mercoledì 18 aprile 2012

Anders Osborne - Black Eye Galaxy

Abbiamo avuto di fronte uno dei più grandi talenti della scena Usa per più di un ventennio ed ha rischiato di passare inosservato. Ad onor del vero, non è che le sue gesta non siano state debitamente enfatizzate. Il vichingo approdato a Crescent City ha una dozzina di album alle spalle. Nominato per il secondo anno consecutivo “Best roots rock artist da Guitar player, questo “poet laureate of Louisiana’s fertile roots music scene” è da quasi un ventennio al centro della scena musicale di New Orleans, senza raccogliere in proporzione ai propri meriti. Le sue collaborazioni si sprecano: Keb Mo, Stanton Moore Trio, Karl Denson Tiny Universe, Voice of Wetland all Stars, Galactics, Chief Monk Boudreaux, Luther Dickinson. Ha lasciato sempre il segno: come solista, come produttore, ed anche come autore, (sua è “Watch The Wind Blow By,” country hit per Tim McGraw). “Black Eye Galaxy”, secondo album targato Alligator, è il suo disco più rock e fruibile e gli permette di incassare, con tanto di interessi, gli investimenti fatti sulla scena musicale di New Orleans. “American Patchwork” non poteva avere miglior seguito!



Between the sheer force and potent lyricism of his guitar playing, the riveting depth of his songwriting and the straight-from-the-soul conviction of his vocals, New Orleans’ Anders Osborne is among the most original and visionary musicians writing and performing today. Relix says Osborne plays “hard-hitting songs” featuring his “raging, expressive guitar and soulful singing…from scorched-earth rock to sweet, tender ballads.” OffBeat magazine recently named Osborne the Crescent City’s Best Guitarist for the second straight year, and also awarded him with the Best Roots Rock Artist title. Guitar Player called him, “The poet laureate of Louisiana’s fertile roots music scene.” Since the release of his 2010 Alligator Records debut, American Patchwork, Osborne has toured virtually non-stop, performing with his own band, solo with Keb Mo, with The Stanton Moore Trio, alongside Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe and with Luther Dickinson as well as with The Voice Of The Wetlands All-Stars. He appears on Galactic’s song “Dark Water” from their Ya-Ka-May album, and in 2011 produced and played on critically acclaimed albums by Tab Benoit, Johnny Sansone and Mike Zito. Along the way, he also found time to write and record the next chapter in his still-unfolding career, Black Eye Galaxy.Recorded at the famed Dockside Studio in Maurice, Louisiana, Black Eye Galaxy was produced by Anders along with engineer Warren Riker and Galactic’s Stanton Moore. Sounds on the album range from heavy electric mayhem to joyous acoustic melodicism, lyrics move from the darkest depths to the healing power of love. Black Eye Galaxy is a personal record for Osborne, but one with universal themes. “It’s about being on the other side of chaos and putting things back together,” he says. The title is an unambiguous metaphor for Osborne’s life as a traveler, a musician, an immigrant, a recovering addict, and as a husband and father. The album is a journey of sorts, following the main character (based on Anders’ own life experiences) from the uncontrolled, primal chaos of “Send Me A Friend”to the inner peace of “Higher Ground.” The disjointed and brutally honest “Mind Of A Junkie” leads into the warm and hopeful “Lean On Me/Believe In You.” The gentle “When Will I See You Again?” finds Anders rebuilding broken relations, while the feral and confrontational “Black Tar” (co-written with Little Feat’s Paul Barrere) says farewell to a dark past. The final four songs — “Tracking My Roots,” “Louisiana Gold,” “Dancing In The Wind,” and “Higher Ground” — bring an almost ecstatic tranquility after the intense stress and turbulence of the beginning of the album. From ultra-heavy and challenging to sweetly soul-soothing and melodic, Osborne’s guitar work, like his vocals, is simply mesmerizing. Black Eye Galaxy is a harrowing but ultimately uplifting cycle of richly detailed songs that are musically and lyrically thought-provoking, exhilarating and completely engaging.



