Monday, 18 June 2012

Barrelhouse Jukes Update

Last month we had Pete Latham and Andy Wooton of Barrelhouse Jukes live in the studio. Jen has been to see them twice this weekend and has an updated list of their gigs.

Fri 22nd June New Horseshoe, Church Lawton
Sat 30th June Blacks Head, Tean
Tue 3rd July Lift Off Festival, Northwich
Thu 12th July The Railway, Greenfield
Sat 14th July The Holy Inadequate, Etruria (12am)
Sat 21st July White Lion, Penkhull, Stoke (2pm)
Sat 21st July White Lion, Penkhull, Stoke (9pm)
Tue 24th The Glebe, Stoke
Fri 27th Nags Head, Crewe
Sat 4th August London Road Tavern, Newcastle
Sun 26th Aug Congleton Jazz & Blues Festival
Fri 31st Aug Freebird Freehouse, Newcastle
Sat 15th Sept Nags Head, Crewe
Sat 22nd Sept Greedy Pigs Bikers Rally, Shavington, Crewe
Thu 22nd Nov The Railway, Greenfield
Sat 15th Dec White Lion, Penkhull, Stoke

Today's Playlist...

"Diddie Wa Didie" - Blind Blake
"Highway Blues" - Savoy Brown
"I'm Not Ashamed" - Janiva Magness
"Hound Dog" - Duffy's Nucleus
"Long Tall Mama" - Big Bill Broonzy
"Little Monster" - Stringbean & The Stalkers
"Low Down Blues" - Whistler & His Jug Band
"She Caught The Katy" - The Blues Brothers
"Please Take Care" - Grainne Duffy
"Made Up My Mind" - Savoy Brown
"Smotherin' Me" - Imelda May
"Bonie Maronie/Tequila" - Dr. Feelgood
"Coming Down Your Way" - Savoy Brown
"Rock Island Line" - Leadbelly
"Untrue Blues" - Blind Boy Fuller
"Barrell House Jukes" - Pete Latham & Andy Wootton
"Mean Mistreatin' Mama" - Leroy Carr
"Catfish Blues" - Jimi Hendrix
"7 Comes 11" - U. P. Wilson
"Needle And Spoon" - Savoy Brown
"Juggernaut" - Jon Amor Blues Group

Featured Artist: Savoy Brown

Savoy Brown

Part of the late-'60s blues-rock movement, Britain's Savoy Brown never achieved as much success in their homeland as they did in America, where they promoted their albums with nonstop touring. The band was formed and led by guitarist Kim Simmonds whose dominating personality has led to myriad personnel changes; the original lineup included singer Bryce Portius, keyboardist Bob Hall, guitarist Martin Stone, bassist Ray Chappell, and drummer Leo Manning.
This lineup appeared on the band's 1967 debut, “Shake Down”, a collection of blues covers.
Seeking a different approach, Simmonds dissolved the group and brought in guitarist Dave Peverett, bassist Rivers Jobe, drummer Roger Earl, and singer Chris Youlden, who gave them a distinctive frontman with his vocal abilities, bowler hat, and monocle.
With perhaps its strongest lineup, Savoy Brown quickly made a name for itself, now recording originals like "Train to Nowhere" as well. However, Youlden left the band in 1970 following “Raw Sienna”, and shortly thereafter, Peverett, Earl, and new bassist Tony Stevens departed to form Foghat, continuing the pattern of consistent membership turnover.
Simmonds collected yet another lineup and began a hectic tour of America, showcasing the group's now-refined bluesy boogie rock style, which dominated the rest of their albums. The group briefly broke up in 1973, but re-formed the following year.
Throughout the '80s and '90s Simmonds remained undeterred by a revolving-door membership and continued to tour and record. Their first album for the Blind Pig label, “Strange Dreams”, was released in 2003. “Steel” followed in 2007 from Panache Records.
While the band is still active today, touring the world and recording regularly, only Simmonds has stayed since the beginning.
Original member and harmonica player John O'Leary is still active on the British blues circuit with his band Sugarkane.
Another singer, Dave Walker, later joined Fleetwood Mac and Black Sabbath.
Their bassists included Andy Pyle, who played with Mick Abrahams from Jethro Tull in Blodwyn Pig then later with The Kinks and Gary Moore.
Andy Silvester had played with Wha-Koo and Chicken Shack.
Savoy Brown also provided an outlet for keyboardist and guitarist Paul Raymond, who later went on to join UFO.

