April 08, 2022

Clarence Edwards - Swamps The Word (1991, re-issued 1999)

Juke-joint blues from swampland

This album has a personal sound of its own. With his raw amplified guitar sound and his straightforward voice, Mr Clarence Edwards is certainly one of the best of the Louisiana bluesmen almost ignored by history. That big record companies' talents scouts that hang around juke-joints and clubs could pass away from a guy like that is just unbelievable !
The first one who have "seen" Edwards' talent was Louisiana State University ethno-musicologist Harry Oster who recorded a few field tracks from him with his brother Cornelius and fiddler Butch Cage between 1959 and 1961.

Clarence Edwards was born in 1933 in a small village just north of Baton Rouge, and was about 20 when he started to perform in juke-joints and clubs with his brother Cornelius in local bands, the Boogie Beats, then the Bluebird Kings. A life that could be dangerous sometimes : one day, after a show at a club in Baton Rouge's Alsen district, he was shot in the leg in a brawl outside the club.
In the seventies, while working in a scrapyard to earn a living (a job he kept for some thirty years), Edwards recorded again a dozen titles that were scattered in different compilations.

By the early eighties, while the disco-mania had emptied juke joints and blues clubs, bluesman Tabby Thomas opened a new club in Baton Rouge, Tabby's Blues Box, that immediately attracted all the frustrated Louisiana bluesmen and of course Edwards whose career was re-boosted, this time drawing attention from young producer-manager Stephen Coleridge who opened the doors of the national blues clubs and festivals circuit to him.
Still he had already reached the age of 57 when he was able to record a full album under his name : "Swamps The World".

This album is like a water hyacinth flower that searched for light and slipped through duckweed and waterlilies up to the surface of the swamp. It's been recorded in a couple of days in February 1990 with really excellent partners : Harmonica Red (no need to precise on which instrument !) stands out brilliantly, Michael Ward adds a vintage Louisiana country sound with his fiddle, Henry Gray's piano (and Bill Guess') brings a New Orleans touch, and the beat is solidly maintained by Antony Hardesty's great job on bass, and Lester "Pick" Delmore's on drums, helped by a few others on diverse percussion (even cardboard box !)

The whole album is sweating with dampy Louisiana groove. Mixing acoustic and amplified numbers, Edwards shows his sense of humor in his choices of the topical songs he covers, from Lightnin' Hopkins, Guitar Slim, Rufus Thomas and Muddy Waters, to Buster Benton, Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup or Willie Dixon… These are mixed with four Edwards originals : "I'm Your Slave", "Lonesome Bedroom Blues", "I Want Somebody", and "I'm The One", adapted from a traditional.

It alternates stimulating rocking tracks like "Stoop Down Baby", the feet-stomping "Chewing Gum", "Walking The Dog" and "I Want Somebody" or the sincere "Born With The Blues" featuring great work from Harmonica Red; and acoustic pieces like "Driving Wheel", or the shuffling "Done Got Over It"  with its zydeco feel : Michael Ward's fiddle replacing the accordion over a background of clapping, washboard and guitar rhythm. As a matter of fact Edwards always used to have a fiddler on stage with him, reminding another Clarence : "Gatemouth" (except that this one played the fiddle himself).

Edwards style is typical of the south Louisiana rural raw dancing music played in noisy juke-joints and clubs. His voice has soul and power, and his guitar is played in a simple but very effective way.
This album, and the two that followed ("Swampin'" in 1991 and "Louisiana Swamp Blues, Vol. 4" in 1992) gained Edwards good praises from the blues community, but unfortunately, in 1993, at only 60, death robbed this growing fame from him.


