After more than 5 years it is time to say good bye and this blog shuts its doors.

Thank you very much for all your support through out this time.

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Super Chikan 1997 Blues Come Home To Roost





Genre: Blues
Rate: 251 kbps VBR / 44100
Time: 00:59:52
Size: 102,90 MB

United States

As far as debuts go, the one from James "Super Chikan" Johnson is one of the most auspicious and accomplished of modern times. Recorded in Clarksdale, MS -- about as close to a home as blues has -- it covers the bases, from the sophisticated soulful swing of "Crystal Ball Eyes" to the funk of "Super Chikan Strut" and the Mississippi pride of "Down in the Delta" (albeit with a bayou rhythm).

Unlike so many bluesmen, however, Super Chikan doesn't always take himself too seriously -- he's not averse to crowing like a rooster, or throwing in a self-deprecatory chicken scratch on the guitar, or the overbearing mama of "Mama & the Chillen." In addition to being a very solid, occasionally inspired, writer (as on the soul "service" history of "Captain Love Juice"), he's a very decent vocalist, and a guitarist who tends to hide his light under a bushel, rarely unleashing his talents, which is a shame, because the ability is there. When he does get (semi-) properly serious, on the slow-jam "Bleeding From the Heart," he shows himself following classic footsteps, a Chicago wail tempered by a Delta heart that simply oozes the blues in every note and syllable.

More than simply a novelty act, Super Chikan is part of the great lineage of American blues music, and proof that the blues is very much still alive and kicking -- thankfully. (Chris Nickson)



Tracklist:

01 - Down In The Delta 04:20

02 - Well Gone Dry 05:04

03 - Crystal Ball 04:13

04 - Super Chickan Strut 04:58

05 - Mama & The Chillin (Part 1) 03:15

06 - What It Is 03:51

07 - Captain Love Juice 04:05

08 - Camel Toe 04:08

09 - White Rock Rooster 03:53

10 - Bleeding From The Heart 06:54

11 - Mr. Rich Man 03:09

12 - Rockin' (That 'Cane ) & Rollin' (Mary Jane) 04:31

13 - The Real You 04:16

14 - Mama & The Chillin (Part 2) 03:15





Super Chikan here:

DL



Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Donnie Romano 2009 BlueSpirits


Genre: Blues
Rate: 320 kbps CBR / 44100
Time: 00:43:04
Size: 98,51 MB

Italy


Tracklist:

01 - Mean Blue Spirits 03:21

02 - Walking Blues 03:39

03 - Come Back Baby 03:59

04 - 3 A.M. Blues 05:13

05 - I Don't Need No Doctor 03:40

06 - Forgive Me 05:19

07 - I'm A Ram 07:09

08 - I Don't Want To Be Alone 04:03

09 - I'm Leaving 02:44

10 - Bye Bye Bro!!! 03:57





Donnie Romano here:

DL



Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Lone Kellermann & Rockbandet 1978 Før Natten Blir' Til Dag



Genre: Blues-Rock
Rate: 163 kbps VBR / 44100
Time: 00:39:37
Size: 46,57 MB

Denmark

Lone Kellermann Ekelund (20. marts 1943 – 30. april 2005) var en dansk sangerinde og skuespiller.

Lone Kellermann var i 1970'erne og 1980'erne et stort aktiv for den danske blues- og rockscene, og hun udfoldede sideløbende sit talent på de skrå brædder i en række revyer og teaterstykker.

Det folkelige gennembrud kom på hendes anden plade, Før Natten Bli'r til Dag, i 1978 med den for Lone Kellermann atypiske sang Se Venedig og dø, som var en gave fra Kim Larsen. Det var egentlig skrevet til Gasolin', og var tiltænkt som deres bidrag til brug i Dansk Melodi Grand Prix i 1978, men Kim Larsen forærede Lone Kellermann & Rockbandet denne sang. I Rockbandet, som var Lone Kellermanns faste band, spillede Bjørn Uglebjerg trommer. Han havde i sin tid været trommeslager i Gasolin'. Sangen blev et kæmpe hit for Kellermann, og er den, som flere generationer umiddelbart forbinder hende med. (http://da.wikipedia.org)