Monday, 11 June 2012

Today's Playlist...

"Harmonica" - The Graham Bond Organisation
"After Midnight" - J.J. Cale
"Next To Nowhere" - Beth McKee
"Sweet Man Moses" - Jo Harman
"I Lost My Baby" - Lil Johnson
"Rolling The Dice" - Garron Frith
"Bring It On Home" - Hawkwind
"Jake Leg Blues" - Mississippi Sheiks
"Ain't Got No Home" - The Band
"I Got The Same Old Blues" - J.J. Cale
"Clap Your Hands" - The Reverand Peyton's Big Damn Band
The Easy Blues" - John Martyn "Midnight In Memphis" - J.J. Cale
"Right On Cue" - Al Wood & The Woodsmen
"Cuttin' Out" - John Lee Hooker
"Trying To Get To You" - Brooke Shive & The 45's
"Wild Pony" - Chris Rea
"Got To Go" - Asamu Johnson
"Last Bluesman Gone" - Anthony Gomes
"Unemployment" - J.J. Cale
"Same Old Train" - T-Model Ford

Featured Artist

JJ Cale (also J.J. Cale), born John Weldon Cale
December 5, 1938,
Shortly after he arrived in Los Angeles, in 1964, Cale began playing with Delaney & Bonnie. He only played with the duo for a brief time, beginning a solo career in 1965. That year, he cut the first version of "After Midnight," which would become his most famous song. Around 1966, Cale formed The Leathercoated Minds with songwriter Roger Tillison. The group released a psychedelic album called “A Trip Down Sunset Strip” the same year.
Deciding that he wouldn't be able to forge a career in Los Angeles, Cale returned to Tulsa in 1967. Upon his return, he set about playing local clubs. Within a year, he had recorded a set of demos, which were forwarded to Danny Cordell, who was founding a record label called Shelter with Leon Russell.
Shelter signed Cale in 1969. The following year, Eric Clapton recorded "After Midnight," taking it to the American Top 20 and thereby providing Cale with needed exposure and royalties.
In December 1971, Cale released his debut album, “Naturally”, on Shelter Records; the album featured the Top 40 hit "Crazy Mama," as well as a re-recorded version of "After Midnight," which nearly reached the Top 40, and "Call Me the Breeze," which Lynyrd Skynyrd later covered. Cale followed “Naturally” with “Really”, which featured the minor hit "Lies," later that same year.
Following the release of “Really” J.J. Cale adopted a slow work schedule, releasing an album every other year or so.
“Okie”, his third album, appeared in 1974. Two years later, he released “Troubadour” which yielded "Hey Baby," his last minor hit, as well as the original version of "Cocaine," a song that Clapton would later cover.
By this point, Cale had settled into a comfortable career as a cult artist and he rarely made any attempt to break into the mainstream. One more album on Shelter Records, “5”, appeared in 1979 and then he switched labels, signing with MCA in 1981. MCA only released one album (1981's “Shades”) and Cale moved to Mercury Records the following year, releasing “Grasshopper”.
In 1983, Cale released his eighth album, “8”. The album became his first not to chart. Following its release, Cale left Mercury and entered a long period of seclusion, reappearing in late 1990 with “Travel Log”, which was released on the British independent label Silvertone; the album appeared in America the following year.
“10” was released in 1992. The album failed to chart, but it re-established his power as a cult artist. He moved to the major label Virgin in 1994, releasing “Close To You” the same year. It was followed by “Guitae Man” in 1996.
Cale returned to recording in 2003, releasing “To Tulsa And Back” in 2004 on the Sanctuary label and “TheRoad To Escondido”, a collaborative effort with Clapton, in 2006 on Reprise.
“Roll On” appeared in 2009 on Rounder Records.

