Sunday, August 14, 2022

The Nighthawks - Rock 'n' Roll (1974 us, solid blues rock)

 



The Nighthawks was an idea in Mark Wenner's brain long before he was able to implement it. The musical product of pre-1958 radio in Washington, D.C., he did not know there were rules against mixing blues, R&B, honky-tonk country, doo-wop, gospel and rockabilly into one delicious stew.

In 1972, Mark, then 23, returned to his hometown after a New York City band apprenticeship eager to start a real, work-every-night band based on American roots music. He found a receptive local scene. Washington has long been a musical melting-pot of the kind that made Memphis the source point for the evolution of American music in the second half of the 20th century. It just never had a Stax or Sun record label to tell the world. As the city exploded with an influx of people from all the surrounding states during the Great Depression and World War II, Washington became a hotbed of musical cross-fertilization. When Bill Haley first brought his wacky Pennsylvania mix of hillbilly music and rhythm and blues to D.C. in 1952, people got it. And white kids like Mark found the Howard Theater – now recently restored and part of the historic top tier of the Chitlin' Circuit that included Baltimore’s Royal, Chicago’s Regal and New York’s Apollo – just a 25-cent bus ride away from the suburbs.

The original Nighthawks lineup solidified in mid-1974. Bringing together frontmen Mark Wenner and the young Jimmy Thackery with a veteran rhythm section, Jan Zukowski on bass and Pete Ragusa on drums, the quartet ruled the highways and honky-tonks until Jimmy’s departure in 1986 to pursue a solo career. The band opened many doors and forged many touring routes for their contemporaries, including the Fabulous Thunderbirds, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Robert Cray, and played with as many Blues and Rockabilly legends as they could. They opened show after show for Muddy Waters, James Cotton and Carl Perkins, and backed up and recorded with John Hammond and Pinetop Perkins.
The NightHawks
Tracks
1. Red Hot Mama (Elmore James) - 4:14
2. Can't Get Next To You (Barrett Strong, Norman Whitfield) - 3:41
3. Keep Cool (Jerry Ragovoy) - 3:29
4. Bring It On Home (Willie Dixon) - 3:44
5. Tell The Truth (Lowman Pauling) - 3:11
6. Stop Breakin' Down (Robert Johnson) - 4:46
7. Shake And Finger Pop (Junior Walker) - 3:44
8. Bright Lights (Jimmy Reed) - 3:19
9. Little Sister (Doc Pomus, Mort Shuman) - 2:55
10.Heat Wave (Brian Holland, Edward Holland, Jr., Lamont Dozier) - 3:12
11.Memo From Turner (Mick Jagger) - 4:44
12.Teenage Nervous Breakdown (Lowell George) - 2:29

The Nighthawks
*Mark Wenner - Vocals, Harp
*Jimmy Thackery - Guitar
*Jan Zukowski - Bass
*Pete Ragusa - Drums

Friday, August 12, 2022

Goliath - Goliath (1969 us, magnificent soulful psych rock)



“Goliath” by Goliath was a major-label US release in 1969 (ABC Records ABCS-702). The LP was recorded in Philadelphia, and the band is usually presumed to be from there as well. The album is dominated by heavy Hammond B3 organ and a vocalist who sounded much like David Clayton-Thomas. As such, the album is justifiably described as a blend of Vanilla Fudge and Blood, Sweat & Tears. The highlight is a Fudge-like cover of the Beatles’ “Eleanor Rigby”. 
by W. T. Neill
Tracks
1. Yesterday's Children (Steve D'Amico, Ted Barbella) - 6:04
2. Can't Stop Feeling Lonely (Rusty Richards) - 3:10
3. Man's Temptation (Curtis Mayfield) - 4:39
4. Time And Time Again (Eddie Ray) - 3:17
5. If Johnny Comes Marching Home (Steve D'Amico, Ted Barbella) - 4:15
6. Eleanor Rigby (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) - 6:12
7. Come With Me To My World (Steve D'Amico, Ted Barbella) - 3:10
8. Loving You Too Long (Otis Redding) - 6:24
9. Are You Lonely For Me, Baby? / Jacksonville Express (Bert Berns / Dennis Jason, Jerry Gilbert, Norm Conrad, Steve Jason, Ted Barbella) - 4:05

Goliath
*Dennis Jason - Lead Guitar
*Jerry Gilbert - Drums, Percussion
*Norm Conrad - Bass  
*Steve Jason - Vocals 
*Ted Barbella - Organ

Tuesday, August 9, 2022

The Sundowners - Captain Nemo (1968 us, elagant sunny beats, 2007 remaster)



The Sundowners’ cover of Roger Nichols’ Always You, was a nailedon easy monster: a string and trumpet-driven hallucination of a violet sunset over Malibu Beach, with a girl in a big bikini running your way. It quickly fostered a craving for more.

