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Band suggestions for 2010 |
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rbeetsme
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Joined: April 10 2004 Location: Indianapolis Online Status: Offline Posts: 2695 |
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Topic: Band suggestions for 2010Posted: November 12 2009 at 8:20am |
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I agree with Jimi Lee.
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Ken
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Joined: October 27 2008 Location: Indianapolis IN Online Status: Offline Posts: 299 |
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Posted: November 11 2009 at 9:15pm |
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How about Jimi lee
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Ken
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Train-train
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Joined: March 09 2004 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 650 |
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Posted: November 11 2009 at 5:56pm |
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Now that's a line up! I can never get enough Madcat. Every time I see him he has new stuff, techniques and songs. I seen Madcat this past January put a named guitar player to shame playing the guitar player's own licks. Madcat is a musician's musician.
Has anyone listen to Madcat's 'More Real Folk Blues'. It's a harmonica collector's prize CD. With Filisko, Segal, Gazell, and Lamb, you would kill us off with too much excitement for our ears. |
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rbeetsme
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Joined: April 10 2004 Location: Indianapolis Online Status: Offline Posts: 2695 |
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Posted: November 11 2009 at 12:04pm |
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How about a more acoustic line-up, Madcat, Filisko, Corky Segal. PT Gazell. They all live in the midwest. And, oh yeah, for a little variety, PAUL LAMB.
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bulletboy
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Joined: October 27 2009 Location: Indianapolis Online Status: Offline Posts: 26 |
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Posted: November 03 2009 at 4:42pm |
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OK, Sonny Terry, Big Walter, Snooky Prior, oh wait...just get PAUL LAMB!
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1/2fast-harp
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Joined: January 21 2007 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 5650 |
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Posted: October 14 2009 at 1:29pm |
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" Now things have picked up as the crop of real bluesmen thins"
are you dieting again Walter ? |
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"Not too slow, not too fast, kind of half fast" --Louis Armstrong
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waltertore
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Joined: July 07 2008 Location: granville, ohio Online Status: Offline Posts: 1627 |
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Posted: October 14 2009 at 11:14am |
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Did I suggest LOUSIANA RED yet? He could do both an electric and acoustic set that would be as about as authenic as any blues player alive today. I could back him up acoustically on harp and organize a killer backup band. He tours the states in the summer lately and we got to hook a few years ago. For about 20 years there was no interest in him here. Now things have picked up as the crop of real bluesmen thins..... He is pushing 80 and going stronger than anyone. His new album has gotten some good reviews. Red mentored me as a teenager and to this day continues to inspire me to follow my heart. He is the most musical man I have ever met. Here is a link to his site. Walter
check out: sweet blood call, reds dream, let me be your electrician, heck they all are good and most are with backing bands that were not the best fit for red.
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looking for someone to promote spontobeat to the world-call if interested http://www.soundclick.com/bands/default.cfm?bandID=157137
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BluesDaddy
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Posted: October 06 2009 at 11:12am |
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So how do ya really feel? Unless you can dig one of those fellas up not sure what we got out there. If it's acoustic back porch country blues may I suggest a guy named Scott Ainslie at http://cattailmusic.com/ He is a blues historian that travels and teaches workshops about the blues roots. Seen him doing a show covering Robert Johnson ( AKA father of the most covered blues songs ever written) one time playing acoustic slide guitar. Mabey that would help satisfy your blues craving? I am 46 and love those guys also but, there is a wide range of people of people that attend the Bean that all have different taste and I think John has done a great job at entertaining everyone of all ages.
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eharp
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Joined: October 31 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 5109 |
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Posted: October 05 2009 at 8:45am |
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i agree with 1/2! (shocking, aint it.) i just dont like going to see blues when it is really just 12 bar rock. it is fine for a few songs but when the entire show is just rock/blues, i get bored. to me, slow blues is the deal.
i want some of that front-porch, sitting-in-a-rocker, lots-of-space blues. let's get some real blues guys to the bean while there are still some alive. btw, 1/2 if you are sick of the term "guitar hero", quit using it! you are the only one that uses that term here, or anywhere else, i imagine, except when in reference to the video game. (back to disagreeing with 1/2. the world is back to normal.)
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it's in him and it gots to get out
eric |
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DeltaDon
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Joined: September 11 2005 Location: United States Online Status: Online Posts: 135 |
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Posted: October 04 2009 at 10:04pm |
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I do agree with you 1/2Fast on the "melting pot" of rock and blues.......quite a lot of bands these days are performing blues tunes within a rock format much like today's country music that is certainly more rock than C&W. Some of it works really well and it also leads people to those origins you talk about and allows them to discover the sources of the "blues" material. And I will also give you affirmation that British blues came about from copying the old masters and giving it a more "commercial" (airplay) sound. But I must and will give credit to those same Brits and Europeans without whom, most of the "deep Blues" music would have died. Here is the U.S. "blues" records or "race" records were on their way out because the record companies and the money that ran them didn't wish to promote such music or such people for that matter. People like Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Ike Turner, et al weren't getting bookings, weren't making records, and were basically out of the music business. If it weren't for people like Willie Dixon and a few others who saw the possibility and promise of performing in England and Europe where the social climate was certainly more inviting.......many in the "blues" business would never have had a rediscovery and second chance at getting their music heard. Yes, the British bands took directly from the American bluesmen and women and made fortunes imitating their songs and styles but in doing so awakened the whole world to the the music and ultimately to the real performers. I guess it is all a matter of perspective.............you can hear a lot of rock in your blues, or, you can hear a lot of blues in your rock. I remember listening to Otis Taylor playing at Merlefest in North Carolina a few years back. For a few songs he switched from guitar to banjo.............and he addressed the crowd by saying that, "I am here in N. Carolina where bluegrass is a way of life but I am here to tell ya...............the banjo came from Africa." |
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Keep my hot tamales warm and all my shrimp sauteed......
(Carlos Guitarlos) |
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