Monday, 4 June 2012

Today's Playlist...

Arlo Guthrie - "The Motorcycle Song" The Hamsters - "Only Slide I Ever Played On" Dr. Feelgood - "Lights Out" Peter Karp & Sue Foley - "We're Gonna Make It" Omar & The Howlers - "Let Me Hold You" Even Dozen Jug Band - "Take Your Fingers Off It"Lil' Ed And The Blues Imperials - "If You Were Mine" Jay Owens - "Wishing Well" Seasick Steve - "Chiggers" J.J. Cale - "Anyway The Wind Blows" Sherman Robertson - "Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind" The Sensational Alex Harvey Band - "Hole In Her Stocking"Marc Benno - "Love Junkie" Bessie Smith - "Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out" Grainne Duffy - "In My Arms" Little Brother Montgomery - "The First Time I Met The Blues"Status Quo - "Lazy Poker Blues" Isaac Scott - "Help" The Super Super Blues Band - "The Red Rooster"

A Monday Morning Jam!

No featured Artist this week, well in a way I suppose there is. We are going to have a jam session live. Kev is playing slide guitar, and Jen is on bass.


Kev is making his debut on slide guitar today, normally he plays bass in The Mad Dog Davies Band. Jen's instrument of choice is bass, but has not played in a looong while, and is a bit nervous.

Monday, 28 May 2012

Today's Playlist...

"Atlanta Moan" - Barbecue Bob
"Everything's All Right" - Frank Frost
"Payday" - Pete 'Snakey Jake' Johnson
"Walkling Blues" - Son House
"Send For Me If You Need Me" - The Ravens
"Blues Stay Away From Me" - The Delmore Brothers
"Pretty Mama Blues" - Ivory Joe Hunter
"Baby Please Come Home" - The Famous Jug Band
"What'd You Take Me To Be" - Andy Fairweather-Low
"Could Be You, Could Be Me" - Eric Bibb
"Harpoon Man" - Paul DeLay Band
"Baby You're So Kind" - Frank Frost
"Third Degree" - Champion Jack Dupree with John Mayall & Eric Clapton
"Messin' With The Kid" - Buddy Guy & Junior Wells
"Never Leave Me At Home" - Frank Frost
"Roll Me Over" - Curtis Jones
"Trouble No More" - Charlie Musslewhite
"Neighbour Neighbour" King Biscuit Boy with The Ronnie Hawkins Band
"Sweet Little Angel" - Mae Mercer
"New Car" Troyce Key & J.J. Malone
"The Memory Of Our Love" - Henrik Freischlader
"Didn't Mean No Harm" - Frank Frost
"E.S.P." - Eliza Neals

Featured Artist

Frank Frost

(April 15, 1936 — October 12, 1999)


Although the atmospheric juke joint blues of Frank Frost remained steeped in unadulterated Delta funk throughout his career, his ongoing musical journey took him well outside his Mississippi home base. He moved to St. Louis in 1951, learning how to blow harp first from Little Willie Foster and then from the legendary Sonny Boy Williamson, who took him on the road -- as a guitar player -- from 1956 to 1959. Drummer Sam Carr, a longtime Frost ally, was also part of the equation, having enticed Frost to front his combo in 1954 before hooking up with Sonny Boy.
Leaving Williamson's employ in 1959, Frost and Carr settled in Lula, Mississippi. Guitarist Jack Johnson came on board in 1962 after sitting in with the pair at the Savoy Theater in Clarksdale. The three meshed perfectly -- enough to interest Memphis producer Sam Phillips in a short-lived back-to-the-blues campaign that same year. Hey Boss Man!, issued on Sun's Phillips International subsidiary as by Frank Frost & the Night Hawks, was a wonderful collection of uncompromising Southern blues (albeit totally out of step with the marketplace at the time).
Elvis Presley's ex-guitarist Scotty Moore produced Frost's next sessions in Nashville in 1966 for Jewel Records. Augmented by session bassist Chip Young, the trio's tight down-home ensemble work was once again seamless. "My Back Scratcher," Frost's takeoff on Slim Harpo's "Baby Scratch My Back," even dented the R&B charts on Shreveport-based Jewel for three weeks.
Chicago blues fan Michael Frank sought out Frost in 1975. He located Frost, Johnson, and Carr playing inside Johnson's Clarksdale tavern, the Black Fox. Mesmerized by their sound, Frost soon formed his own record label, Earwig, to capture their raw, charismatic brand of blues. Released in 1979, Rockin' the Juke Joint Down, billed as by the Jelly Roll Kings (after one of the standout songs on that old Phillips International LP), showcased the trio's multifaceted approach -- echoes of R&B, soul, and even Johnny & the Hurricanes permeate their Delta-based attack.
In the following years, Frost waxed his own Earwig album (1988's Midnight Prowler) and appeared on Atlantic's 1992 Deep Blues soundtrack -- an acclaimed film that reinforced the fact that blues still thrives deep in its Southern birthplace. Frost returned in 1996 with Keep Yourself Together. He died from cardiac arrest October 12, 1999 at his home in Helena, Arkansas; he was 63