The Sundowners, it now transpires, hailed from New York and there were six of them. Stylistically, they mashed up the usual Beatles, Beach Boys and Byrdsisms – but these cats boasted symphonic ideas, an edge, a complexity, and a six-way ego clash. Playing Ciro’s on Sunset Strip in the spring of 1967, Michael Nesmith wandered backstage and asked them, “So, how would you like to go on tour with the Monkees?” They ended up supporting Hendrix as well. Then they imploded and disappeared. Finding Nemo, indeed.
by Derek Hammond, 04 September 2007
Tracks
1. Sunny Day People (Dominick DeMieri, Eddie Placidi) - 2:36
2. On The Edge Of Love - 3:10
3. Let It Be Me (Gilbert Bécaud, Manny Curtis, Pierre Delanoë) - 4:36
4. Dear Undecided - 2:24
5. Ring Out Wild Bells - 2:27
6. Plaster Casters (Dominick DeMieri, Eddie Placidi) - 2:43
7. Captain Nemo - 3:45
8. Always You (Tony Asher, Roger Nichols) - 2:54
9. Easy Does It - 2:48
10.Blue Green Eyes - 3:03
11.So Sad - 3:59
All songs by Dominick DeMieri except where noted

The Sundowners
*Dominick DeMieri - Bass, Lead, Rhythm, Steel Guitars, Organ, Piano, Vocals
*Eddie Placidi - Rhythm, Lead, Steel Guitars, Organ, Piano, Vocals
*Bobby Dick - Bass, Vocals 
*Eddie Brick - Percussion, Vocals 
*Kim Capli - Drums 
With
*George Bianchi - Percussion, Vocals
*Benny Grammatico - Drums, Vocals 
*Joe Foster - Synthesizer
*Nick Robbins - Synthesizer

Monday, August 8, 2022

Lewis And Clarke Expedition - The Lewis And Clark Expedition (1967-68 us, wonderful sunny folk psych, 2016 edition)



Lewis & Clarke Expedition evolved out of several folk bands operating around Los Angeles during the mid-'60s. Formed by Dallas songwriter Michael Martin Murphey (under the guise of Travis Lewis) with Owen Castleman (performing as Boomer Clarke), the band recorded one LP in late 1967 for the Colgems label then making pots of money off sales of the first two Monkees albums. Not quite a coincidence then, that Lewis, Clarke, and bassist John London were all old friends of country-minded Monkee Michael Nesmith (London even worked as Nesmith's stand-in on the television show).

Well before Nesmith was hired to the Monkees, though, London performed with him in San Antonio as a folk duo, and after moving to California, all four native Texans appeared in a large folk group called the Survivors. Nesmith dropped out because of a commitment to the Air Force, and the remaining trio added guitarist Ken Bloom and drummer John Raines, coming together in 1966 as the Lewis & Clarke Expedition. Since Lewis and Clarke both worked at Monkees corporate Screen Gems as writers, a recording contract with Colgems was a natural. 

The band was hyped not only to young girls as another version of the Monkees, but also to older rock fans as a cutting-edge country-rock band that played up their association with Native American elements. Colgems released The Lewis & Clarke Expedition in November 1967, and the single "I Feel Good (I Feel Bad)" was a local hit, though nothing from the band ever charted and they were soon dropped. Michael Martin Murphey, soon to leave Los Angeles to concentrate on his songwriting at a home in the San Gabriel Mountains, wrote a song ("What Am I Doing Hangin' 'Round?") recorded by Nesmith for the 1968 Monkees LP Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd. Owen Castleman played on an album with Earl Scruggs, and later played on several of Murphey's solo LPs, while London played with Michael Nesmith's First National Band, Bloom performed on several folk records, and Raines went on to play with the Dillards. 
by John Bush
Tracks
1. Windy Day - 3:00
2. Freedom Bird - 2:50
3. Spirit Of Argyle High - 3:15
4. This Town Ain't The Same Anymore - 2:40
5. Everybody Loves A Fire - 2:30
6. House Of My Sorrow - 4:24
7. I Feel Good (I Feel Bad) - 2:26
8. (I Call Them) Lies - 2:44
9. Destination Unknown (Boomer Clarke, Tom Jefferson, Travis Lewis) - 2:51
10.Chain Around The Flowers (John Vandiver) - 2:33
11.Blue Revelations - 2:16
12.Memorial To The American Indian - 7:14
.1.Legend Of The Creation (Travis Lewis, Boomer Clarke, Diane Hilderbrand)
.2.Send Me Rain (Travis Lewis, Boomer Clarke, Diane Hilderbrand)
.3.Red Cloud's Farewell To His Tribe (Travis Lewis, Boomer Clarke, Diane Hilderbrand)
.4.(The Lament Of) The Cherokee Reservation Indian (John Loudermilk)
13.Daddy's Plastic Child (Danny Janssen) - 3:02
14.Gypsy Song Man (Jerry Jeff Walker) - 2:22
15.Why Need They Pretend - 2:32
16.Slave Medley - 12:21
All songs by Travis Lewis, Boomer Clarke except where noted
Bonus Tracks 13-16