Tracklist:

01 - Dette Er Himmelen Her 02:47

02 - Nina 03:10

03 - Venter På En Sang 03:27

04 - Spring Ud 02:47

05 - Fuglen Er Fløget 08:02

06 - Månefiskeren 00:33

07 - Vandkunstens Lille Café 03:15

08 - Ryg Dansk 03:19

09 - Se Venedig Og Dø 03:35

10 - Natholdet 03:11

11 - Du Der! 05:31





Lone Kellermann & Rockbandet here:

iTunes

DL



Casey Jones 1987 Solid Blue



Genre: Blues
Rate: 320 kbps CBR / 44100
Time: 00:31:52
Size: 72,93 MB

United States

Review by Bill Dahl

One of the Chicago drummer's best solo outings. Eight originals, all of them well-done (especially the chunky "Mr. Blues" and a rocking "Hip Hip Hooray"). Jones's vocals are enthusiastic and his backing is expert.

Jones is best known as drummer for the Icebreakers, backing band for the late Albert Collins, and for backing Johnny Winter on his Alligator Records albums.

Yet when unleashed on his own as leader and vocalist, Jones gives Collins and Winter a run for their money. Jones is possessed of a fine, pleasant voice, steeped in the blues tradition. Pianist Allen Batts and fellow Icebreaker Johnny B. Gayden (bass) kick in on the project to good effect.

"(Tribute to the) Boogie Men" starts off this outing in strong fashion. With a rollicking beat, Jones belts out the names of old blues artists and their contributions. As he puts it, "They played the boogie music." The rest of this strong effort is equal to those who came before. (Jim Trageser)

artists:

Casey JONES - Drums, Guitar, Vocals
Maurice Vaughn, Jonathan McDonald - Guitar
Billy Branch - Harmonica
Allen Batts - Piano, Organ
Jerry Wilson - Tenor Saxophone
Paul Howard - Trumpet
Bill McFarland - Trombone
Greg Rzab, Johnny B. Gayden, Jerry Barry - Bass



Tracklist:

01 - (Tribute To The) Boogie Men 04:26

02 - You Put The Whammy On Me 04:00

03 - Mr. Blues 04:06

04 - The Big Cities Shuffle 04:34

05 - Going Up And Down 03:38

06 - News Is Bad 04:42

07 - I Am A Hog For Ya 04:00

08 - Hip Hip Hooray 02:26





Casey Jones here:

DL



The Silks 2013 Last American Band

Rock and Roll may not be dead, but it does seem like there’s a priest leaning over its bed, reciting the last rites. However, if The Silks have anything to do with it, the body will soon be out of bed, bopping around the room.

What makes their debut disc, Last American Band, so special is this Rhode Island trio not only rocks but also rolls. While longhaired singer-guitarist, Tyler-James Kelly belts it out like early Paul Rodgers, bassist Jonas Parmelee and drummer Matthew Donnelly, keep the beat swinging. One listen to these guys and you’ll remember this music is for the body as well as the mind. The minute you hear The Silks? You can't sit down.


http://www.thesilksmusic.com

bandcamp

Monday, September 22, 2014

Kalyi Jag 1987 Fekete Tüz (Black Fire)


Genre: Gypsy
Rate: 192 kbps CBR / 44100
Time: 00:47:57
Size: 65,90 MB

Hungary

The first record of the group called Kalyi Jag (’Black Fire’) is an extraordinary venture for several reasons: they play and sing traditional Gypsy folklore, trying at the same time to adapt itt to their individual personalities and their contemporary musical environment. The „Young masters of folk art”, a title the group from Szatmár county (North-East Hungary) merited in 1979, give performances in workers’ hostels, community centres, theatres as well as various European towns.

The music they play is traditional, yet not quite: once folk music has been uprooted from the medium that produced and fosters it, once it is performed as an artistic production rather than used, it automatically alters, adjusting to its new (stage) function and setting. Nearly all the songs on the record are genuine folk songs. The lyrics and tunes original, but their adaptation has been the group’s invention. Apart from a thin layer of instrumental musicians, Hungarian Gypsies do not play any instruments; they render their folk songs exclusively vocally, and it is only to accompany dance songs that they resort to ’instruments’ – some household utensils (watercan, pot-lid, spoons) to produce percussion effects. The group has not parted with this custom: the water-can is there is the accompaniment of nearly every dance tune. But what is the guitar and the mandolin used for then?