Monday, 21 May 2012

Today We Played...

Cross Cut Saw Blues - Tommy McClennan, Mojo Boogie - Johnnie Winter, Room 414 - Anthony Gomes, Sneakin' Around (With You), Killing Time - Jimmy Witherspoon, Honky Tonk Girl - Pete Anderson, Frankie and Johnny - Frank Crumit, Black Cat Bone - Robert Cray, Albert Collins & Johnny Copeland, I'm Good - Johnny Winter, Seemed Like A Good Idea At The Time - Saffire, Statesboro Blues - Blind Willie McTell, Lights Out - Johnny Winter, Forever Truly Bound - Bill Bourne & The Free Radio Band, It Hurts Me Too - Tampa Red, Hesitation Blues - Jim Jackson, Taking Off - Matt 'Guitar' Murphy, Baby Please Don't Go - Big Joe Williams, Soft And Mellow Stella - Sunnyland Slim, Trucking My Blues Away - Blind Boy Fuller, Trick Bag - Johnny Winter, Harmonica Stomp - Sonny Terry.

Featured Artist

Johnny “Guitar” Winter
February 23, 1944, Leland, Mississippi


He was born John Dawson Winter III, and as an infant moved to Beaumont, Texas, where his brother Edgar Winter was born on December 28, 1946.
They turned to music early on, Johnny Winter learning to play the guitar, while Edgar Winter took up keyboards and saxophone. Before long they were playing professionally, and soon after that recording singles for small local record labels. Both of them were members of Johnny & the Jammers, whose 45 "School Day Blues"/"You Know I Love You" was released by Dart Records in 1959.
Other singles, either credited to Winter or some group pseudonym, were released over the next several years, including "Gangster of Love"/"Eternally," initially issued by Frolic Records in 1963 and picked up for national distribution by Atlantic Records in 1964,
In 1968, Winter decided to focus exclusively on blues-rock, and he formed a trio with Tommy Shannon on bass and John "Red" Turner on drums. He signed with the Austin, Texas, label Sonobeat Records.
Winter appeared at the Woodstock festival in August 1969. (In 2009, The Woodstock Experience, an album of his performance, was released.)
In the spring of 1970, he disbanded his trio and enlisted the former members of the McCoys to back him: Rick Derringer (guitar), Randy Jo Hobbs (bass), and Randy Z. (drums). The group was dubbed "Johnny Winter And." Their self-titled album was released in September and peaked at a disappointing number 154, but they followed with a concert collection, Live Johnny Winter And, released in February 1971, and it reached number
, appeared in 2011

Monday, 14 May 2012

Featured Artist

John Pippus (Born Winnipeg, Manitoba 1950)