Lewis And Clarke Expedition
*Mike Murphy "Travis Lewis" - Guitar, Harmonica 
*Owens Boomer Clark - Guitar, Percussion 
*Kenneth Michael Bloom - Autoharp, Bouzouki, Chalumeau, Clarinet, Esraj, Flute, Guitar, Organ, Saxophone, Tuba, Vina 
*John Kuehne "John London" - Bass, Guitar, Percussion 
*John Rains Hoenig - Drums, Percussion 

Saturday, August 6, 2022

Various Artists - 50 Years Of Genuine Houserockin' Music (1971-2021 us, superb electric blues compilation, 2021 three disc box set remaster)



You could say that Alligator Records was born in a little neighborhood South Side Chicago bar in January of 1970, almost two years before the label’s first release. That’s the first time I was overwhelmed by the most joyful, exhilarating, spirit-lifting music of my life—the blues of Hound Dog Taylor & The HouseRockers. It was at Florence’s Lounge, on a gritty side street of run-down houses, on a snowy Sunday afternoon. This life-altering music was created by just three men—Hound Dog Taylor, playing a cheap Japanese guitar with a steel slide encasing the fifth of his six fingers (true!) and singing in a high-pitched voice into a microphone plugged into a guitar amplifier; Brewer Phillips, propelling each song with ever-changing bass lines played on a Fender Telecaster guitar, and Ted Harvey, driving the band with rocking grooves played on a minimalist drum kit. It was blues, but it sure wasn’t sad blues. It was blues to make you forget your blues, to make you holler and dance and throw away your troubles. But it could turn serious, slow and cathartic. Hound Dog, playing searing slide and singing about love gone wrong in his ragged, just-on-the-verge-of-cracking voice, could reach inside you, grab you by the soul, and squeeze hard.

I had pushed my way into the dancing, happy crowd of neighborhood people. They had come here to cut loose on the weekend and celebrate their shared “down home” roots in the Mississippi Delta, and to forget about their low-paying jobs and hard life in one of the poorest parts of the city. Once they had figured out that I wasn’t a cop, they weren’t concerned about the longhaired, bearded “hippy” among them. They were having too much fun.  And I, a young blues fan who had come to Chicago to immerse himself in the music he loved, thought, “This band has got to be recorded.” And so, in the spring of 1971, I started Alligator Records to record an album by my favorite musicians. It was called simply Hound Dog Taylor & The HouseRockers. Now, 50 years and over 350 albums later, Alligator Records is still releasing recordings by my favorite musicians.

The promotional flyer for that first album was headlined “Genuine Houserockin’ Music,” and that’s been Alligator’s slogan ever since. Not only does it pay tribute to Hound Dog’s band, but it also has a deeper meaning. Genuine because Alligator’s music is rooted in the blues tradition, even when it stretches beyond a purist definition of blues. It’s a musical tradition created by oppressed Black people to carry them through hard times and bind their communities together. It’s created by musicians who have honed their music to meet the emotional needs of live audiences, not by programming synthesizers in their bedrooms. House instead of “theater” or “arena” or “stadium,” because it grew up being played in intimate settings, on front porches and in little taverns, where the audience could feel the emotions of the musicians and the musicians could feel the feedback from the audience. Blues is not music presented by the musicians, but instead it’s shared between the musicians and their audience, just like what happened every Sunday at Florence’s Lounge. And Rockin’ because it’s meant not just to move your body and your feet, but also to rock your soul. It’s music to rid you of your inner pain by ripping that pain right out of you. That’s why they say the blues “hurts so good.”

When I started Alligator back in 1971, I knew a little bit about the record business. I had learned from watching my mentor, hero and boss, Bob Koester, founder of Delmark Records, whom I had talked into hiring me as the label’s shipping clerk. I went to every Delmark recording session in 1970 and 1971, saw Bob interact with and inspire musicians, listened to him on the phone with distributors, and packed every LP Delmark shipped to critics, radio stations, mail order customers and distributors. I hung on his every word as he shared his years of accumulated wisdom learned from running a tiny blues and jazz label.

But Bob didn’t spend much energy reaching out to the growing new audience for the blues—an audience like me—college-aged kids who had discovered blues by listening to the Stones or Yardbirds or Paul Butterfield, or maybe from hearing acoustic blues at folk music festivals, like I did. They were reading new publications called Rolling Stone or Creem, and listening to “progressive rock” radio stations that were playing everything from the Beatles to Motown to Coltrane to Joni Mitchell to B.B. King. I knew that if I was so energized and excited by Hound Dog Taylor’s music, that young audience and those radio stations and those publications would love his music as much as I did. So, when I founded Alligator, a label with one LP in its catalog, I reached out to those radio stations and those publications. I sent out hundreds of promo copies, and visited as many stations as I could. And, much to my delight, the DJs and writers fell in love with Hound Dog, too. My one-man record company, housed in an efficiency apartment where I was sleeping on a mattress on the floor, was getting national and international radio play and press coverage. Plus, I was able to sell enough Hound Dog albums to afford to make the second Alligator release, a summit meeting of two of the world’s best harmonica players, Big Walter Horton With Carey Bell. By then, I had become Hound Dog’s booking agent, manager, publicist, song publisher and part-time driver. I became the same thing for Son Seals and Koko Taylor. They all needed my support, and I was the whole staff of Alligator. It was four years before Alligator was able to afford a full-time employee.

