informed right here. ■ Onurbix
► Blue Dragon's address was jellyrollbaker.blogspot.com. Here are some “Jelly Roll Blues”,”Mr Jelly Roll Baker” and other “Jelly Roll” stuff :
> “Jelly Roll Blues”
→ Jelly Roll Morton : https://youtu.be/BcOyVW-8WYo
→ Louis Armstrong : https://youtu.be/8VegtJxgY6o
→ Bukka White : https://youtu.be/Uv1P69xveUE
→ Jimmie Davis : https://youtu.be/_8tK2Fr3_Yo
→ Jorma Kaukonen (1978) : https://youtu.be/koF4_8BFb_Y
→ Gerald French & the Original Tuxedo Jazz Band, "Jelly Roll", New Orleans, 2013 : https://youtu.be/PjBrWtcAwW0
> “Mr Jelly Roll Baker”
→ Otis Spann : https://youtu.be/x6rU5LIVYCQ
→ Lonnie Johnson : https://youtu.be/1HepVzZ5gPE
→ Frankie Lee Sims : https://youtu.be/8d-PJjCctjE
→ Leon Redbone : https://youtu.be/-9Jyx2jxIQU
→ John Martyn : https://youtu.be/nIgr_OTgW8Y
→ Joe Bonamassa : https://youtu.be/wM3-AVnUX6g and https://youtu.be/_dN521Py2Sk
> And also...
→ Charlie Mingus, “My Jelly Roll Soul” : https://youtu.be/wzNuG8q2Xh8 and “Jelly Roll” : https://youtu.be/aGF76md7e3Q
→ Johnny Dodds, “Mr Jelly Lord” : https://youtu.be/YaeiarwYdpE
→ The French Quarter Pounders, “Ain't gonna give nobody none of my jelly roll”, New Orleans, 2023 : https://youtu.be/yckYUhqKb5s
> Even in Japan they have a band called The Jelly Roll Baker Blues Band. Live, 2009 : https://youtu.be/H43uIdyfSy8
April 25, 2023
The Super Catch-Back, vol. 6 & 7 : Papa John Creach - L.V. Banks - Sue Foley - John Cephas & Phil Wiggins - Jimmy "Duck" Holmes - Jimmy Thackery & The Drivers - Waylon Thibodeaux - Hans Olson - Tab Benoit - Jeff Ray & Hurricane Harold - V.A.-Texas Guitar Summit
One last one for the road
to the next world
I discovered Papa John Creach on Hot Tuna famous album “Burgers” back in 1972. The presence of a violinist (or fiddler) on a blues album was a surprise but a good one. Actually, if the fiddle was one of the primary instruments of Old time music (pre-bluegrass Appalachian folk, early Cajun music, country & western, jug bands…), it was also used in the early times of Blues.
Before WWII, Lonnie Johnson, Big Bill Broonzy in the first years of his career, Lonnie Chatmon of the Mississippi Sheiks, did play violin, and of course later, the great Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown.
April 24, 2023
The Super Catch-Back, vol. 4 & 5 : Boney Fields - Maria Muldaur - Toronzo Cannon - Tab Benoit, Debbie Davies, Kenny Neal - Big Bad Voodoo Daddy - Cyril Neville - Wes Montgomery - Buckwheat Zydeco - Kenny Burrell & Jimmy Raney
The wolf is howling and growling out there in the background, red like a chili pepper and hot as the infernos. On the cover, with his dark bowler hat, wicked eye and sharp teeth ready to tear your flesh, he's fronting a jungle jumble of fearsome musical animals, and from the CD disc he's throwing a threatening look at you.
This is not Howlin' Wolf but Boney Fields, and “Red Wolf” is a highly enjoyable album by the champions of funk jubilation, Boney Fields and his Bone's Project band, one of the baddest horn section on the circuit today (Fields on trumpet, Nadège Dumas on tenor sax, Max Pinto on baritone sax and Pierre Chabrèle on trombone).