Interested in music early in life he got his first guitar at the age of 12, shortly after moving to Vancouver .
Like many teens back in those days, he was caught up in the folk revival, and then the British invasion.
Upon discovering the black blues artists, things changed. This is when his musical tastes and knowledge began to grow, and he was heavily infuenced by the music of Son House, B.B. King, John Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters, etc
He played in garage bands in his late teens and early 20's but, by his own admission “music became secondary while I worked a full time job (tv news editor) and raised a family”
He returned to music full-time in 2004 and has varied from sharing a stage with Jackson Browne to playing to small but appreciative coffee house audiences. It has been said “John has lived a life filled with music and well-earned stories”.
He has released three albums “Born A Genius”, “This City” and his latest “Wrapped Up In The Blues” has received much airplay and good reviews.
As well as touring to promote this album, John is currently working on material for a new album hoped to be ready for release towards the end of 2012.

John's Website is HERE

Big thanks to John for phoning in to the show today and chatting with us!!

Monday, 7 May 2012

Pete Latham and Andy Wootton


Today we have special guests LIVE in the studio. Pete Latham and Andy Wooton are from the band "Barrelhouse Jukes". Andy plays harmonica and performs vocal, Pete is on guitar. The acoustic guitar led band was formed in 2011 in its current line-up. Prior to that the band has been around for about 10 years. They perform around 50% covers and the rest is their own material written by Andy.
The band members are Pete Latham (guitar-fingerstyle), Andy Wootton (vocal and harmonica), Chris Bingham (bass), Jules Ogle (drums).


The band's facebook page is HERE.
Feedback on the show from Pete...
"This is a connoisseur show, wish you all the best".
Pete got his first guitar in 1970, and joined a band in 1974. Played country blues for around 7 years then ragtime, then went electric until 97 when he went back to his first love acoustic guitar.
Barrelhouse Jukes will be at Bleeding Wolf - Scholar Green on 26th May
Holy Inadequate - Etruria 30th May
Queens Festival - Blackfriar Newscastle- June 3rd
Kings Lock Middlewich 16th June 2-5pm
Cheshire Cheese 17th June 2-4pm
Middlewich Folk and Boat Festival
Lift Off Festival - Anderton Boat Lift

Pete is appearing at Sandbach farmers Market on 12th May

Monday, 30 April 2012

Mahalia Jackson
October 16th 1911 – January 27th 1972
General critical consensus holds Mahalia Jackson as the greatest gospel singer ever to live; a major crossover success whose popularity extended across racial divides, she was gospel's first superstar, and even decades after her death remains, for many listeners, a defining symbol of the music's transcendent power. Born in one of the poorest sections of New Orleans she made her debut in the children's choir of the Plymouth Rock Baptist Church at the age of four, and within a few years was a prominent member of the Mt. Moriah Baptist's junior choir. A major inspiration was the blues of Bessie Smith and Ma Rainey.

Jackson relocated to Chicago in 1927, where she worked as a maid and laundress; within months of her arrival, she was singing leads with the choir at the Greater Salem Baptist Church. Her provocative performing style enraged many of the more conservative Northern preachers, but few could deny her fierce talent.

Jackson began her solo career accompanied by pianist Evelyn Gay, who herself later went on to major fame as one half of gospel's Gay Sisters. In 1937 she made her first recordings for Decca, becoming the first gospel artist signed to the label. She soon began performing live in cities as far away as Buffalo, New Orleans, and Birmingham, becoming famous in churches throughout the country for not only her inimitable voice but also her flirtatious stage presence and spiritual intensity.

Producer Art Freeman insisted Jackson record W. Herbert Brewster's "Move on Up a Little Higher"; released in early 1948, the single became the best-selling gospel record of all time, selling in such great quantities that stores could not even meet the demand. Virtually overnight, Jackson became a superstar; among White intellectuals and jazz critics, she acquired a major cult following based in large part on her eerie similarities to Bessie Smith. In 1952, her recording of "I Can Put My Trust in Jesus" even won a prize from the French Academy, resulting in a successful tour of Europe,

Jackson's success soon reached such dramatic proportions that in 1954 she began hosting her own weekly radio series on CBS, the first program of its kind to broadcast the pure, sanctified gospel style over national airwaves. In 1954 she signed to Columbia, scoring a Top 40 hit with the single "Rusty Old Halo," and two years later made her debut on The Ed Sullivan Show.