The early years of Alligator were spent mining the riches of Chicago’s fabulous blues scene. Dozens of taverns and clubs across the Black neighborhoods of the South Side and West Side booked blues bands (and, starting around 1971, some white North Side clubs did, too). You could sit 20 feet from Howlin’ Wolf at Big Duke’s or Junior Wells at Theresa’s or Otis Rush at the Wise Fools Pub. And you could hear wonderfully talented unrecorded and under-recorded bluesmen and women who deserved a national and international audience. Alligator became the home for some of those world-class Chicago artists, ranging from an unknown, rough-edged young guitarist from Arkansas named Son Seals, to Koko Taylor, “The Queen Of The Blues,” to a subtle, melodic master singer and player named Fenton Robinson. Besides full albums by Chicago artists, our six-LP Living Chicago Blues series, released in 1979 and 1980, showcased 18 more of the city’s bluesmen and women. One of them, Lonnie Brooks, a West Side guitarist with roots in Louisiana and Texas, became a long-time member of the Alligator family, bringing his funky “voodoo blues” sound to the label.

It wasn’t until 1978 that Alligator signed its first non-Chicagoan, the legendary Texas-born guitar giant Albert Collins, “The Master Of The Telecaster.”  Albert came to Alligator with a worldwide reputation as a thrilling, top-echelon blues guitarist. With his Alligator debut, Ice Pickin’ (which I co-produced with Dick Shurman), he finally made a record that matched the level of his overwhelmingly powerful live performances. Ice Pickin’ announced Alligator as more than a Chicago label. During the 1980s, my little label signed artists from all across the country.

The first was the beloved, one-of-a-kind pianist/vocalist Professor Longhair, New Orleans’ “Bach of Rock.” Fess cut his classic Crawfish Fiesta album (sadly, the last album of his career) for us. Famous blues-rock guitar heroes also found a home at Alligator. The flamboyant Johnny Winter came aboard, determined to get back to his blues roots. He made three albums for Alligator with some of Chicago’s blues giants, beginning with the much-hailed Guitar Slinger. Pyrotechnic master guitarist Roy Buchanan followed, and Alligator shepherded the re-emergence of Lonnie Mack, produced by his #1 disciple, Stevie Ray Vaughan. (In December of 1985, Albert Collins, Lonnie Mack and Roy Buchanan rocked the house at Carnegie Hall for an American Guitar Heroes night. It was a long way from Florence’s Lounge!)

Other major blues figures joined the Alligator family during the 1980s—powerhouse harmonica giant James Cotton, beloved country-tinged blues-rocker Elvin Bishop, the fabled Texas guitarist Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown (who had been recording since the 1940s) and the exuberant “Swamp Boogie Queen,” pianist Katie Webster. Besides signing established stars, we championed rising younger artists, helping them break out of their local scenes to reach national and international audiences. We released albums by a host of newcomers: Lil’ Ed & The Blues Imperials, the rough and ready band from Chicago’s West Side; The Kinsey Report, the funky band of brothers from Gary, Indiana; Little Charlie & The Nightcats, the jumping, swinging quartet from Sacramento; The Paladins, the tough roots rock trio from Southern California; Kenny Neal, the guitarist/harmonicist from Louisiana bayou country; and Tinsley Ellis, the rocking guitar hero from Atlanta. All of them burst onto world stages following their debut Alligator releases. And the unlikely all-female, all-acoustic, proudly middle-aged trio, Saffire–The Uppity Blues Women, became one of the label’s best sellers. Virtually all the Alligator artists were touring nationally and internationally, represented by professional booking agents. I often became the overseas road manager for Koko Taylor and Lonnie Brooks, and regularly carried luggage and guitar cases through Europe, Japan and Australia. Alligator has always been a “hands on” business.

The 1980s and 1990s were years of steady growth for Alligator. In the 1970s, the label released only 22 LPs. In the 1980s, that number grew to 60, and in the 1990s, we released 90 albums. The label expanded from three people to over 20. We moved from my little house in a working-class neighborhood, with its dank basement “warehouse” crammed with albums and 7000 cassettes stored in the kitchen, to two rundown storefront buildings. Alligator became a real business, with distributors across the country and around the world. Taking a leap of faith, I gambled on a new technology called compact discs, and Alligator became the first blues label to release its catalog on CDs. Meanwhile, I was in the studio constantly, producing or co-producing iconic artists like Albert Collins, Koko Taylor, Son Seals, James Cotton, Johnny Winter, Roy Buchanan, Lil’ Ed, Saffire, and more. As a fanatic fan, to work with these artists, help them create and then be the bridge that carried their music to the public, was my dream come true. And over the years Alligator attracted a series of intensely hard-working staffers who were just as dedicated to the artists and their music as I was.