Live, Osborne is a force to behold. His wildly energetic, physical performances find him ripping notes out of his guitar, forcing out intense steel-on-steel slide solos, pouring his entire soul into his vocals. His piercing guitar playing, slide work and fluid finger picking (oftentimes happening simultaneously) are simply unmatched. His use of Open D tuning (a rare choice for a guitar virtuoso) gives his fretwork a signature sound and feel. “I first heard Open D on Joni Mitchell’s Blue,” he says, “and my fingers just fit the tuning.” His influences range from Ry Cooder and Robert Johnson to the great horn players like Miles Davis and John Coltrane. Past gigs include repeated appearances at The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, stops at Bonnaroo, The High Sierra Festival, The Telluride Blues Festival, The Hollowbaloo Music & Arts Festival in Honolulu, The Voice Of The Wetlands and an appearance at the 2008 Democratic National Convention. He has toured North America and Europe extensively, and is constantly in demand as a guitarist, songwriter and producer. Since his recording debut in 1989, Osborne has written virtually all of his own material and contributed memorable songs to a wide variety of artists. Two tunes co-written by Osborne appear on blues great Keb Mo’s Grammy-winning 1999 release Slow Down. Country superstar Tim McGraw scored a #1 hit with Anders’ song “Watch The Wind Blow By.” Osborne’s compositions have been covered by artists as diverse as Brad Paisley, Tab Benoit, Jonny Lang and Kim Carnes. His song “What’s Going On Here” appeared in the 1996 feature film Fled, and Osborne, along with Ivan Neville, wrote and recorded the title track for the 2010 Kate Hudson film Earthbound. He can also be seen performing in a recent episode of HBO’s New Orleans-based drama, Treme. Osborne was destined to live in New Orleans, and it’s no surprise he’s become one of the city’s favorite sons. His path home, however, was a long and winding one. He was born in Uddevalla, Sweden in 1966. His father was a professional touring jazz drummer who played all over Europe and was exposed to a lot of styles of popular American music. He brought home reel-to-reel recordings of jazz, R&B and early rock ‘n’ roll from artists as diverse as Little Richard, Fats Domino, Bill Haley, Art Pepper and Miles Davis. As a teen, Anders started playing guitar and listening to Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Jackson Browne, and Joni Mitchell records. He fell in love with the vocal styles of Ray Charles, Van Morrison and Lowell George. Then he heard the blues of Robert Johnson and recordings of African drumming, and suddenly, everything clicked. “Blues connected everything together for me,” Osborne recalls. “The early rock, the R&B, the jazz, the singer-songwriters. Blues was like a thread running through everything.” With a serious case of wanderlust, Anders began traveling on his own at 16. For the next four years, he hitchhiked across Europe, North Africa, Southeast Asia and the Middle East, earning money by doing odd jobs and performing on the street or in bars at every opportunity. He worked assembly lines in Israel and dug ditches in Greece. He picked fruits and vegetables in many locales, following the harvest seasons across Europe. He wrote constantly, soaking up the life experience and honing his craft. In 1985, after landing in New York with only $5.00 in his pocket, Osborne hitchhiked to New Orleans to meet up with a friend. “Once I got to New Orleans, everything I heard in my head — the music, the way people treated each other — was happening. I knew I was home.” He naturally absorbed the spirit of the Crescent City into his soul, as he was fully embraced by the city’s vibrant music community. Shortly after moving there, he found out that his grandfather, a sailor, had lived in New Orleans for many years. His grandfather then began telling him vivid stories of the city, and sharing old photographs. “I just felt connected to his memories,” Osborne says, “and I knew I was where I was supposed to be.” Anders spent his first few years in New Orleans writing and developing his sound and style, all the while continuing to soak up the music of the city. He cut his first two albums for the independent New Orleans-based Rabadash Records in 1989 and 1993. The excitement surrounding those releases led to a major label deal with Sony’s Okeh imprint in 1995. Osborne released a series of successful albums for Shanachie and MC Records, all to wide critical and popular acclaim, before joining forces with Alligator Records. With the 2010 release of American Patchwork, Osborne’s fame suddenly reached a whole new level. Critics went wild, with OffBeat saying, “American Patchwork is the album Osborne fans have been waiting for. The record is a focused and tuneful triumph. Osborne’s gifts as a guitar player are significant. His voice is so emotionally intense it feels like an explosion. He writes with remarkable eloquence…this is the living definition of great art.”



mercoledì 11 aprile 2012

Danny Bryant - Night Life

Il Blues inglese è stato un movimento sotterraneo che ha scosso e forse rivoluzionato la musica rock molto piu' di quanto non si pensi. Lontano dal Delta oltremanica gli accordi della solitudine e del riscatto vengono contaminati dal rock and roll e dai poeti della musica che trovano in questo genere un volano unico per esprimere i loro sentimenti. Mischiate tutti questi ingredienti con la passione per la chitarra blues e tanto ma tanto sudore da palco e otterrete il sound di Danny Bryant...... Steve Ray Vaughan sarebbe sicuramente un suo grande fan.


