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

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Joanne Shaw Taylor – Almost Always Never

Tuesday, September 25, 2012 By Bill Wilcox

Joanne Shaw Taylor is in the vanguard of a group of driven, talented young European women who have taken on blues music – and taken no prisoners. Taylor, originally from Birmingham, England, has been playing professionally since she was a teenager (she toured with the Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart’s group D.U.P. when she was only 16) […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Soul/R&B Tagged With: Joanne Shaw Taylor

Deanna Bogart – Pianoland

Wednesday, August 15, 2012 By Bill Wilcox

Having won three past Blues Music Awards for her saxophone playing and a trunkful of Wammies (Washington Area Music Awards) in a fertile Washington, DC blues scene that included the likes of the Nighthawks, Tom Principato, Jimmy Thackery, Cephas & Wiggins, John Jackson, and Saffire – the Uppity Blues Women, multi-instrumentalist Deanna Bogart focuses her attention on her magical piano […]

Filed Under: Blues, Jazz, Reviews, Roots, Soul/R&B Tagged With: Deanna Bogart

Cee Cee James – Blood Red Blues

Tuesday, July 24, 2012 By Bill Wilcox

Caution:  On first listen, Cee Cee James’ Blood Red Blues may blow unexpectant listeners away.  James has a great voice and, at times, can channel Janis Joplin.  And her accompanying band, including James’ songwriting partner and husband, Rob “Slideboy” Andrews on slide guitar, can provide the perfect vehicle for her vocals.  Now based in St. Louis, James spent her […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Soul/R&B Tagged With: Cee Cee James

The Nighthawks – Damn Good Time!

Friday, July 06, 2012 By Bill Wilcox

In their appropriately titled Damn Good Time!, veteran DC-based blues rockers the Nighthawks prove that after decades on the road, they can still serve up a toe-tapping set to satisfy their blues-roots following and make a few new friends in the process.  Damn Good Time! follows up their Blues Music Award-winning Last Train to Bluesville (Acoustic Album […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews Tagged With: The Nighthawks

Albert Castiglia – Living the Dream

Friday, June 22, 2012 By Bill Wilcox

Albert Castiglia plays a hot guitar in a traditional blues format, taking cues from generations of Chicago electric bluesmen. Echoes of Freddie and Albert King, Otis Rush and Magic Sam can be heard in Castiglia’s playing, although Castiglia takes a decidedly more aggressive tack than those greats. Castiglia’s connection to those great Chicago artists that […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews Tagged With: Albert Castiglia

Peter Karp & Sue Foley – Beyond the Crossroads

Tuesday, June 19, 2012 By Bill Wilcox

Peter Karp and Sue Foley have developed a unique sound that seems to be a cross between country and blues – bluntry – but with a healthy dose of R&B thrown in.  Both veteran blues-roots musicians, Karp and Foley joined forces for a second combined effort, Beyond the Crossroads, reprising the teamwork that made 2010’s […]

Filed Under: Americana, Blues, Reviews, Roots Tagged With: Peter Karp & Sue Foley

Royal Southern Brotherhood

Thursday, June 14, 2012 By Bill Wilcox

Ever since Little Village’s one disappointing album in 1992, I am prepared to be underwhelmed by any new group promotors tout as a “supergroup.”  There have been, of course, huge successes when music superstars were mixed and matched into new units (e.g., Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young – comprised of members from Buffalo Springfield, the Byrds and […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Roots, Soul/R&B Tagged With: Royal Southern Brotherhood

Delta Moon – Black Cat Oil

Friday, June 01, 2012 By Bill Wilcox

Delta Moon features unique dueling slide guitar leads that give the band’s music the swampy, gritty sound that has made it one of Atlanta’s best kept secrets.  Black Cat Oil, the seventh album to feature the lap-steel guitar-work of singer-songwriter Tom Gray and bottleneck slide guitar of Mark Johnson, is a solid offering.    Delta Moon, which until 2007’s Clear […]

Filed Under: Blues, Reviews, Roots Tagged With: Delta Moon

Luther Dickinson – Hambone’s Meditations

Friday, May 25, 2012 By Bill Wilcox

Someone should sit Luther Dickinson down and tell him he needs to figure out what he’s going to do with his life. Still in his 30s, Dickinson laid down his first recorded guitar licks at the age of 14 on the Replacements’ Pleased to Meet Me (produced by Luther’s father Jim) in 1987. He established […]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Luther Dickinson

Dr. John – Locked Down

Friday, May 18, 2012 By Bill Wilcox

Dr. John is an institution.  With his characteristic mystical groovy-gumbo-voodoo schtick and funky keyboard playing, he has been a force in American music since his groundbreaking Gris-Gris in 1968.  His early 1970s work, including Dr. John’s Gumbo and In the Right Place were instant classics.   A gifted piano (and occasional guitar) player, Mac Rebennack, or Dr. John, […]

Filed Under: Americana, Blues, Reviews, Rock, Roots, Soul/R&B Tagged With: Americana, Dan Auerbach, Dr. John, New Orleans, Rock, Roots, The Black Keys

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