THE live video
At the St Louis Blues Festival in 1990 : https://youtu.be/4FyAsVAsuII

Audio only oldies
Clarence Edwards (guitar & vocal), brother Cornelius Edwards (guitar) and James "Butch" Cage (fiddle), recorded near Baton Rouge by Dr. Harry Oster in 1960 :
"Mean Old Frisco" : https://youtu.be/_H0tnNnlC7g
"Smokestack Lightnin'" : https://youtu.be/Ck4bOiJvfrw
"Stack O' Dollars" : https://youtu.be/sbtTeP95A3o or https://youtu.be/YNFpdOFAknM
"Thousand Miles From Nowhere" : https://youtu.be/AUtDsHqpd_0

Clarence Edwards, Henry Gray, Arthur "Guitar" Kelley, Silas Hogan & Moses "Whispering" Smith (from the Smithsonian Folkways Recordings 1970 album "Louisiana Blues") :
"How Many More Years" : https://youtu.be/pcLTW6Rfdh4
"Hear That Rumbling": https://youtu.be/JLD1IYd0fUA

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April 06, 2022

Mark "Muleman" Massey - One Step Ahead Of The Blues (2014)

Soul blues of the Muleman
Born in 1969 in Clarksdale (Mississippi), at 22 he spent two and a half years in the Mississippi State Penitentiary of sinister reputation better known as Parchman Farm (May 1991-November 1993), condemned for drug dealing and shooting at his elder brother.
Fortunately his brother was only wounded, if not he probably would still be inside, or even worse ! Fortunately also, in Parchman Farm, where famous bluesmen Bukka White and Sonny Boy Williamson among others preceded him, he bought a guitar ("for 28 dollars, that's all I had" he recalls), and learned how to play it from inmate David Kimbrough, son of Jr. Kimbrough, before joining the Parchman Prison Band.
Once out, he raised mules (hence his "Muleman" nickname) in his little farm while working week days in a tire shop in Senatobia, in the Hills country, and met Big Jack Johnson who took the succession of David Kimbrough as his mentor and friend, and opened to him the doors of the blues juke joints and clubs circuit.
Don Nix

"One Step Ahead of the Blues", Massey's second album, was co-produced by Memphis Stax Records legend Don Nix, who signed or co-signed seven of the thirteen tracks. It's as much a Nix album as a Massey's one, featuring an impressive list of veteran blues musicians : Eric Gales on guitar, Garry Burnside on bass, and the excellent Grammy/Emmy awarded Billy Earheart on Hammond organ and piano, plus Willie Clayton ("In The Hole") and Bobby Rush ("She's Hongry").
"Muleman" and Billy Earheart
Though often presented as a Hills country bluesman, Massey's album featuring a horn section, definitely sounds like Memphis soul. Massey's powerful and soulful vocal and guitar dominates this rhythm'n'soul production, many times leaning towards funk'n'soul : "Plastic Flowers", "In The Hole", "Blind, Crippled And Crazy", "Double Trouble", "She's Hongry" (sic). No matter what style, the whole album has a real groove, even on the gospel "Waiting On The Help To Arrive", or on Massey's final moving ballad "Sun Going Down In Memphis".
If you watch the videos of "the Muleman" below, you'll discover a man totally bewitched by the music in which he found his redemption : the blues.

Documentary

A video portrait of the "Muleman" : https://vimeo.com/232376569

Live stream perfs & interviews
Virtual confined jams and interviews via Zoom :
in May 2021 : https://youtu.be/xWoghLUcLVQ
in December 2020 : https://youtu.be/RAQafMANNBA
in November 2020 : https://youtu.be/8HFuOJl-Uto
in July 2020 : https://youtu.be/gJoc34Sk3c4
On the Local Yokels radio show  :
in 2019 (skip first 3 mn) : https://youtu.be/gXivtcd4al4
in 2018 (skip first 3 mn) : https://youtu.be/sISUtY1PL5I
A Maryland's Sandy Spring Museum live stream solo and acoustic perf. during the Covid confinement (go straight to 1h13mn) : https://youtu.be/sUMN85YriyQ
On the National Blues Museum's  Howlin' Fridays in 2020 (skip first 17 mn) : https://youtu.be/30HgL8h8AKs
At the Crossroads Confined Countdown Festival : https://youtu.be/rQecNxQ8VoQ