Danny Bryant was born in Hertfordshire England in July 1980. First hailed as a ‘young guitar prodigy’ Danny began playing guitar aged 15, turning professional just three years later, and in the last decade has paid his dues clocking up endless miles of traveling and approximately two thousand shows in many countries around the world. After a decade of hard toil he now gets the recognition he so well deserves, being acknowledged by those in the business as one of the cream of the crop of this generation of blues artists, ably backed by his rhythm section of his father Ken on bass and Trevor Barr on drums.


In a career already littered with highlights including many sold out club tours across Europe and numerous major festival appearances that have seen the power trio perform on the same bill as such names as Joe Cocker, Carlos Santana, Buddy Guy and Peter Green to mention a few; Danny and his band have steadily carved a huge and loyal fan base around the world. So far the band have released seven internationally acclaimed CDs, in 2007 they signed with Rounder Records and released three highly successful albums with this Label which all topped the itunes and Amazon blues charts in several countries. In 2009 Danny signed a licensing deal with Virgin/EMI Asia and track from their 2007 release, ‘Live’, was included on a compilation CD entitled ”The Best Blues Album In The World Ever”. Danny was featured alongside many giants of Blues, including Johnny Winter, Gary Moore, Albert Collins and ZZ Top. February 2010 saw the release of the bands critically acclaimed studio album “Just As I Am’, hitting Blues charts all across the continent and receiving glowing reviews from the international music press. The album caught the ear of German based label Jazzhaus records leading Danny to ink a deal with the dynamic new label. March 2012 will see the release of “Night Life”, a live CD/DVD recorded last summer in the Netherlands and capturing the band doing what they do best – playing explosive blues rock with passion.

giovedì 5 aprile 2012

Ruthie Foster - Let It Burn

January 31 release on Blue Corn Music features Blind Boys of Alabama, Soul legend William Bell, and songs by Adele, Black Keys, Los Lobos, Johnny Cash, The Band, Pete Seeger, Crosby, Stills & Nash and more. Those who have followed Ruthie Foster's eclectic musical history know that she can burn down any stage with her combustible blend of soul, blues, rock, folk and gospel. And when Grammy Award-winning producer John Chelew suggested she record an album in New Orleans - with support handpicked from the Crescent City's overflowing pool of talent - it was an opportunity for Ruthie to infuse fresh spices into her already rich sonic gumbo. The result is Let It Burn - slated for January 31, 2012 release on Blue Corn Music - a recording that smolders, sizzles and ignites with an intensity born from her vibrant voice and indelible presence. Ruthie's astonishing voice has taken her on an amazing ride. She came from humble church choir beginnings in rural Texas, followed by a tour of duty with the U.S. Navy Band, and ended up in New York City with a major-label development deal that went sour. After she moved back to Texas to care for her ailing mother, Foster took a break from singing professionally for a couple of years. When she resumed her music career in Austin, she became a regular nominee at the Austin Music Awards, winning Best Folk Artist in 2004-05 and Best Female Vocalist in 2007-08. Broadening her sound by blending blues and soul aspects into her folk roots, Ruthie added a Grammy nomination to her list of achievements (Best Contemporary Blues Album for her last studio release, 2009's The Truth According to Ruthie Foster). And, in a nod to her astounding range, she then won seemingly contradictory Blues Music Association awards for both Best Traditional and Best Contemporary Female Blues Artist in back-to-back years.


