Twangville

A music blog featuring Alt-Country, Americana, Indie, Rock, Folk & Blues. Est. 2005.

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Guy Davis – Kokomo Kidd

Tuesday, September 15, 2015 By Bill Wilcox

Guy Davis is among the vanguard of musicians, including Keb’ Mo’, Eric Bibb, Otis Taylor, Alvin Youngblood Hart and Corey Harris, who have carried the blues torch lit by the post-war greats like Howlin’ Wolf, Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker and B.B. King.   His newest album, Kokomo Kidd, reminds us why Davis is a key voice in […]

Filed Under: Americana, Blues, Reviews, Roots, Streams Tagged With: Charlie Musselwhite, Guy Davis, Otis Taylor

John Mayall – Find a Way to Care

Tuesday, September 08, 2015 By Bill Wilcox

John Mayall is often called the “Godfather of British Blues,” but his legacy may include so much more than just pioneering the British blues.  By introducing a generation of rock fans to the blues, he arguably had a hand in saving blues as a viable music form at a time in the 1960s when elderly bluesmen […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Roots Tagged With: Coco Montoya, Eric Clapton, Harvey Mandel, John Mayall, John McVie, Larry Taylor, Mick Fleetwood, Mick Taylor, Peter Green, Sonny Landreth, Walter Trout

Zac Harmon – Right Man Right Now

Tuesday, September 01, 2015 By Bill Wilcox

Good music speaks for itself. Long-time session- and side-man Zac Harmon, who produced and wrote music for artists as varied as Black Uhuru and The O’Jays, has made some good music after launching his young solo blues career. Hailing from Jackson, Mississippi, Harmon spent a number of years playing with soul-blues artists like Z.Z. Hill and […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Roots, Soul/R&B, Streams Tagged With: Anson Funderburgh, Bobby Rush, Lucky Peterson, Zac Harmon

Peace, Love and Twang at the Philadelphia Folk Festival

Tuesday, August 18, 2015 By Bill Wilcox

The Philadelphia Folk Festival, which has been around for 54 years, isn’t your grandfather’s folk festival. While there is still a smattering of venerable acoustic solo folksingers on its program like Arlo Guthrie, Bruce Cockburn and Tom Paxton, the festival has become a great platform for Americana artists of all flavors as well as for […]

Filed Under: Acoustic, Alt-Country, Americana, Bluegrass, Blues, Cajun, Country, Folk, Reviews, Rock, Rockabilly, Roots, Soul/R&B Tagged With: Arlo Guthrie, Baskery, Bruce Cockburn, Cody Dickinson, El Caribefunk, Hillbenders, Hoots & Hellmouth, Larry Campbell, Luther Dickinson, Lyle Lovett, North Mississippi Allstars, Parker Millsap, Selwyn Birchwood, Shakey Graves, Teresa Williams, The Lee Boys, Tom Paxton

Victor Wainwright & the WildRoots – Boom Town

Friday, June 05, 2015 By Bill Wilcox

Victor Wainwright is relatively new on the national music scene, but his swampy honky tonk piano licks are having an impact in both his solo career and as a member of roots rock, blues and funk “supergroup” Southern Hospitality. Wainwright, who grew up in a musical family in Savannah, Georgia, moved to Daytona Beach, Florida to […]

Filed Under: Blues, Country, Reviews, Rock, Rockabilly, Roots, Soul/R&B, Streams Tagged With: Southern Hospitality, Victor Wainwright, Victor Wainwright & the WildRoots

Otis Taylor – Hey Joe Opus … Red Meat

Thursday, May 07, 2015 By Bill Wilcox

Otis Taylor likes to experiment. As architect of a mesmerizing style of blues music christened “trance blues,” Taylor’s albums tend to have an atmospheric, dream-like quality. Taylor’s style might sometimes be described as Muddy Waters meets Shawn Phillips or Pink Floyd. Taylor’s career, like his musical style, has been unconventional. He was active in the […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Rock, Roots Tagged With: Otis Taylor, Warren Haynes

Leo “Bud” Welch – I Don’t Prefer No Blues

Thursday, April 09, 2015 By Bill Wilcox

It’s hard to explain just what makes Leo “Bud” Welch so special. Yes, there is the fact that the 83-year-old made his recording debut in 2013. There is also the pure, rugged honesty of his delivery and the fact that, unlike some other country blues musicians who got discovered in their later years, Welch is […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Streams Tagged With: Jimbo Mathus, Leo "Bud" Welch, Sharde Thomas

Bernard Allison – In The Mix

Wednesday, March 18, 2015 By Bill Wilcox

Bernard Allison has a tough act to follow. The son of legendary bluesman Luther Allison, Bernard Allison has inherited his father’s energy and skill, but he has forged a sound of his own. When I saw the elder Allison perform live in the early 80s, it was like watching pure energy.  Luther Allison’s guitar work was […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Roots, Soul/R&B Tagged With: Bernard Allison, Luther Allison

JJ Grey & Mofro – Ol’ Glory

Friday, February 20, 2015 By Bill Wilcox

Southern swamp funk-blues band JJ Grey & Mofro have a unique sound forged in the backwaters of Florida.  Grey, the band’s leader, is well established as a songwriter, and the band’s recordings and live performances are among the most dependably enjoyable in the business. Grey & Mofro’s reputation grew steadily since the band recorded its first […]

Filed Under: Americana, Blues, Country, Reviews, Rock, Roots, Soul/R&B Tagged With: Derek Trucks, J Grey and Mofro, JJ Grey, Luther Dickinson, Mofro

Tinsley Ellis – Tough Love

Thursday, February 12, 2015 By Bill Wilcox

Tinsley Ellis came up as a hard-rocking guitar slinger in the mold of Stevie Ray Vaughan.  He was always known as a great axe-man, but as the decades passed and his art matured, he also became an accomplished songwriter and interpreter of the many shades of blues.  Kanye West might even be a little impressed with […]

Filed Under: Americana, Blues, Reviews, Roots, Soul/R&B, Streams Tagged With: Delbert McClinton, Tinsley Ellis

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