In the ’60s young Hungarians began to try their hands at the guitar. They wanted to create a new musical culture for the young free from the hackneyed sugary schlager tunes. Gypsy youth also began to take to the guitar, some playing the same type of music as the young Hungarians, others who lived in traditional communities and regarded folklore as their „musical mothertongue” providing instrumental accompaniment to their indigeneous songs. This rapidly spreading fashion has left almost no Gypsy community in Hungary without young guitarists. It is natural for today’s teenagers to dance and sing to guitar accompaniment. The guitarist must adapt to the songs of the community, but the songs ’adapt themselves’ as well: they get transformed so as to fit the guitar accompaniment. That is how the instruments have made their way into the Kalyi Jag group. Otherwise, their fine voices and talents at vocal improvisation, a characteristic legacy of Gypsies, continue to be a source of great delight to the listener similarly to conventional folk music records. What is new compared to the traditional practice is the structuring of the songs and the addition of instrumental passages to introduce a song and fill the spaces between stanzas.

The main appeal of Gypsy folk music is precisely its opennes to new inlfuences. It is capable of assimilating strong external musical influences, retaining at the same time its distinctive character. Today, external impacts arrive from popular dance music. They enrich the adaptations, leaving the essential components of the musical material intact.

The group seek to enlarge their repertoire in two ways: they learn the music and performance styles of other (non-Szatmár) Gypsy groups, and they mould their songs so as to please the young audience fascinated by popular dance music. That is why the record includes besides ’native’ songs (from Nagyecsed) melodies from the Szabolcs, the Great Plain and West Hungary, as well as the adaptation of an originally Roumanian-language song of Balkanian tone, a tribute by the group to Roumanian-speaking Gypsies. Most songs are rendered in Romani, as it is part of the group’s endeavours to promote their mother tongue. The lyrics are transcribed according to Hungarian ortography with a view to Romani-speaking Gypsies in Hungary.

The members of the group display a wide versatility of talents: they sing stick-dance tunes in asymmetric rhythm (3/8; the exclusive accompaniment to the Gypsy stick dance), polyphonic songs and traditional monophonic slow songs from Szatmár, and lively many-voiced dance songs. The dance songs are performed in their traditional style. The rolled virtuosic leading voice-part studded with onomatopoeic effects in accompanied by oral bassing, a popular term derived from the analogous bass part of the ’restaurant’ Gypsy bands. This colourful repertoire finely blends tunes in traditional performance style, adaptations and songs in a more popular taste like the slow song ’What do I need that much money for?’ (A/8) or a composition by the leader of the group, Gusztáv Varga (’Fanny’, B/2).

It is by no means accidental then that the music the listener finds on this record differs from the three Gypsy folk music records so far released in Hungary. Young Gypsies have also awakened to the need of having modern music which still has a distinctive Gypsy character. One of the first outcomes of these efforts is this record of the Kalyi Jag group. (Katalin Kovalcsik)


Tracklist:

01 - What're You Looking For, Brother 02:21

02 - Make Way, Children 02:34

03 - Our Daughter-In-Law Was Fair 02:32

04 - May God Be Lucky 02:55

05 - Follow Me, Girl 04:54

06 - Cavity (Oral) Bass Improvisations 02:13

07 - The Band Played Till The Morning 01:53

08 - What Do I Need That Much Money For 01:45

09 - Rumanian Gypsy Dance From The Balkans 02:40

10 - For Forty-Two Nights 02:15

11 - Fanny 03:26

12 - What's My Young Life 02:23

13 - Rolled Song From Nyirbator 02:03

14 - As Many Girls There Were 02:24

15 - The Duck Goes In The Water 01:42

16 - Mother, Mother 01:57

17 - Her Soul Is 03:47

18 - Why Should My Mother Die 01:57

19 - I Have A Pipe And A Hat 02:16





Kalyi Jag here:

iTunes

DL



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