In addition to leading her own band and touring it around the world, Foster has also collaborated on stage and recordings with a diverse list of artists including Warren Haynes, Big Head Todd, Bonnie Raitt, Eric Bibb and Paul Thorn. She's a regular favorite at an equally diverse list of festivals such as the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, the Monterey Blues Festival, Merlefest and the Kate Wolf Festival. The ingredients for Let It Burn, recorded at New Orleans' Piety Street Studios, start with some of that city's most respected players: The Funky Meters' rhythm section of bassist George Porter Jr. and drummer Russell Batiste, guitarist Dave Easley, and renowned saxophonist James Rivers collectively infuse the tracks with the groove-based, in-the-pocket vibe that comes naturally to New Orleans-bred musicians. The addition of Hammond B3 wizard Ike Stubblefield, who has toured and recorded with everyone from Curtis Mayfield to Eric Clapton, gives the album a jazzy organ-combo feel. Finally, legendary gospel singers the Blind Boys of Alabama and Soul icon William Bell add extra depth to the project's surprisingly eclectic collection of cover songs and fresh originals. Besides the New Orleans location, there was another significant "first" associated with these sessions. "This is the only album I've done where I don't play an instrument, which is really different. It gave me a lot more freedom vocally. Without a guitar, all I did was concentrate on singing," Foster explains. "Sometimes I tried to channel Mavis Staples vocally, but I also wanted to bring a kind of Cassandra Wilson/Sade sultriness to some of the songs." The results are powerful, defining performances of Adele's anthemic "Set Fire to the Rain," John Martyn's poignant and sensual "Don't Want to Know," and Johnny Cash's "Ring of Fire," all of which take on new vibrancy with distinctive musical arrangements and Ruthie's commanding presence. The achingly beautiful, atmospheric ballad version of "Ring of Fire" is at the heart of thisalbum, and potently showcases Foster as one of the finest interpretive singers of our time. "When it comes to songs, often older ones, I love it when they find me and that's what happened with 'Ring of Fire.' I put myself inside of that song, which speaks to the passion of a new relationship," she says. Ruthie mines other tunes from a variety of sources such as the Black Keys ("Everlasting Light," given a sparkling and righteous treatment), Pete Seeger (a dynamic, ominous swamp/jazz reimagining of "If I Had a Hammer") and Los Lobos (the rambling, haunting "This Time"). The church is never far from anything Foster touches as her spiritual original "Lord Remember Me" with the Blind Boys, featuring a sanctified slide solo from guitarist Easley, makes clear. The album's opening and closing tracks also spotlight the Blind Boys and bookend the project with a devotional approach. "I haven't lost my gospel in the way I approach a song," explains Ruthie. Another new Foster song is "Aim for the Heart" (a co-write with Jon & Sally Tiven), which works Porter's funky bass, Stubblefield's expressive organ and Easley's snake-like guitar into a groove which supports the deeply personal motto ("Aim for the heart/And you'll never go wrong") that Foster has exhibited in both her life and music. Rounding out this smoldering collection of tunes are covers of The Band's melancholic "It Makes No Difference," David Crosby's politically charged "Long Time Gone" and William Bell's classic "You Don't Miss Your Water" (with Bell dueting on a slow, jazz/blues version of the standard, augmented by a stunning Rivers solo), all of which further display Ruthie's uncanny knack for finding the simmering essence of any song. On Let It Burn, Ruthie Foster takes the listener on her most personal journey yet, sounding like she is pouring her heart out late at night, and her deeply soulful vocals create a spiritual soundscape to support her testimony. This is the album her fans have been waiting for - and that the rest of the world will listen to in wonder.

mercoledì 4 aprile 2012

B. B. King, nome d'arte di Riley B. King (Itta Bena, 16 settembre 1925), è un chitarrista e cantante statunitense. Con una lunghissima carriera alle spalle, oggi è uno dei più importanti esponenti del blues viventi. Con la sua "Lucille", una chitarra Gibson ES-355 custom, è diventato un'icona stessa del genere musicale già a partire dagli anni cinquanta. Ha avuto una così grande carriera che ancora oggi è riconosciuto come il re del blues. Ha vinto 14 volte il Grammy. Nella rivista Rolling Stone è posto come sesto chitarrista più bravo del mondo (Lista dei 100 migliori chitarristi secondo Rolling Stone). Il suo sound è caratterizzato da suoni caldi e piacevoli che danno vita ad un blues elegante che lo ha contraddistinto per tutta la sua carriera. Il suo stile chitarristico è noto a tutti per essere caratterizzato solo da parti soliste che si alternano al canto senza mai sfociare in parti di accompagnamento.King passò molta della sua infanzia vivendo con la madre e la nonna, lavorando come mezzadro. King ha detto che veniva pagato 35 centesimi per ogni 100 libbre (45 kg) di cotone che raccoglieva, prima di scoprire il suo talento. Da giovane, si appassionò ai cantanti neri come T-Bone Walker e Lonnie Johnson e artisti jazz come Charlie Christian e Django Reinhardt. Presto incominciò a esercitarsi cantando musica gospel in chiesa.

