8-5-09 I'd like to say I had been traveling all over hearing the Blues everywhere I went . . . sigh, someday
maybe I can. I have heard some lately and the most notable was Davy Knowles who opened for Buddy Guy at Summerfest.
Summerfest has long been a favorite event and do try to get there at least once each year. It's an amazing
combination of 13 stages with live music of all varieties, located in a parklike setting along Lake Michigan, delicious ethnic and festival food,
and whohoo they now serve alcohol besides beer! Wine and martinis of various types have made me much happier since I never touch beer of any kind
since I graduated from the beer bars back in my teens.
I did get to California this summer and had the kids here from the east coast but mostly I have been trying to get funding for school. Now it's
starting to look doubtful I can make it the fall semester but I'm still working on it. Tune in later same bat time, same bat channel for results.
Imagine my surprise when I got online today to work on this project and found an article present about a new Jeff Healy album! Yes, Ruf Records has
announced a September 8th, 2009 US release date for Songs From The Road (released in Canada by Stony Plain in July), a new collection of eleven
previously-unreleased live performances taken from concerts recorded in Norway, England, and Canada during 2006 and 2007. Produced by Healey's
friend and band member, bassist Alec Fraser, Songs From The Road displays a mix of original material and cover songs such as White Room (Cream),
Come Together (The Beatle's), Whipping Post (The Allman Brothers), and While My Guitar Gently Weeps (George Harrison); Healey also offers an
updated version of his 1988 hit "Angel Eyes."
Now gone from our midst for 18 months and of course his last award winning album was relased pothumusly, I'm greatful for another chance to hear
"new" Jeff Healy. I was a convert the first time I heard him on "Road House" (he played himself, as Cody the blind singer/guitarist in the road
house). I just wonder how much other recorded music gets overlooked even with someone who has major outlets, as Healy most certainly did. He owned
his own saloon in Toronto for years, and acted as a DJ spinning his own collection of over 30,000 vinyl, 78 rpm, jazz records to an appreciative
audience. So why not put out his own recordings? It was and will remain a mystery.
6-24-09 Back from the west coast and counting down the days until Summerfest.
It starts Thursday and I will be in attendance to see Buddy Guy on the 30th. It's been far too long since I heard someone of his caliber. I may get
back for more but uncertain since the kids will be home for a visit that week.
5-31-09 Updated the Listen to the Blues page. 5-30-09 I found an amazing site for
Music Photos. I have been inside all the time since the pollen is killing me so I'm getting more computer time right now. 5-29-09 My Blues Buddy Mike sent me this article. I searched BluesWax for it but can't find the link so I am
including it in total. If someone has the link please send it to me. Thanks!
2-28-09 Got out to hear some live music finally! We had to go
to a Ladies Night Out that I was an organizer for but as soon as it started to split up we headed to
Liquid Johnny's located at 540 S 76th Street in Milwaukee. They don't seem to have a website but if
you stop in most Fridays you will find Rick Holmes with a couple of his blues buddies wailing away.
On occasion Robert Allen Jr. plays a weekend night there.
2-26-09 Discovered the Chicago Blues Fest this year will be
June 12-14 which is later than some years but before the Blues on the Fox event in Aurora which is
being held Fri, Jun 19, 2009 - Sat, Jun 20, 2009. Both these events are free and neither has their
schedule or websites updated yet. I'll keep you posted. 2-12-09 Just discovered that Buddy Guy will be at Summerfest
this year. That sounds awesome. I can't wait! 2-10-09 OK, got my head screwed on now. I've updated my resume,
re-listed on Career Builder, Robert Half, and built a Facebook page. I have joined a couple of local
networking groups and am heading to a networking gathering tonight. Not sure if I will get to hear
any music this week but I scheduled a music event for the end of the month with my Meetup Group.
Have you heard of Meetup.com? It's a networking site (both social
and professional) that covers a wide range of topics (from knitting to physical fitness, political to
social gatherings) all over the country. Check it out; they may have a group you are interested in
near you. 2-5-09 I did manage to get out for some live music last Friday. We saw
the Charles Walker Blues Band at the Neighbors Social Club.