Pre-confinement live performances videos
With the Robbert Fossen Blues Band in Haarlem (Netherlands) in  2020 :
https://youtu.be/WO8pbgIHw24
https://youtu.be/MbTrote8YYg
https://youtu.be/ITehCo-e0cQ

At the GrassRoots Blues Festival
in 2020 (skip first 3 mn) : https://youtu.be/osdjoSCVFl0
in 2016 : https://youtu.be/QszPxmzLdgM & https://youtu.be/H2qrDlzww8s
"All Night Long" at Blues Rules 2017 : https://youtu.be/TA9BBqYIVzA
At Bluesday Tuesday, Overton Square, Memphis, with Billy Earheart (keyboards), Tory Todora (bass) and Joel Williams (drums) in 2015 :
https://youtu.be/pTN2abGuro0
https://youtu.be/HBh2cgGDTX8
https://youtu.be/VK73jYfrQ9Q
https://youtu.be/53n5rWeyYDw
At the Rum Boogie cafe in Memphis in 2015 : https://youtu.be/Gkvhw1_316Q
At the Howlin' Wolf festival 2011 : https://youtu.be/uvdx_g003uk
At Clarksdale's Ground Zero Blues Club
in 2011 :
- https://youtu.be/o9SUwXEvvdo
- https://youtu.be/qZg6IeGme2g
- https://youtu.be/3ZAj0s4pTgs
- https://youtu.be/FW4L0V26cmg
- https://youtu.be/cTHudrzieNI
in 2010 :
- https://youtu.be/xEAc1E8XvCI
- https://youtu.be/BRWVC9blTV4
- https://youtu.be/no5zVdPb4-g
At BB King's on Beale St., Memphis, in 2009 : https://youtu.be/58Wf8nwZvRc


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April 04, 2022

Roy Book Binder - Bookeroo! (1988)

Ramblin' Roy's swinging hillbilly blues

For our readers not deeply familiar with the subtleties of English-American language, "bookeroo" has been jokingly coined from the word "buckaroo" meaning "cowboy" or "cowhand", and derived from the Spanish word "vaquero" used under the mid-19th century in Tejas (Texas) and the south-west territories (New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, Southern California). This being clarified, don't go too fast and conclude that Roy Book Binder is a country & western musician, you'd get it all wrong.

With Pink Anderson

No, Binder's stuff is vintage Piedmont style folk & blues ragtime guitar (sometimes adapted to "hillbilly" and bluegrass material), a style that he learned in the early 1960s straight from Rev. Gary Davis and Pink Anderson.

With Rev. Gary Davis

Born in Queens (New York) in 1943 as Paul Roy Bookbinder, RBB sailed around the world on an aircraft carrier with the U.S. Navy in the beginning of the 1960s : he legendarily bought his first guitar in Naples (Italy), heard his first Lightnin' Hopkins record in Marseilles (France) and read his first Jack Kerouac novels while cruising the North Atlantic. In 1965 he landed back in New York's Greenwich Village in time to catch the folk revival and befriended folk singer Dave Van Ronk, met Rev. Gary Davis, became his student, even working as his driver and touring companion for some times. Later on, he met an old South Carolina medicine show performer named Pink Anderson. He learned as much of both men songs, stories and guitar styles as he could.

His first album came out in 1971 and its title, "Travelin' Man", already symbolized a major aspect of RBB's personality. In the late 1970's, after a three-year duo partnership with fiddler Fats Kaplin and eager for the open road, he bought an Airstream motor-home and for about the next 20 years lived in it, touring the country coast to coast, rambling from clubs to coffeehouses and festivals along the way. "Twenty plus years of living full time in 'the bus' make for an interesting take on what's what and who's who", he commented once.

After leaving the sedentary life, it took him a decade before entering again a recording studio, in Nashville in 1988 : the result is "Bookerro!", a perfect demonstration of his unique brand of swinging hillbilly country blues and of his storytelling talent as a writer and a singer, released in a sleeve cover illustrated by photos of RBB in his motor-home.