A triumphant appearance at the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival solidified Jackson's standing among critics. In 1959, she appeared in the film Imitation of Life, and two years later sang at John F. Kennedy's Presidential inauguration. During the '60s, Jackson was also a confidant and supporter of Dr. Martin Luther King, and at his funeral sang his last request, "Precious Lord"; throughout the decade she was a force in the civil rights movement, but after 1968, with King and the brothers Kennedy all assassinated, she retired from the political front. At much the same time, Jackson went through a messy and very public divorce, prompting a series of heart attacks and the rapid loss of over a hundred pounds; in her last years, however, she recaptured much of her former glory, concluding her career with a farewell concert in Germany in 1971. She died January 27, 1972.

Monday, 23 April 2012

Wynonie Harris (August 24, 1915 – June 14, 1969)


No blues shouter embodied the rollicking good times that he sang of quite like raucous shouter Wynonie Harris. "Mr. Blues," as he was not-so-humbly known, joyously related risque tales of sex, booze, and endless parties in his trademark raspy voice over some of the jumpingest horn-powered combos of the postwar era.

The shouter debuted on wax under his own name in July of 1945 with backing from drummer Johnny Otis, saxist Teddy Edwards, and trumpeter Howard McGhee. A month later, he signed on with Apollo Records, an association that provided him with two huge hits in 1946: "Wynonie's Blues" (with saxist Illinois Jacquet's combo) and "Playful Baby." After scattered dates for Hamp-Tone, Bullet, and Aladdin, Harris joined the star-studded roster of Cincinnati's King Records in 1947. There his sales really soared.

Few records made a stronger impact than Harris' 1948 chart-topper "Good Rockin' Tonight." Ironically, Harris shooed away its composer, Roy Brown, when he first tried to hand it to the singer; only when Brown's original version took off did Wynonie cover the romping number. With Hal "Cornbread" Singer on wailing tenor sax and a rocking, socking backbeat, the record provided an easily followed blueprint for the imminent rise of rock & roll a few years later (and gave Elvis Presley something to place on the A-side of his second Sun single).

After that, Harris was rarely absent from the R&B charts for the next four years, his offerings growing more boldly suggestive all the time. "Grandma Plays the Numbers," "I Like My Baby's Pudding," "Good Morning Judge," "Bloodshot Eyes", and "Lovin' Machine" were only a portion of the ribald hits Harris scored into 1952 (13 in all) -- and then his personal hit parade stopped dead. Changing tastes among fickle consumers accelerated Wynonie Harris' sobering fall from favor.

Records for Atco in 1956, King in 1957, and Roulette in 1960 only hinted at the raunchy glory of a few short years earlier. The touring slowed accordingly. Chess gave him a three-song session in 1964, but sat on the promising results. Throat cancer silenced him for good in 1969, ending the life of a bigger-than-life R&B pioneer whose ego matched his tremendous talent.

Monday, 16 April 2012




William James "Willie" Dixon

(July 1, 1915 – January 29, 1992)

Willie Dixon's life and work was virtually an embodiment of the progress of the blues, from an accidental creation of the descendants of freed slaves to a recognized and vital part of America's musical heritage. A producer, songwriter, bassist, and singer, he helped Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter, and others find their most commercially successful voices.

By the time he was a teenager, Dixon was writing songs and selling copies to the local bands. He eventually made his way to Chicago, where he won the Illinois State Golden Gloves Heavyweight Championship. He might have been a successful boxer, but he turned to music instead, thanks to Leonard "Baby Doo" Caston, a guitarist who had seen Dixon at the gym where he worked out and occasionally sang with him. The two formed a duo playing on street corners, and later Dixon took up the bass as an instrument.