We celebrated the 20th anniversary of Alligator in 1991 by hitting the road and taking the music to the people. In the spirit of the old R&B multi-artist package tours, we rented a bus and brought on board Koko Taylor & Her Blues Machine, the Lonnie Brooks band, Lil’ Ed & The Blues Imperials, Elvin Bishop and Katie Webster. They barnstormed across the Midwest and up and down the East and West Coasts, delivering hours-long shows with spontaneous jams, and spreading the gospel of Genuine Houserockin’ Music.

As we rolled into the 1990s, established artists like harmonica great Charlie Musselwhite, zydeco accordion hero C.J. Chenier and Piedmont acoustic blues duo Cephas & Wiggins found a home at Alligator. Through an arrangement with Germany’s Ruf Records, we released four albums by the amazing Luther Allison, a Chicago legend who had relocated to Europe. Between 1994 and his tragic death from cancer in 1997, Luther became the most popular artist on Alligator, returning to the U.S. to deliver thrilling, hours-long performances, including his incredibly powerful set at the 1995 Chicago Blues Festival. But we were also determined to continue to bring new names to the forefront. Australian slide guitar wizard Dave Hole, brilliant California harp player William Clarke, and visionaries like young Corey Harris and cutting-edge New York guitarist/songwriter Michael Hill, all became Alligator artists. Plus, the most charismatic blues/roots singer of her generation, Shemekia Copeland, cut the first of her seven genre-bending Alligator albums in 1998, at the age of 18.

Things turned difficult for Alligator starting in 1999, when music began being offered illegally on the Internet for little or nothing. CD sales plummeted, and thousands of record stores closed nationwide, especially independent stores that had supported Alligator. “Music should be free” became a mantra for a lot of youth. At the end of 1999, we had 22 employees. Within a few years, that number was reduced to sixteen. But still, established artists kept knocking on our door. In the next few years, Coco Montoya, The Holmes Brothers, Marcia Ball, Roomful of Blues, Tommy Castro, W.C. Clark, Guitar Shorty and the truly legendary Mavis Staples, all of whom had recorded for other labels, released Alligator albums. Our definition of the Alligator sound broadened to include roots rock singer-songwriters—Florida’s JJ Grey & Mofro and New Orleans’ Eric Lindell and Anders Osborne. Not every artist has stayed with Alligator. We weren’t the right fit for some musicians, or they weren’t the right fit for us. But many, like Koko Taylor, Lil’ Ed, Lonnie Brooks and Little Charlie & The Nightcats (now Rick Estrin & The Nightcats), spent decades with us and became close personal friends. Of course, over the years, we’ve had too many of our musician family members leave us to join the great blues band in the sky.

