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Confessing The Blues #09
by admin on May.01, 2010, under Podcasts
00:12 Welcome to Episode #009 of Confessing the Blues!
01:10 Keith’s New Music To Check Out
- “St. James Infirmary’” by The Blue Vipers of Brooklyn and released on Good Night Harry, available on both eMusic and CD Baby. Check out their website here.
- “Dream Blues” from Johnny Hodges on Essential Jazz Masters, found on eMusic.
- “Trouble Blues” by the great Sam Cooke, found on The Man Who Invented Soul on eMusic.
- “Trouble in Mind” as presented by Jimmy Rushing on Five Feet of Soul, available on eMusic.
- “Trouble in Mind” yet again, this time by Peter Carlsson and Blå Grodorna off of their self-titled album, also on eMusic.
12:31 Jonathan Speaks! He’ll be at Emerald City Blues Festival in November!
14:50 Jonathan’s New Music to Check Out
- “Moaning and Groaning” by Johnny Young on Chicago Blues on eMusic.
- “Wee Baby Blues” from Lynwood Slim’s Last Call, available on CD Baby and eMusic.
- “Feather Brain Blues” done by Muggsy Spanier, available on Manhattan Masters 1945 on eMusic.
- “Honey Babe Let the Deal Go Down” off of the Mississippi Sheiks tribute album Things About Comin’ My Way, performed by Bruce Cockburn and available on CD Baby and eMusic.
25:04 Feedback
- Christine Moser writes in to point us towards the thriving blues and jazz communities in Europe, show us a couple of new artists on the way: The Lake Village Ramblers Jazz Band and The Caldonian Blues Band. Check out her blog here, where she gives us a mention, as well as talks about her experiences DJing and enjoying blues music.
30:43 Keith Returns…Now With More Feedback!
- Kate Bramley-Moore talks to us about the workshop Damon Stone taught in Sweden. She wanted to point out Albert King’s “I’ll Play the Blues For You,” which is available on eMusic on the album of the same name. The shorter version is available here.
- More audio feedback, this time from Duane Grover asking that we stem the tide of “Black Rattler” being played at dances across the country; the album is available on Amazon on The Carl Sonny Leyland Trio Meets Nathan James and Ben Hernandez (price = ouch!). He also mentioned how truly awesome the Spankers were at Shout…you guys really did miss out, if you weren’t there.
39:40 Thanks!
Contact us via email at info@confessingtheblues.com or phone at 60-THE-BLUES (608-432-5837).
( – Just a reminder, instead of playing the show from the website, click the Download link and save it to your computer or MP3 player/iPod to listen to later, OR subscribe to the show via iTunes or using our RSS feed on the front page – )
Confessing The Blues #08
by admin on Mar.29, 2010, under Podcasts
00:10 Welcome to Episode #008 of Confessing the Blues!
01:50 Credits/Corrections
- “Haman Was Rotten (Purim Blues),” our last song from last month, is by Howlin’ Wasserstrom and on Youtube.
- Keith points out that James P. Johnson taught Fats Waller, not Jelly Roll Morton. Just to make it up to you, he shows you “Yellow Dog Blues” off of Classic Piano Blues from eMusic.
05:28 New Music To Check Out
- “I Got a Feelin’” by Big Maybelle and released on The Complete Okeh Sessions 1952-1955 from eMusic.
- “Hoodoo Man” from Ralph Willis, available on Greatest Blues Masters which is on eMusic.
- “Algiers Hoodoo Blues” as done by Billie and Dede Pierce on New Orleans: The Living Legends. Get it on eMusic.
- “Reconsider Baby,” performed by The Mannish Boys. It’s on Shake For Me on eMusic.
19:56 Blues Instrumentals: How Mighty They Are
In response to Kristin Buxton’s email regarding this topic, we respond with a bunch of music we like.
- “Harlem Parlor Blues” by Sammy Price, available on eMusic on Blues Routes: Heroes and Tricksters: Blues and Jazz Works Songs and Street Music.
- “The Bells” done by Memphis Slim on The Folkways Years 1959-1973 on eMusic.
- “Eddie’s Blues” by Eddie Boyd, from the Essential Blues Masters collection on eMusic.
- Johnny Otis doing “Slo Fuse,” available on Johnny Otis: The Essential Recordings on eMusic.
- “Uptown Blues” by Jimmie Lunceford on Sophisticated Lady: The Best of Jimmie Lunceford on eMusic; also available on the Quadomania box set available on Amazon.
- “Careless Love” from The Wolverines Jazz Band of Bern, released on The Wolverines of Bern at 35 which is available on eMusic.
- Gerry Hundt gave us permission to play the full track of “End of the Day Blues” off of Since Way Back which you should go pick up on cdbaby, but is also available on eMusic and Amazon.
44:07 Feedback
- Kate Bramley-Moore gets back with us again about wangling.
- Manu gets back with us about last month’s show, and has some questions about why faster blues doesn’t get played at events more frequently. We discuss it and offer up a few examples of music we like that we want to play. Also, Google translated his voice message into something…different.