With his thick mustache, metal-circled spectacles and broad-brimmed hat, RBB, now 78, looks like a modern-day Mark Twain ! He continues to tour and has at heart to transmit his craft through instructional books and DVDs, or workshops (like at Jorma Kaukonen's famous Fur Peace Ranch in Ohio).

Mark Twain is back!

In "Bookerroo!", his acoustic songs are enhanced by a backing band featuring bass (Mark Hembree) and percussions (Kenny Malone), the excellent dobro guitar of Jerry Douglas, the mandolin and fiddle of Stuart Duncan, and the harmonica Phil Gazell on a couple of tracks...
In his very personal covers of other authors' works ― Louisiana bluesman Jesse Thomas ("Friend Like Me"), folk-blues artist Paul Geremia ("Somethin' Different"), country singers Merle Haggard ("Nobody Knows I'm Hurtin'" and Jimmie Rodgers ("Waiting for a Train") or soul performers Percy Mayfield & Ray Charles ("Tell Me How Do You Feel") ― as in his own creations and most of all adaptations of oldies, RBB shows his skill for tasteful arrangements and his liking for exploring musical styles from different horizons (see detailed credits of each song below).

If Piedmont finger-picking guitar is the core of his trade, he also pecks here and there in the traditional repertoire  of American folk music styles : blues and ragtime, hokum and old Dixie jazz, but also country, hillbilly and, particularly here, bluegrass. Mr Binder is an American folk music encyclopedia all by himself, not talking about his amazing guitar playing skill and storytelling talent. 

This album has something of a road-book(eroo !) gathering humourous memories of a rambling life, be they personnal, like the talking folk blues "Gonna Get Myself A Motorhome", or be they "borrowed" from fellow songsters : the swinging blues rags "Friend Like Me", "Nobody Knows I'm Hurtin'" and "Tell Me How Do You Feel", the hilarious booze song "Gin Done Done It", the hillbilly "I'm Goin' Home", the rockabilly version of "Good Gal", the hobo ballad "Waiting for a Train", the double-entendre "Cigarette Blues" or the traveling song "My Road Is Rough And Rocky".

The whole package is so nice and jubilant that you can't manage to stop playing it back and back again, and it sounds better each time.

Detailed credits
Merle Haggard
→ 01. Friend Like Me (written by Jesse Thomas) Bass: Mark Hembree - Dobro: Jerry Douglas - Percussion: Kenny Malone - National Steel resonator guitar: Roy Book Binder.
→ 02. Gonna Get Myself A Motorhome (written by Roy Book Binder & Tom Moore) Bass: Mark Hembree - Dobro: Jerry Douglas - Fiddle: Stuart Duncan - Guitar: Roy Book Binder - Percussion: Kenny Malone.
→ 03. Somethin' Different (written by Paul Geremia) Bass: Mark Hembree - Dobro: Jerry Douglas - Fiddle: Stuart Duncan - Guitar: Roy Book Binder - Rhythm Guitar: Russ Barenberg.
→ 04. Mississippi Blues (arranged & adapted by Roy Book Binder from a Willie Brown recording for the Library of Congress) Bass: Mark Hembree - Guitar: Roy Book Binder.
Jimmie Rodgers