Unfortunately I can't even remember anything about it since I lost my job today. More later. 1-25-09 I'm hoping to get out for some live music this week. I'm so sick of deep winter
(20 below temperatures and lots of snow.) We are all looking forward to GROUNDHOG's DAY. Will he see his shadow near you? Will
Jimmy avoid seeing his shadow here? Can we have an early spring PLEEEZE? 1-1-09 HAPPY NEW YEAR and I hope you all have a happy, healthy and prosperous
one. Once again, another year has slipped quickly by. I have lost a dear friend, a job, and the latest here is being
sick all the time. Working in a preschool is taking its toll on me and my newly reopened
webstore on eBay Jewelry
and all that Jazz which features New Sterling Silver and Vintage Avon including
Vintage Jewelry, other Gifts and Collectibles is not growing as fast as I would like either.
Life has been complicated lately. One thing I have been investigating is how to reduce my prescription costs among other things.
Doctor's offices have all of the forms for all of them but you have to ask. Pharmacies are another source for reducing costs. Did you
know they have the ability to change what they charge you? Here are some links for the best free patient assistance drug programs.
Keep this in mind as you know the economy is only going to get harder for us all and we all need to help each other:
BluesWax Sittin' In At 2009 Blues Music Awards
BMAs Reach New Heights on 30th Anniversary
When Sirius-XM Satellite Radio host Bill Wax and Blues Foundation Executive Director Jay Sieleman walked into the Flying Saucer bar a block from
Beale Street the day after the Blues Music Awards, the Memphis club welcomed them with a spontaneous and completely unplanned round of applause.
The two had been the fulcrum for the most successful awards presentation in the 30-year history of the event. Wax hosted the seven-hour marathon
and Sieleman pieced it together with his number two man Joe Whitmer and a staff of unpaid volunteers. The pervasive feeling was that in these
times of economic struggle - no stranger to the Blues community - that we are family. Not a dysfunctional family, but a loving family that pulls
together.
"I've been doing media a long, long time," said Wax three days after the impromptu applause, "and I had never experienced that in my life. It
was incredibly moving. I was blown away." The event itself had profound effects on so many people. "This was a family reunion," said Wax, "but it
wasn't a blood family. It was a musical family."
Chris Healey, widow of Jeff Healey, the winner of the first ever Rock Blues Album Award for Mess of Blues, commented at the awards ceremony
that her husband would be proud. She told the story of their four-year-old son who wanted to know if his daddy was getting a present. "Tomorrow I
can tell him yes," she said, holding back tears. In a night of 26 awards and almost double the number of performances crammed into six hours, there
were countless epiphanies, numerous emotional transcendences and musical high points that offered hope to the movers and shakers of The Blues that
our music saves lives and builds character - and characters.
Janiva Magness was so blown away that she blew her nose on her flowing emerald dress. She joked about the challenge of getting the two awards
onto a plane without being charged $90 in baggage fees after winning both the Contemporary Blues Female Artist Award and the B. B. King Entertainer
Award. On a more serious note, she confessed that Blues had saved her life. She meant it literally. The daughter of two parents who committed
suicide, her only recognition as a child came when her eighth grade class gave her the prize for having the funniest face. A multiple BMA winner in
the last three years, she projected assertive female sensuality in her performance singing, "I swear everybody's dreaming about something they can't
touch."
There were classic pairings: Taj Mahal and Maria Muldaur singing "What About The Soul of The Man;" Gaye Adegbalola singing "I love being a
queen" backed by veteran guitarist Bob Margolin and harp harlequin Jason Ricci with spiked hair stolen from a raptor's back; Curtis Salgado singing
"4 O'clock" to B. B. King's guitar sting; Marcia Ball and Irma Thomas on "Morning Rain;" Koko Taylor looking and sounding healthier than at any time
since her 2005 hospitalization doing "Wang Dang Doodle" with members of the Mannish Boys; and Kenny Neal backed by his family singing The Song of
The Year, "Let Life Flow," from his Blind Pig album of the same name. A liver cancer survivor, Neal thanked God, his band of 20 years, his mother,
and his wife, "who stuck by me for 14 months of treatment."
Testimonies for the healing properties of the Blues nearly threatened to become clichés by the end of the night. Curtis Salgado's deep soul was
powerful evidence of his gratitude for being alive following a liver transplant and an outpouring of support to the tune of a half million dollars
earned from performances by fellow artists. He admitted on stage what a thrill it was to be playing with The King of The Blues, B. B. King.