Hey guys, What’s up. This is venue. It’s me, you know so that the guys who produced of the things that show bye bye bye. But what I want to pay. Great show the apartment. Every other i’m hopeful this laptop, so sounds like we have to so that you wanted to talk about the because the January show. If you guys granted if I’m not going to go to the best. I think that I show you guy’s wanted to confirm the beginning, but this payment. You know I would like to rent the of the way, but I appreciate if you are, items, although I appreciate the playing the at the Blue Elvis. Yeah, that I’m a huge fan of the all that but you actually filed a blue, so I’m gonna deal with it as opposed to you know whatever else there question. You guys have any game tomorrow for a favor of james brown blue, so I’m just getting back with you were explaining. See you soon. Hey, right. Actually, I’m calling to ask you about the mood music, dancing, but I don’t. LoopNet, well I don’t. I don’t. Alright, well I don’t know what I do, but every time I go to a movie event. The Tempo Keith. It’s an around 100. Andrew and and it seems like it’s your boy, 120, P. M. You’re kind of rake in a little if you guys ever played of that that you know he like chicken above 150 or some like that, but it’s available of salt. Have you ever done that and got it was the reaction, Good afternoon. Are they looking, just to yeah hey busy.
I don’t know. I would let you do, so that’s why. Rachel guys. Thanks.
- “One Kind Favor” by Cephas & Wiggins, available on Flip, Flop, & Fly on eMusic.
- “Three in One Boogie” from Memphis Slim’s Paris Mississippi Blues on eMusic.
- “Come Back to Me Baby Blues” by T-Bone Walker, available on The Very Best Of on eMusic.
- “Sugar Sweet” by Muddy Waters, available on the Properbox King of Chicago Blues on Amazon.
- The video Keith mentioned from the Library of Congress is available here.
87:30 Thanks!
Contact us via email at info@confessingtheblues.com or phone at 60-THE-BLUES (608-432-5837).
( – Just a reminder, instead of playing the show from the website, click the Download link and save it to your computer or MP3 player/iPod to listen to later, OR subscribe to the show via iTunes or using our RSS feed on the front page – )
Confessing The Blues #07
by admin on Feb.24, 2010, under Podcasts
00:13 Welcome to Episode #007 of Confessing the Blues!
01:38 Upcoming Events
- Mile High Blues is March 26-28 in Denver, CO! Twitter feed still right here.
- BluesSHOUT is LOOMING OVER YOU, stomping into Austin April 16-18 2010! *queue Blue Oyster Cult’s “Godzilla”*
- Ottawa Blues Blast erupts into Canada April 23-25!
03:24 New Music To Check Out
- “Hesitation Blues” off of James P. Johnson’s Classic Piano Blues on eMusic.
- “Nickel’s Worth of Liver” done by Edith North Johnson and Henry Brown on the Classic Blues collection on eMusic.
- “Every Night About This Time” from Magic Sam on The Essential Magic Sam: The Cobra and Chief Recordings 1957-1961, as available on eMusic.
- “Lonesome Blues” by Nathan James & Ben Hernandez, released on Make a Change Sometime, available on eMusic and cdbaby.
- “I Got a Woman” as done by Marvin & Turner Foddrell on Classic Appalachian Blues on eMusic.
- If you really, really must…”Night Time is the Right Time” by Elvin Bishop on eMusic.
20:48 The Grammy Recap
The Grammies happened. And there were winners. These are the two winning albums and a track from each of them.
- Best Traditional Blues Album: Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, A Stranger Here, available on eMusic and Amazon. Our preferred track this week is “Grinnin’ In Your Face.”
- Best Contemporary Blues Album: The Derek Trucks Band, Already Free, available on Amazon. Check out “Down Don’t Bother Me” off of this.
27:53 Jelly Roll? Something Sweet for Valentine’s Day
- “Jelly Jelly” by Lowell Fulson off of Classic Cuts 1946-53, available on eMusic .
- “Jelly Roll Baker” done by Frankie Lee Sims Masterly Texas Blues and released on eMusic .
- “I Ain’t Gonna Give Nobody None of This Jelly Roll,” version done by Lizzy Miles with Sharkey & His Kings of Dixieland on Jazzin’ the Blues 1943-1952, found on eMusic.
- “Jelly Roll Blues” from Louis Armstrong’s Butter and Eggman available on eMusic.
41:49 Work Songs
All of the samples for this section were taken off of Field Recordings vol. 6, recorded by Neil and Alan Lomax in prisons across Texas. It’s available on eMusic.
61:54 Feedback
- Wendel Ramsey offers up some positive feedback; check out his work here.
- Kristin Buxton has questions about instrumental blues. Check back with us next month, Kristin…
- Kate Bramley-Moore emailed from Sweden wanting to let us know about a workshop coming up there, with info on the event available here. The website is entirely in Swedish; Google will turn that into something almost, but not quite, entirely unlike comprehensible English. Please help us learn how to be more cruel DJs.
67:40 Thanks!
68:36 What the…
Contact us via email at info@confessingtheblues.com or phone at 60-THE-BLUES (608-432-5837).
( – Just a reminder, instead of playing the show from the website, click the Download link and save it to your computer or MP3 player/iPod to listen to later, OR subscribe to the show via iTunes or using our RSS feed on the front page – )