→ 05. Gin Done Done It (arranged & adapted by Roy Book Binder from the lyrics of a 1920s song by 'Pigmeat' Pete & Cat 'Juice' Charlie) Guitar: Roy Book Binder.
→ 06. I'm Goin' Home (written by Roy Book Binder - inspired by Rev. Gary Davis' "I Will Be Alright Someday") Bass: Mark Hembree - Dobro: Jerry Douglas - Guitar: Roy Book Binder - Harmonica: Phil Gazell - Mandolin: Stuart Duncan.
→ 07. Good Gal (arranged & adapted by Roy Book Binder from a 1929 song of Charlie Spand & Blind Blake) Bass: Mark Hembree - Dobro: Jerry Douglas - Guitar: Roy Book Binder - Percussion: Kenny Malone.
→ 08. Nobody Knows I'm Hurtin' (written by Merle Haggard - first released on his album "I Love Dixie Blues") Guitar: Roy Book Binder.
→ 09. Waitin' For A Train (written by Jimmie Rodgers) Bass: Mark Hembree - Dobro: Jerry Douglas - Fiddle: Stuart Duncan - Guitar: Roy Book Binder - Percussion: Kenny Malone.
Percy Mayfield & Ray Charles
→ 10. Cigarette Blues (arranged & adapted by Roy Book Binder from a 1938 song by Bo Carter) Bass: Edgar Meyer - Guitar: Roy Book Binder.
→ 11. My Road Is Rough And Rocky (arranged & adapted by Roy Book Binder from 'Cryin' Sam Collins) Dobro: Jerry Douglas - Fiddle & Mandolin: Stuart Duncan - Guitar: Roy Book Binder - Harmonica: Phil Gazell - Percussion: Kenny Malone.
→ 12. Tell Me How Do You Feel (written by Percy Mayfield & Ray Charles) Bass: Mark Hembree - Guitar: Roy Book Binder - Mandolin: Stuart Duncan - Percussion: Kenny Malone.

Interviews


Recent live stream on Godfrey Daniels' Live From 4th Street : https://youtu.be/2FHFoLWWbno

About Rev. Gary Davis : https://youtu.be/zZg_71cOPc4

Videos

At the Suwannee Spring Reunion in Live Oak, FL :
in March 2022 : https://youtu.be/LsmN1iObOMI
in 2017 : https://youtu.be/pfTkVr62ieQ
Live stream concert at the New Orleans Jazz Museum (skip first 5 mns) : https://youtu.be/4gYjoFFX2Ts
Live stream from Club Passim in Cambridge, MA (skip first 2 and ½ mns) : https://youtu.be/iHzXVbZnAqM
At the Fogartyville Community Media & Arts Center
in Sarasota, FL :
unknown date : https://youtu.be/cutBDKnvJLs
in 2017 (10-part playlist) : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLGuKplPlhw0JS4Yklpj4CcgT6JKW4P7QE
in 2016  (10-part playlist) : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLGuKplPlhw0LtF2TEaDMNc2cpd32yN1ra
At the Woody Guthrie Festival 2015 : https://youtu.be/2D8EnSSCzyE
At Folk Alliance in 2014 : https://youtu.be/MrsShJKDYmw
At the Acoustic Guitar Magazine studio in 2013 : https://youtu.be/PO-YAYQ8-Nw
"Mississippi Blues" at the Side Door in St. Petersburg, FL, in 2010 : https://youtu.be/GyloYh2RtJQ
"Travelin' Man" and banter at New Bedford Summerfest, New Bedford, MS, in 2009 : https://youtu.be/4CWo7agezAs
Funny show at the Nova Scotia, Bristol (UK), in 2007 : https://youtu.be/GkaebVGg1Ik
On the "Horses Sing None of It" cable television program in 1997 : https://youtu.be/OfjnVzNGkV4
In Laureana di Borrello (Italy) in 1995 : https://youtu.be/rVh0c5pwFiU

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April 02, 2022

Terrance Simien - The Tribute Sessions (2001)


A tribute to Louisiana Creole culture

E
thno-historians define "Creole" as a hybrid of Spanish, French, African and native American cultures, not to be mistaken with Cajun, even if both cultures have common aspects, especially in the musical field. If by chance you try to imagine what a "Creole" from Louisiana looks like, Terrance Simien could well be a good example. Go to his official Web site, explore the photo gallery and see him with his eternal cheerful smile and his African traditional hat !
Not only is he a two-time Grammy Award winning musician (2008 & 2014), but he is also an active preserver of Creole culture and zydeco music, having at heart to transmit both to the younger generations : in 2000, he and his wife Cynthia set up the ieducational program "Creole4Kidz and the History of Zydeco" which benefited hundreds of thousands of teens of all continents.