Presenter Candye Kane openly wept as she told the story of how the support from the Blues community helped her survive a year with pancreatic cancer.
The self-described "big black drag queen trapped in a white woman's body" has lost 100 pounds and was deeply moved and thrilled to be alive and part
of the BMA experience.
From most of the artists there was a sense of endless struggle leading up to this one night of celebration and reward, a feeling that
recognition among peers was the sweetest award of all. Even The King of The Blues and newly "elected" Mayor of Sirius/XM's Bluesville B. B. King
commented on his 60-year odyssey from radio deejay on Memphis' own WDIA to his new role as commentator with his "You and Me with B. B. King"
interviews with Bill Wax on Sirius/XM. It was Bill Wax who was the catalyst for bringing B. B. King and Pop star Bonnie Raitt to the Awards ceremony.
"I have been blessed that he and I have become friends," says Wax of his relationship with King. "He trusts me enough to give me information and
answer my questions openly and honestly and allows me to see, and he really is himself so that when we're recording this stuff and are finished, the
listeners can hear who B. B. King really is because he's not hiding behind anything. He's open enough to show that to me, and then of course I get
to show it to the listeners."
It was King's graciousness that set the tone for the whole event as he sat backstage signing autographs for scores of musicians thrilled to be
on the bill with him.
Multi-million-selling Pop hit maker Bonnie Raitt made a surprise cameo appearance following her dedication the same day, May 7, in Cuomo,
Mississippi, of the Mississippi Fred McDowell historical marker. Before becoming a star in the Rock world, she'd studied at the feet of McDowell,
Son House, and other Country Blues progenitors she met as a student at Radcliffe.
In an interview to be published in the next issue of Blues Revue, Raitt credits the Blues with giving her a leg up as a Pop star. "When I
played clubs, I'd be playing a James Taylor song or a Buffalo Springfield song or a Judy Collins thing, and then I'd play some Blues - and people
acted like it was the second coming. They said, 'What's a woman playing a guitar like that for?' I said, 'Who cares if I'm a woman? It's what I like.'
It happened to get my foot in the door because it was unusual."
Younger artists were just thrilled to be rubbing shoulders with their mentors. Memphis harp player Billy Gibson simply couldn't believe he'd
won the Instrumentalist-Harmonica Award. "Wow," he exclaimed, adding that it was a thrill just to be mentioned in the same breath with artists he's
loved.
Young pianist Eden Brent experienced déjà vu from her 2006 International Blues Challenge winning performance when she experienced problems with
her piano again on stage. "At least it isn't a wardrobe malfunction," she quipped, a reference to Janet Jackson's infamous bodice boggle at the 2008
Super Bowl.The Acoustic Artist and Acoustic Album winner for Mississippi Number One thanked everyone for "the dream of a lifetime. I feel like a part
of your family." Then, she dedicated a song to her late mother who had written some of her songs.
Otis Taylor won Instrumentalist - Other for his banjo playing. He quipped that he was bummed out to be breaking his losing streak of 14
nominations without a win. Daughter and bass player Cassie Taylor, who is currently recording her first album, was stunning in a fetching dress and
Billie Holiday orchid in her hair. She sang a song called "Sunday Morning" and introduced 15-year-old guitarist Michael Kesselring to the Otis Taylor
set.
As the youngest member of the Blues Foundation board of directors, Cassie has introduced the IBC Centrum Scholarship to bring young people into
the Blues. As its first winner, Kesselring, a Columbus, Ohio, native, was given room, board, and airfare to attend Blues Week in Memphis. Cassie
conducted the new youth jam that attracted 70 players at the IBC and is responsible for signing 43 new youth members to the Blues Foundation in
four hours at the jam.
Indeed, it was the relatively younger performers who made some of the biggest impressions at the BMAs. Albert Castiglia, once Junior Wells'
lead guitarist, proved that his excellent album These Are The Days is no fluke. Backed by a rhythm section that was a perpetual motion machine, he
turned "A Real Bad Year" into a tour de force that had people on their feet dancing. Bob Brozman, an extremely rhythmic National Steel player, told
his audience, "Music is older than language, and that's why language needs translation." No interpreters were required for his set. He made instant
contact with the crowd, dedicating his second song to the late John Cephas, punctuating his vocals and guitar work with vocal clicks, body blows to
the guitar, and guitar-case foot stomping.