Today, after 50 years, Alligator remains proudly independent and still 100% dedicated to Genuine Houserockin’ Music. With a roster that includes beloved veterans like Marcia Ball, Lil’ Ed & The Blues Imperials, Elvin Bishop and Roomful Of Blues, rising stars like Selwyn Birchwood and Toronzo Cannon, and the 22-year-old sensation Christone “Kingfish” Ingram, we are committed to the past, present and future of the tradition. Now that illegal downloading has been replaced by digital streaming services reaching around the globe, Alligator’s music can be heard in China, India, and across Africa, and in other countries where it was never available in physical form. Hound Dog Taylor & The HouseRockers would be amazed to see what happened to the tiny record label, now with over 350 releases, that was created to bring their music to the world. They’d be thrilled to know that billions of people can now discover the joyous houserockin’ blues that they played every Sunday at Florence’s Lounge.
by Bruce Iglauer, 2021
Artist - Tracks - Composer
Disc 1
1. Hound Dog Taylor - Give Me Back My Wig (Hound Dog Taylor) - 3:34
2. Koko Taylor - I'm A Woman (Koko Taylor, Bo Diddley) - 4:34
3. Big Walter Horton And Carey Bell - Have Mercy (Walter Horton) - 3:43
4. Fenton Robinson - Somebody Loan Me A Dime (Fenton Robinson) - 2:56
5. Professor Longhair - It's My Fault, Darling (Miles Grayson, Lermon Horton) - 4:53
6. Son Seals - Telephone Angel (Deadric Malone) - 5:25
7. Johnny Winter - Lights Out (Mac Rebennack, Seth David) - 2:34
8. Albert Collins - Blue Monday Hangover (Deadric Malone, Gilbert G. Caple) - 5:34
9. James Cotton - Little Car Blues (Big Bill Broonzy) - 3:33
10.Albert Collins, Robert Cray And Johnny Copeland - The Dream (Bruce Bromberg, Robert Cray) - 5:32
11.William Clarke - Pawnshop Bound (William Clarke) - 4:23
12.Lonnie Mack - Ridin' The Blinds (Don Nix) - 4:23
13.Lonnie Brooks - Cold Lonely Nights (Lonnie Brooks) - 5:43
14.Luther Allison - Soul Fixin' Man (Luther Allison, James Solberg) - 4:06
15.Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown - Got My Mojo Working (Preston Foster) - 4:47
16.Saffire The Uppity Blues Women - Sloppy Drunk (Lucille Bogan) - 3:07
17.Roy Buchanan - That Did It (Dave Clark, Pearl Woods) - 5:07
18.The Paladins - Keep On Lovin' Me Baby (Otis Rush) - 4:02
Disc 2
1. Michael Burks - Love Disease (Michael Burks) - 3:19
2. Kenny Neal - I'm A Blues Man (Walter Godbold, A.D. Prestage, Joe Shamwell) - 4:11
3. The Holmes Brothers - Run Myself Out Of Town (Wendell Holmes) - 3:25
4. Little Charlie And The Nightcats - Jump Start (Little Charlie Baty) - 2:54
5. Katie Webster - I'm Still Leaving You (Jay Miller) - 3:36
6. Smokin' Joe Kubek And Bnois King - Don't Lose My Number (Joe Kubek, Bnois King) - 3:33
7. The Kinsey Report - Corner Of The Blanket (Donald  Kinsey, Kenneth  Kinsey, Ralph  Kinsey) - 3:36
8. Carey Bell - I Got A Rich Man's Woman (Jack Leroy Welch) - 4:43
9. C.J. Chenier - Au Contraire, Mon Frere (Williams) - 3:39)
10.Mavis Staples - There's A Devil On The Loose (Brenda Burns) - 3:34
11.Michael Hill's Blues Mob - Presumed Innocent (Michael Hill, Eunice Levy) - 4:38
12.Bob Margolin - Not What You Said Last Night (Bob Margolin) - 2:48
13.Billy Boy Arnold - Man Of Considerable Taste (Billy Boy Arnold) - 4:32
14.Cephas And Wiggins - Ain't Seen My Baby (John Cephas) - 3:23
15.Long John Hunter - Marfa Lights (Jon Foose, Long John Hunter, Tary Owens) - 4:53
16.Dave Hole - Phone Line (Dave Hole) - 3:43
17.Eric Lindell - Josephine (Eric Lindell, Aaron Wilkinson) - 2:46
18.Joe Louis Walker - I Won't Do That (Tom Hambridge, Richard Fleming) - 5:01
19.Janiva Magness - That's What Love Will Make You Do (Milton Campbell) - 3:20
20.The Siegel-Schwall Band - Going Back To Alabama (Sam Lay) - 3:40
21.Corey Harris And Henry Butler - Why Don't You Live So God Can Use You (Traditional) - 2:12
Disc 3
1. Marcia Ball - Party Town (Bobby Charles) - 4:14
2. Lil Ed And The Blues Imperials - What You See Is What You Get (Lil Ed Williams) - 4:21
3. Roomful Of Blues - In A Roomful Of Blues (Chris Vachon) - 3:30
4. Billy Branch And The Sons Of Blues - Blue And Lonesome (Walter Jacobs) - 4:12
5. Christone 'Kingfish' Ingram - Outside Of This Town (Tom Hambridge, Christone "Kingfish" Ingram) - 4:09
6. Shemekia Copeland - Clotilda's On Fire (John Hahn, Will Kimbrough) - 4:26
7. Curtis Salgado - The Longer That I Live (Curtis Salgado) - 3:50
8. Selwyn Birchwood - Living In A Burning House (Selwyn Birchwood) - 4:07
9. Elvin Bishop And Charlie Musselwhite - Midnight Hour Blues (Leroy Carr) - 4:13
10.The Cash Box Kings - Ain't No Fun (When The Rabbit Got The Gun) ("Low Rollin' Joe" Nosek, Oscar Wilson) - 3:07
11.Tommy Castro And The Painkillers - Make It Back To Memphis (Bonnie Hayes, Tommy Castro) - 4:55
12.JJ Grey And Mofro - A Woman (John Grey Higginbotham) - 3:25
13.Rick Estrin And The Nightcats - I'm Running (Rick Estrin) - 4:07
14.Coco Montoya - You Didn't Think About That (Dave Steen) - 3:56
15.Tinsley Ellis - Ice Cream In Hell (Tinsley Ellis) - 4:14
16.Chris Cain - You Won't Have A Problem When I'm Gone (Chris Cain) - 3:06
17.Guitar Shorty - Too Late (Cecilia Rockstead, Dave Kearney) - 4:15
18.Nick Moss Band And Dennis Gruenling - The High Cost Of Low Living (Nick Moss) - 4:04
19.Toronzo Cannon - The Chicago Way (Toronzo Cannon) - 4:22

Thursday, August 4, 2022

Puff - Puff (1969 us, fabulous garage beat psych, 2009 remaster)



Puff has a connection to the early sixties group The Ramrods, originally called The Rockin Ramrods. I loved them in back in the day and Bright Lit, Blue Skies is a local classic.

Vin Campisi and Robert Henderson are the Ramrods who started Puff. Ronn Campisi wrote all the songs on the album but supposedly was not a member.