These "Tribute Sessions", issued two decades after Simien's career started in the very early 1980s (a kind of anniversary), belongs to the same kind of approach : as explained in the quick opening narration, it is a homage to the great elders who have had a strong influence on his music, be they zydeco artists or not (Sam Cooke, The Band, Bob Marley).

Terrance Simien was born in 1965 in Mallet, in the Eunice area, 50 km north-west of Lafayette, where his family had settled eight generations earlier, an ancestry he is really proud of. As a boy, he used to hear zydeco at local dances, then learned to play the accordion, formed his first band at age 17 with his brother Greg, who is now a Catholic priest, and began to tour the local clubs and outdoor dances circuit, gaining in popularity and largely contributing to the revival of a genre that was considered as minor by the mainstream and slowly dying.

In 1984, he did a remarked performance at the World's Fair in New Orleans with his band The Mallet Playboys, and two years later, he had the good fortune to retain Paul Simon's attention and record with him. His first album, "Zydeco on the Bayou", came out in 1990, already featuring a deeply moving version of "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" in memory of Clifton Chenier. His career was definitely launched, nationally then internationally, extending to movies scores writing and recording.

Simien, who incidentally likes to play barefoot, is regarded as one of Zydeco’s most soulful vocalists. This is clearly demonstrated by the 13 songs featured on this tribute album. Simien and The Zydeco Experience are driven by a nice gentle but solid zydeco swing and most of all by very nostalgic mellow arrangements (accordion, organ). Sad, sorrowful, desperate, nostalgic, melancholic, heartbreaking, emotional… are some of the words that come to mind to describe Simien's musical and outstanding vocal style.

Canray Fontenot

It starts with a recalling of zydeco rare fiddle player Canray Fontenot through his song "Les Barres De La Prison".
Rockin' Sidney aka Sidney Simien (apparently not a relative, the narration being mute on the subject) is paid his dues with two excellent rhythmic tracks : "If It's Good For The Gander" and the cult "My Toot Toot".
Simien then quote Sam Cooke as one of his main influences as a singer and proves it with a grand version of "Rome Wasn't Built in a Day".

John Delafose (accordion) & the Eunice Playboys

From the King of Zydeco, Clifton Chenier, who modernized the genre by using amplified instruments and an extended band, and who taught Simien the important thing was to "do your own thing" as he recalls, Simien chose "I'm Coming Home", a nostalgic and soulful declaration of love of a young man to his mother, featuring a very roots-sounding fiddle part, and "Zydeco Cha Cha", built on an Afro-Cuban rhythm.
With the two rocking pieces, "Joe Pete Got Two Women" (co-signed by John Delafose and Canray Fontenot) and "One Hour Too Late", Simien honors John Delafose and his Eunice Playboys.

The Band (R. Danko at ext. right).

After recalling the surprising way he first met his idol Rick Danko, Simien gives a really outstanding magnificent version of the dramatically sorrowful love ballad "It Makes No Difference" from The Band, that he confesses has always been his favorite group. Written by Robbie Robertson and sung by Rick Danko, it was first released on The Band's 1975 album "Northern Lights-Southern Cross". Simien's cover, magnificently sung, is certainly one of, if not the, highlights of the album.
Rockin' Dopsie
Rockin' Dopsie (pronounced "doopsee") typical rocking (of course !) zydeco is present through the "That Was Your Mother" (another mother story !), punctuated by a nice part of vintage New Orleans drumming.
Zydeco and reggae were meant to meet each other, a mix which is common nowadays but wasn't at that time. Simien picked up "Waiting In Vain", a 1977 song from Bob Marley & The Wailers first period, to delivers a nostalgic tropical gumbo.
 
Beau Jocque
The late great
Beau Jocque who was eight years older but started his musical career a decade later than Simien, untimely died in 1999 at age 45. The jumpy but again melancholic version of his song "Yesterday" gives justice to his style.
The conclusion of this tribute celebration comes in the form of the very popular Christian "Will The Circle Be Unbroken", a prayer in memory of the musicians who have passed on, rendered here with the same nostalgia that marks the whole album.