Bill Wax introduced Michael Burks saying that this was probably the shortest set "The Iron Man" had ever done. His iron may never turn to chrome,
but his playing continues to get harder and smoother the older he gets, and while Burks will never be the next Luther Allison, Alligator Records'
Bruce Iglauer has a lot to be proud of there. Iglauer had begun my evening bemoaning the state of the record business but vowing to soldier on. When
I left the convention center at 1:30 he had to admit he'd had a good evening. His premier artist Koko Taylor walked away with Traditional Blues
Artist Award and displayed enough swagger on stage to retain her Blues Queen crown. Janiva Magness took two (Contemporary Blues Female Artists and
B. B. King Entertainer), and Lil' Ed and The Blues Imperials captured Band of The Year. Both acts proved themselves winners in performance.
Pinetop Perkins' manager Pat Morgan picked up Etta James' Soul Blues Female Artist Award quipping, "Etta's not here. We'll give it to Beyonce,"
a reference to Beyonce's playing Etta in the film Cadillac Records. James is a perpetual winner and no show. I have to keep reminding myself that
the Blues Music Award is a popularity contest, and as such, some awards to perennial favorites are givens. Buddy Guy took home his 27th, 28th, and
29th awards out of 42 nominations taking Contemporary Blues Male Artist, Contemporary Blues Album, and Album of the Year for Skin Deep, which is his
most personal and heartfelt album of a 50-year career. B. B. King took both Traditional Blues Artist and Traditional Blues Album for another career
topper, One Kind Favor, which may match Live at The Regal as my new favorite of his. Bobby Rush rightfully took home Soul Blues Male Artist and Koko
Taylor was a sympathetic favorite for Traditional Blues Female Artist.
"Everyone wins once they're nominated," says Bill Wax. "There's no number one winner. They're all winners, but Billy Gibson's excitement was
phenomenal. To see him bounce across that stage, shake everybody's hands...! How much more wonderful could it be? Robin Roberts told me that she
picked up three festival gigs by being there and just having the opportunity to play. That's what it's about, musicians being able to make a better
living for themselves and if by doing this, that helps, that's fabulous. It just doesn't get any better than that."
Maria Muldaur is purported to have said that the event was better than the Grammys. Veterans and neophytes alike agreed that the event had
reached a new level of excitement, importance and stature. I predict next year's awards will sell out in advance. You've been advised. Get your
tickets early.
Don Wilcock is the editor of BluesWax. He may be contacted at blueswax@visnat.com.
No cover charge and great pub food complete the picture for this legendary local blues venue. Bands
playing Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday nights are almost always blues and smokin' hot!
So Rick was playing with Cadillac Pete and Perry Weber.
What a fun evening! Rick is and always will be refered to as the Ace of Bass and we got there in time
for two Bass solos. Cadillac Pete formerly had his own band of Cadillac Pete and the Heat but I don't
see them anywhere on the web.
For more on Jimmy.
According to Wikipedia "Perhaps the earliest known American reference to Groundhog Day can be found at the Historical
Society of Berks County in Reading, Pennsylvania. The reference was made Feb. 4, 1841 in Morgantown, Berks County,
Pennsylvania storekeeper James Morris' diary: "Last Tuesday, the 2nd, was Candlemas day, the day on which, according
to the Germans, the Groundhog peeps out of his winter quarters and if he sees his shadow he pops back for another six
weeks nap, but if the day be cloudy he remains out, as the weather is to be moderate."
In the United States the tradition derives from a Scottish poem:
As the light grows longer
The cold grows stronger
If Candlemas be fair and bright
Winter will have another flight
If Candlemas be cloud and snow
Winter will be gone and not come again
A farmer should on Candlemas day
Have half his corn and half his hay
On Candlemas day if thorns hang a drop
You can be sure of a good pea crop
This tradition also stems from similar beliefs associated with Candlemas Day and Groundhog Day. Candlemas,
also known as the Purification of the Virgin or the Presentation, coincides with the earlier pagan observance Imbolc.
For more on Groundhogs and Groundhogs Day look here:
Wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_Hog's_Day.
BluesBaby
would be interested in displaying blues related pictures, particularly
for any local bands that you would like to share.
If you have any events or pictures you would like to see listed, submit
them to: bluesbaby.us@gmail.com.
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