The Puff album didn't get as much attention as some of the other Bosstown Sound albums it seems to me.The album is produced by Alan Lorber so it has his production values and is on MGM Records.

It's a calm sounding album. No real loud rock moments. There are many nice passages and it grows on you the more you hear it. 
Tracks
1. Dead Thoughts Of Alfred - 2:02
2. Rainy Day - 2:42
3. Vacuum - 2:12 
4. Walk Upon The Water - 2:00
5. Who Do You Think You Are - 2:27
6. Of Not Being Able To Go To Sleep - 5:09
7. When I Wake Up In The Morning - 3:05
8. Trees - 3:00 
9. It's My Way - 2:52
10.I Sure Need You - 6:29
11.Go With You - 2:55
12.Changes - 2:30
All songs by Ronn Campisi

Puff
*Jim Mandell - Organ, Flute, Piano, Vocals
*David Allen Ryan - Bass, Vocals
*Vin Campisi - Guitar
*Robert H. Henderson - Drums, Vocals

Jim Spencer - Landscapes (1973 us, amazing acid folk psych rock, 2009 korean remaster)



Jim Spencer was always looking for a stairway to success beyond, but Milwaukee was a Mobius loop he could not escape. He played many roles with grace; he was a musician, songwriter, poet, magus, and congenial salesman of ideas. He was a dealer in rare books, antiquities, and fantasies. He was a D.I.Y. publisher and indie recording artist at a time when circulating self-produced poetry and music beyond one’s hometown was a challenge on par with swimming the English Channel. He was Milwaukee famous—at least to anyone who cared about music and poetry. He was not much known elsewhere.

He released three albums under his own name and one as Major Arcana, a band-persona that enabled him to escape his singer-songwriter image. All were issued under the imprimatur of cryptically-monikered labels: Thoth, Akashic, and Castalia Records. “He had forbidden books in his basement,” said frequent collaborator Sigmund Snopek, a classically trained progressive rock keyboardist. “He was fascinated by other cultures and religions and incorporated some of that into his music.”

1973’s Landscapes is Jim Spencer’s first, and perhaps most disciplined and fully-realized record in a singer-songwriter mode. Recorded with a band and released on Thoth (after the Egyptian God of writing and learning), Landscapes shows a level of confidence and sophistication one simply doesn’t associate with private press debuts.
Tracks
1. El-Mar'a (Jim Spencer, Richard Thomas) - 1:55
2. You To Me (Jim Spencer, Kathleen Wingner, John Voyles) - 3:47
3. Poor Dolly (Jim Spencer) - 2:12
4. River Run (Jim Spencer, Kathleen Wingner, Ilze Platais) - 3:15
5. The One Who Cries (Jim Spencer, John Voyles) - 2:37
6. On My Way To You (Jim Spencer, Richard Thomas) - 3:02
7. One Thing Less To Lose (Jim Spencer, Kathleen Wingner) - 3:25
8. She Can See (Jim Spencer, Kathleen Wingner, Roger Skentny) - 3:52
9. Another Lonely Day (Jim Spencer, John Voyles) - 2:14
10.As The Foundation Crumbles (In The House Of Your Love) (Jim Spencer) - 2:08
11.Where Do You Run? (Jim Spencer) - 4:42
12.A Finger For Old Glory (Jim Spencer) - 2:38

Musicians
*Jim Spencer - Vocals, Acoustic Guitar
*Susan Thomas - Vocals
*Richard Thomas - Acoustic Guitar, Bass, Vocals
*Mike Balistierri - Bass, Flute, Piano
*Mike Pageant - Acoustic Guitar
*Ilze Platais - 12 String Guitar, Bouzouki
*Gary Kemp - Acoustic, Electric Guitars
*John Voyles - Electric, Acoustic Guitars
*Kenny Knoll - Electric Pedal Steel Guitar
*Kent Carpentier - Mandolin, Fiddle
*Alan Ek - Bass
*Rob Fixmer - Percussion
*Jim Hall - Percussion
*The Magnetic Staircase - Vocals


Sunday, July 31, 2022

Joy - Thunderfoot (1972 us, extraordinary prog jazz rock with a country feel)



Ι've seen this obscurity listed under the name 'Thunderfoot' with the album entitled "Joy", but it's actually the other way around.  There's also at least one on line reference that has these guys peed as playing jazz!  Regardless, this early 1970s five piece is pretty obscure.  I've looked through various references, but there simply isn't much information to be found on them.  Based on the fact their album was recorded in Shreveport, Louisiana I'm guessing they were from the area, but who really knows.  

With a line up consisting of drummer Ralph DeSimone, lead guitarist Bob Di Piero, bass player Don Di Piero, singer Billy Joe Shina and keyboardist Ralph Vitello, the group was signed by the Louisiana based Paula label, debuting with the single 'Get Outta My Mind' b/w 'Your Mama'.