Twenty years later, on the last week-end of Feb. 2022, while Terrance Simien & The Zydeco Experience stayed in the Las Vegas area for concerts and "Creole4Kidz" appearances, their cargo trailer loaded with all the band's instruments and equipment was stolen during the night on the hotel parking lot : thousands of dollars gone ! What a nice way to give thanks to such a nice musician !

The Web site : https://www.terrancesimien.com
Cynthia Simien, wife and manager of Terrance, accounts for the loss of the band's trailer and extra troubles on a special fundraiser Web page : https://www.gofundme.com/f/tqdqs-we-get-by-with-a-little-help-from-our-friends

Interviews
In-depth on-line discussion about linguistic oppression in 2020 : https://youtu.be/TTHaAfESKGo
On the "Levitt In Your Living Room" network in 2021 : https://youtu.be/5kWM3OZN4KA
On "The Paul Leslie Hour" : https://youtu.be/W3NRe4zDr0s

Videos
Recent virtual concert at The New Mexico Tech University auditorium during the Covid pandemics (skip the first 25 mn) : https://youtu.be/oiAwj2OIe_8
"Mardi Gras Mambo" live stream concert from Lafayette in 2021 (including a 28-mn presentation of Creole culture & food, and interviews with members of The Zydeco Experience) : https://youtu.be/UG9sf_ATWzc
On the Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise in 2020 : https://youtu.be/fnNFjHk-9gc + a cooking demo on the same LRBC : https://youtu.be/LCkddYb27W8
"Amazing Grace" medley at the Long's Park Amphitheater in Lancaster, PA, in 2019 : https://youtu.be/ScrOX9-8ZYM
At the Fitzgerald's American Music Fest. in Berwyn, IL :
in 2016 : https://youtu.be/UUv4le5stMY
in 2019 : https://youtu.be/1YKOLSxj8HM
At the Minnesota State Fair in 2018 : https://youtu.be/4pAfHrgDaew
In Sellersville, PA, in 2017:
https://youtu.be/AUSB-tJ2Jpc
https://youtu.be/pC1mVe8zEt0
https://youtu.be/qS87LPDXjE0
At the Redwood Ramble (a family friendly, music infused campout in Northern California) in 2016 : https://youtu.be/f3P1oNVfPSo
At the 26th Annual Simi Valley (CA) Cajun & Blues Music Fest. in 2015, with Terrance Simien (vocals and accordion), Danny Williams (keyboard & vocals), Eric Johanson (lead guitar), Oreum Joubert (drums), Josh Lazo (saxophone & washboard), Stan Chambers (bass guitar & vocals) : https://youtu.be/W7kHChS0FA8
On the 2015 Russia Tour :
Part 1 : https://youtu.be/PsC4AiEf1pk
Part 2 : https://youtu.be/MMGbjq-xODI
Part 3 : https://youtu.be/x3gvllKs1sQ
Part 4 : https://youtu.be/KZ1NKXbiALc
Раrt 5 : https://youtu.be/IrTRk5xxc3M
In Kyiv (Ukraine) in 2015 (11-part playlist) : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFA7FznavK1Y0FEV-kQJZ36g2ioKveBSY
At the Green Harbor Blues Festival in Marshfield, MA, in 2015 : https://youtu.be/tmPltaMEnVw
At the Crawfish Festival in Sussex County, NJ, in 2014 : https://youtu.be/t_JmIHsMOsU
At the 17th Annual Rhythm & Roots Festival in Charlestown, RI, in 2014 : https://youtu.be/mV70SdHsRKA
In Dnipropetrovsk (Ukraine) at The Gorky Park Summer Theater
in 2012 :
→ Part 1 : https://youtu.be/IYIX9ZZWPn0
→ Part 2 : https://youtu.be/55YE2YzN9kk
→ Part 3 : https://youtu.be/KkPO3kZNx6w

At the Sioux Falls JazzFest in South Dakota in 2011 : https://youtu.be/mzudESQ5HfA
 
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