CD+DVD

BLUE RAY


Nel 1943 King si trasferì a Indianola, Mississippi e tre anni dopo a Memphis, Tennessee, dove affinò la sua tecnica di chitarrista con l'aiuto del cugino, il chitarrista country blues Bukka White. Alla fine, King incominciò a trasmettere la sua musica dal vivo sulla radio di Memphis WDI,A come disc-jokey, una stazione che aveva da poco cambiato la propria programmazione per trasmettere soltanto musica nera, cosa estremamente rara all'epoca. Alla radio King incominciò ad usare il nome The Pepticon Boy, che più tardi divenne "The Blues Boy from Beale Street" (il ragazzo del blues di Beale Street) o più semplicemente The Beale Street Blues Boy: il nome fu poi abbreviato a Blues Boy e, infine, a B.B. Nel 1949 King cominciò a registrare canzoni per la RPM Records di Los Angeles. Gran parte delle sue prime registrazioni furono prodotte da Sam Phillips che poi avrebbe fondato la leggendaria Sun Records. Negli anni cinquanta King divenne uno degli esponenti principali del panorama R&B collezionando una lunga lista di hits tra i quali You Know I Love You, Woke Up This Morning, Please Love Me, When My Heart Beats Like a Hammer, Whole Lotta' Love, You Upset Me Baby, Every Day I Have the Blues, Sneakin' Around, Ten Long Years, Bad Luck, Sweet Little Angel, On My Word of Honor, e Please Accept My Love. Nel 1962 King firmò per la ABC-Paramount Records. Nel novembre del 1964 King registrò al Regal Theater di Chicago l'album Live at the Regal che sarebbe ben presto entrato nella leggenda.


Il primo successo di King al di fuori del mercato blues fu una riedizione di The Thrill Is Gone di Roy Hawkins che nel 1969 scalò le classifiche sia pop che R&B, evento molto raro ancora oggi. L'elenco dei successi di King continuò per tutti gli anni settanta con canzoni quali To Know You Is to Love You e I Like to Live the Love. Dal 1951 al 1985 King è apparso sulle classifiche R&B di Billboard ben 74 volte. Nei decenni successivi King ha registrato sempre meno senza perdere in popolarità grazie alla partecipazione a film e show televisivi (tra cui una puntata de I Robinson dove interpreta se stesso) e tenendo annualmente circa 300 serate. Nel 1988 ha conquistato una nuova generazione di fan grazie al singolo When Love Comes to Town, suonata insieme agli U2. Nel 2000 ha invece registrato Riding with the King in coppia con Eric Clapton. Nella sua carriera ha suonato insieme a moltissimi artisti e gruppi, tra cui Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy, David Gilmour, Muddy Waters, Paul Butterfield, Luciano Pavarotti, Richie Sambora, Phil Collins, Billy Ocean, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Etta James, Gladys Knight, Chaka Khan, James Brown, Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, Ray Charles, Albert King, Gary Moore, Diane Shuur, Slash, U2, John Mayer, Jeff Beck, Gloria Estefan, Roger Daltrey, Bobby Bland, Zucchero, Tracy Chapman, Sheryl Crow, Billy Preston, Elton John, Mark Knopfler, Van Morrison, Billy Gibbons, e Willie Nelson,(( Brad Paisley )) e la sua partecipazione, nel 1990, al Pistoia Blues con Jeff Healy ed Edoardo Bennato dove interpretano alcuni brani tra cui quello di Edoardo, Signor censore . Singolare è inoltre una sua esibizione insieme all'attore Bruce Willis, suo grandissimo fan, e Anthony Jacobson, amico d'infanzia. È indubbio che King sia stato fonte di ispirazione per moltissimi musicisti, da almeno cinquant'anni, e che la sua fama nel mondo musicale non sia diminuita nemmeno oggi. Nel 2004 King è stato insignito di una laurea ad honorem presso la University of Mississippi. Nel 2005 per festeggiare i suoi 80 anni, pubblica un album pieno di ospiti illustri: Van Morrison, Billy Gibbons, Eric Clapton, Sheryl Crow, Darryl Hall & John Oates, John Mayer, Mark Knopfler, Glenn Frey, Gloria Estefan, Roger Daltrey, Bobby Bland ed Elton John. King ha inoltre donato la sua grande collezione blues all'Ole Miss Center for Southern Studies.Nell'inverno del 1949, King stava suonando in una sala da ballo nell'Arkansas. Per riscaldare il locale era stato acceso un barile contenente del kerosene, una pratica non troppo insolita. Due uomini incominciarono a litigare, facendo cadere il barile contenente il kerosene infuocato sul pavimento. Questo scatenò un incendio e conseguente evacuazione. Una volta fuori, King si rese conto di aver lasciato la sua chitarra, una Gibson semi acustica, nell'edificio in fiamme e rientrò per recuperarla. Il giorno dopo, King scoprì che i due uomini avevano combattuto per una donna chiamata Lucille e decise di chiamare Lucille la sua prima chitarra, così come tutte le chitarre che ha posseduto da quell'esperienza quasi fatale, «per ricordarmi di non fare mai più una cosa del genere».Oggi abbiamo il piacere di ascoltarlo in questo fantastico live che riassume una carriera intera
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