Self-produced, 1970's "Thunderfoot" is interesting for a couple of reasons, least of all that fact it's unlike anything else I've heard on Paula Records.  While most Paula associated acts I've heard sport a pop or blue-eyed soul sound (John Fred, The Uniques), Joy are out and out rockers.  Featuring all original material, tracks such as 'Cross Country Woman', 'Things Are Gonna Be Alright' and the three section suite 'Hasufel' offered up a mix of hard rock and progressive moves.

Shina had a nice voice and the band's guitar and keyboard attack generated more than its share of successes.  Highlights included the opener 'Mother Nature', 'Cross Countty Woman' and 'Brothers'.  On the down side, nothing here really jumped out at you and after awhile it all began to blend together.

At least two of the members seem to have stayed in music.  Bob Di Piero's a well known country songwriter and was a member of the short lived country band Billy Hill. Vitello became a sessions player working with the likes of Nanci Griffith.  He's also done production work.
Bad-Cat
Tracks
1. Mother Nature (Ralph Vitello, Ralph DeSimone) - 3:01
2. Sea Green Symphony (Bob Di Piero, Don Di Piero) - 3:34
3. Your Friend and Mine (Bob Di Piero) - 4:51
4. Dreams (Billy Joe Shina, Ralph Vitello, Ralph DeSimone, Bob Di Piero, Don Di Piero) - 2:35
5. Cross Country Woman (Billy Joe Shina, Ralph Vitello) - 3:41
6. Ride the World (Billy Joe Shina, Ralph Vitello) - 3:40
7. Things Are Gonna Be Alright (Ralph Vitello, Ralph DeSimone, Billy Joe Shina) - 3:41
8. Ragged Old Man (Billy Joe Shina, Ralph Vitello) - 4:22
9. Brothers (Bob Di Piero, Don Di Piero) - 2:37
10.Hasufel (Ralph Vitello, Ralph DeSimone, Bob Di Piero, Don Di Piero) - 3:27
.a.Sky Bound
.b.The Journey
.c.Arrival    

Joy
*Ralph DeSimone - Drums, Percussion
*Bob Di Piero - Lead Guitar, Backing Vocals
*Don Di Piero - Bass
*Billy Joe Shina - Lead Vocals, Percussion
*Ralph Vitello - Keyboards, Guitar

Thursday, July 28, 2022

Julius Victor - From The Nest (1970 us, spectacular psych prog jam rock, 2001 edition)



Probably from New York, this short-lived outfit named Julius Victor, release their sole album "From The Nest" in 1970. Hard-rock/psychedelic elements, recorded at the famous Record Plant Studios and produced by jazz musician Ahmad Jamal. Organ-dominated, hard-progressive sound with powerful and soulful vocals, hot lead guitar and atmospheric, swirling Hammond. Next to Child, Valhalla, Atomic Rooster, Vanilla Fudge, Iron Butterfly, H.P. Lovecraft, Day Blindness, Arthur Brown. Superb cover artwork.
Tracks
1. Stubborn Kind Of Woman - 3:39
2. Legend Of The Indian Boy (Kimball Lee, Lawrence Engstrom) - 4:57
3. Black Knife - 3:55
4. Circus Lady - 4:49
5. Break Song - 1:24
6. Judiann (Kimball Lee, Lawrence Engstrom) - 2:59
7. Fall Of Days - 12:44
8. Slide Rule - 3:37
All compositions by Lawrence Engstrom except where noted

Julius Victor
*Lawrence "Zea" Engstrom - Drums, Lead Vocals
*Jim Cutsinger - Bass
*Mark Schneider - Guitar
*Kimball Lee - Organ, Piano, Vocals

Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Hoover - Hoover (1969 us, remarkable psych folk rock)


Beautiful and well-produced chamber/psych folk lp from Nashville. The music is soft and often melancholic, especially when driven by the small string section. The result is less psychedelic than the liner notes and the laconic and direct Hoover talking would suggest at first.

The LP is one of the few produced by Chuck Glaser from the band Tompall Glaser & The Glaser Brothers. Also worth mentioning the album front cover and his photographer, Bill Grine, who took many iconic cover photos for artists such as Johnny Cash, Tammy Wynette, Waylon Jennings…

“Willis Hoover was born in Jackson County, Missouri and raised in Lamoni, Iowa and Shenandoah, Iowa. After starting out as a coffeehouse folk singer as a teenager, Hoover moved to Nashville in the 1960s and became a songwriter. Later he became a recording artist for Monument Records, Epic Records, and Elektra Records in the late 1960s and early 1970s.”
by Witanfols, November 23, 2017
Tracks
1. I'll Say My Words - 4:34
2. Leave That For Memories - 3:11
3. Kommst Du Doch Mit Mir (Come With Me) - 2:55
4. That's How A Woman's S'Posed To Be - 2:59
5. Free To Run Free - 3:42
6. All That Keeps Ya Going - 2:25
7. I'm Not That Kind Of Man - 3:13
8. One Man's Family - 2:06
9. Games - 3:04
10.Theme From "Tick Tick Tick" (Set Yourself Free) - 6:40
All songs by Willis Hoover

*Willis Hoover - Vocals Guitar