Dixon would occasionally appear as a bassist at late-night jam sessions featuring members of the growing blues community, including Muddy Waters. Later on when the Chess brothers -- who owned a club where Dixon occasionally played -- began a new record label, Aristocrat (later Chess), they hired him, initially as a bassist on a 1948 session for Robert Nighthawk. The Chess brothers liked Dixon's playing, and his skills as a songwriter and arranger, and during the next two years he was working regularly for the Chess brothers. He got to record some of his own material, but generally Dixon was seldom featured as an artist at any of these sessions.

Dixon's real recognition as a songwriter began with Muddy Waters' recording of "Hoochie Coochie Man." The success of that single, "Evil" by Howlin' Wolf, and "My Babe" by Little Walter saw Dixon established as Chess' most reliable tunesmith, and the Chess brothers continually pushed Dixon's songs on their artists. In addition to writing songs, Dixon continued as bassist and recording manager of many of the Chess label's recording sessions, including those by Lowell Fulson, Bo Diddley, and Otis Rush.

During the mid-'60s his music was getting covered regularly by artists like the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds, and when he visited England, he even found himself cajoled into presenting his newest songs to their managements. Back at Chess, Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters continued to perform Dixon's songs, as did newer artists such as Koko Taylor, who had her own hit with "Wang Dang Doodle." Gradually, however, after the mid-'60s, Dixon saw his relationship with Chess Records come to a halt. The death of Leonard Chess in the autumn of 1969 and the subsequent sale of the company brought about the end of Dixon's relationship to the company.

Dixon continued performing, and was also called in as a producer on movie soundtracks such as “Gingerale Afternoon” and “La Bamba”, producing the work of his old stablemate Bo Diddley. By that time, Dixon was regarded as something of an elder statesman, composer, and spokesperson of American blues. Dixon eventually began suffering from increasingly poor health, and lost a leg to diabetes. He died peacefully in his sleep early in 1992.

Monday, 2 April 2012

Featured Artist: Chuck Berry

Charles Edward Anderson "Chuck" Berry
(born October 18, 1926)
Born into a middle class family in St. Louis, Missouri, Berry had an interest in music from an early age and gave his first public performance at Summer High School.
While still a high school student he served a prison sentence for armed robbery between 1944 and 1947. On his release, Berry settled into married life and worked at an automobile assembly plant.
By early 1953, influenced by the guitar riffs and showmanship techniques of blues player T-Bone Walker, he was performing in the evenings with the Johnnie Johnson Trio His break came when he traveled to Chicago in May 1955, and met Muddy Waters, who suggested he contact Leonard Chess of Chess Records. With Chess he recorded "Maybellene"—Berry's adaptation of the country song “Ida Red” —which sold over a million copies, reaching #1 on Billboard's Rhythm and Blues chart.
By the end of the 1950s, Berry was an established star with several hit records and film appearances to his name as well as a lucrative touring career.
Berry was among the first musicians to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on its opening in 1986, with the comment that he "laid the groundwork for not only a rock and roll sound but a rock and roll stance." Berry is included in several Rolling Stone "Greatest of All Time" lists, including being ranked fifth on their 2004 list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time

Monday, 26 March 2012

Featured artist Chris Rea

(born Christopher Anton Rea, 4 March 1951)
British singer and guitarist Chris Rea has enjoyed a run of popularity in Europe during the late '80s and early '90s after almost a decade of previous recording. Rea started out performing with a local group called Magdalene, taking David Coverdale's place; the band won a national talent contest in 1975 as the Beautiful Losers, but still failed to get a record contract. Rea left the band and recorded the album “Whatever Happened to Benny Santini?”, which alluded to a discarded stage name. The album went gold on the strength of the U.S. Top 20 hit "Fool (If You Think It's Over)." Rea then spent some time, concentrating his efforts on his main fan base of Europe.
A compilation of tracks from Rea's '80s albums, “New Light Through Old Windows”, was released in 1988 and sold well in the U.K. and Europe and charted in the U.S. Rea followed it up with the critically acclaimed “The Road to Hell”, which many regarded as his best album. It and its follow-up, “Auberge”, went to the top of the U.K. album charts, but did not prove as successful in the U.S., where he has failed to chart with his subsequent releases.
After being diagnosed with pancreatitis, Rea underwent an operation called a Whipple procedure (pancreaticoduodenectomy), with a predicted 50% chance of survival. In 2001, Rea promised himself that if he recovered, he would be returning to his blues roots. This near brush with death was the catalyst for a change in musical direction and motivation.
In 2005 he released “Blue Guitars”, an eleven CD collection of 137 blues-inspired tracks recorded in eighteen months, complete with his own paintings as album covers. It is seen by himself as his finest work to date.
The fun “The Return of the Fabulous Hofner Blue Notes” appeared in 2008, and he released “The Santo Spirito Blues” in 2011.

Monday, 19 March 2012

Featured Artist - Danny Overbea

Danny Overbea

3 January 1926, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA, d. 11 May 1994, Chicago, Illinois


Danny Overbea, came out of the Chicago R&B scene, and was one of the earliest pioneers of rock 'n' roll.
He began his musical career in 1946 and first recorded in 1950 as a vocalist on an Eddie Chamblee track.
He formed a vocal-instrumental trio called the Three Earls
Overbea joined Chess Records in 1952, producing his best-known songs, "Train Train Train" and "40 Cups Of Coffee", the following year. Both were essentially rock 'n' roll songs before the concept of "rock 'n' roll" had even emerged.
In the pop market, "Train Train Train" was covered by Buddy Morrow and "40 Cups Of Coffee" by Ella Mae Morse. By 1955, when rock 'n' roll was making its breakthrough on the pop charts, Bill Haley And His Comets recorded "40 Cups Of Coffee", which, even though it did not chart, proved to be one of their better efforts.
By now Overbea was gaining a name as a writer of songs as well as a performer
Famed disc jockey Alan Freed featured Overbea many times in his early rock 'n' roll revues in Ohio and New York; his acrobatic back-bend to the floor while playing the guitar behind his head was always a highlight of the shows.
The first recorded Overbea work in 1954 was the strangely named "Ebony Chant" and the flip was "Stomp And Whistle". This record did not do anywhere near as well as the first two releases.
Overbea was also a talented ballad singer (in the mode of Billy Eckstine), having most success with "You're Mine" (also recorded by the Flamingos) and "A Toast To Lovers".
Overbea made his last records in 1959 and retired from the music business in 1976.

Monday, 12 March 2012

Featured Artist - Sleepy John Estes

John Adam Estes (January 25, 1899 or 1904 – June 5, 1977)


Big Bill Broonzy called John Estes' style of singing "crying" the blues because of its overt emotional quality. Actually, his vocal style harks back to his tenure as a work-gang leader for a railroad maintenance crew, where his vocal improvisations and keen, cutting voice set the pace for work activities
Estes made his debut as a recording artist in Memphis, Tennessee in 1929, at a session organized by Ralph Peer for Victor Records. His partnership with Nixon was first documented on songs such as "Drop Down Mama" and "Someday Baby Blues" in 1935; later sides replaced the harmonica player with the guitarists Son Bonds or Charlie Pickett.He later recorded for the Decca and Bluebird labels, with his last pre-war recording session taking place in 1941.
Some accounts attribute his nickname "Sleepy" to a blood pressure disorder and/or narcolepsy. Others, such as blues historian Bob Koester, claim he simply had a "tendency to withdraw from his surroundings into drowsiness whenever life was too cruel or too boring to warrant full attention"
Many of Estes' original songs were based on events in his own life or on people he knew from his home town of Brownsville, Tennessee, such as the local lawyer ("Lawyer Clark Blues"), local auto mechanic ("Vassie Williams' Blues"), or an amorously inclined teenage girl ("Little Laura Blues")
He also dispensed advice on agricultural matters ("Working Man Blues") and chronicled his own attempt to reach a recording studio for a session by hopping a freight train ("Special Agent (Railroad Police Blues)"). His lyrics combined keen observation with an ability to turn an effective phrase.
Estes suffered a stroke while preparing for a European tour, and died on June 5, 1977, at his home of 17 years in Brownsville, Tennessee