Various Artistes Back Porch Blues (blues)(mp3@320)[rogercc][h33t]seeders: 1
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Various Artistes Back Porch Blues (blues)(mp3@320)[rogercc][h33t] (Size: 113.52 MB)
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Various Artistes Back Porch Blues
Released: 3 June 1997 Label: King Snake Format : Mp3@320 Tracklist : 1. Sugar Mama Blues (Bob Nelson) 2. Arthritis (Floyd Miles) 3. Standing in the Fire (Bill Wharton) 4. Credit Card Blues (Smokehouse) 5. Dead Cat Luck (Eric Culberson) 6. Head in the Bottle (Ace Moreland) 7. Whole Lotta Ash (Troy Turner) 8. Flyright (Mark Hodgson) 9. Short Hair Woman (Bob Nelson 10. Way off in That Jazz (Jeff Howell) 11. Cocky Rooster (Floyd Miles) 12. Screamin' Woman ( Bill Wharton) 13. Them Jelly Blues (Smokehouse) 14. Big Foot Woman (Mark Hodgson) 15. Gates of Hell (Ace Moreland) Chicago Bob Nelson Robert Lee "Chicago Bob" Nelson was born July 4, 1944 in Bogalusa, Louisiana. At age 8, Bob began playing harmonica and in his teens, Bob was tutored on harmonica by family and friends including blues legends Slim Harpo and Lazy Lester. As a child, Bob spent his summers at an aunt's house in Chicago and eventually moved there in the early 1960's. Chicago is where he met and performed with Howlin' Wolf, Earl Hooker, Buddy Guy, Junior Wells and Muddy Waters. In fact, Muddy gave Bob his nickname "Chicago Bob." Bob would later perform with Muddy Waters at the Newport Folk Festival. Over the years, Chicago Bob toured with Luther "Snake Boy" Johnson, Tinsley Ellis and was in John Lee Hooker's touring band for the last years of Hookers life. Floyd Miles Miles was born in Daytona Beach, Florida, United States. He was the youngest of eleven children, and left home at the age of 15. His musical career really started when playing with the Universals, a soul band who were locally popular in the early 1960s At the time Miles was a singing drummer for the band, and he befriended both Gregg and Duane Allman who lived nearby and jammed with the band. After playing drums and singing with several other local outfits, Miles founded his own group who worked backing musicians such as Arthur Conley, Erma Franklin, Curtis Mayfield, Eddie Floyd and Percy Sledge. Through his friendship of the Allman's, Miles moved on to supply guitar backing to Clarence Carter.[1][3] He later performed with the London Symphony Orchestra Ace Morland Ace Moreland was born in Miami, Oklahoma, in 1952. He was part Cherokee. A guitar player since age five, Moreland played in his first band by the time he was 12. Once he figured out the fret board, he concentrated on learning how to play slide guitar, harmonica, and drums. After an apprenticeship on the Tulsa rock-blues scene, Ace and his left-handed guitar went t to Macon, Georgia in the ‘70s. He hung on the fringes of the Capircorn-Allman Brother scene for three years before returning to Oklahoma, where he gigged with local heroes like the Cate Brothers; opening slots for Bonnie Raitt, Taj Mahal, .38 Special, George Thorogood, John Hammond, Steve Gaines, Leon Wilkerson and much of the Lynyrd Skynyrd Band soon followed. Afterward, he relocated to Jacksonville, Florida with his band in 1987, forming Ace Moreland’s West Side Story and signing with King Snake Records. He played with his band and another band called the Midnight Creepers. In addition to playing guitars and a harmonica, he was a writer and a vocalist. Mark Hodgson Mark Hodgson • Born April 9,1953, Detroit, Michigan • Family moves to Daytona Beach, Fl., July 1959 • Attends St. Paul’s Catholic School September, 1959 – 1968 • Attends Father Lopez High School 1968- 1971 • 1968 discovers Harmonica and begins listening and copying Harmonica Players, Al Wilson of Canned Heat, Paul Butterfield, John Mayall and Sonny Terry • 1969 Forms Tommy and the Trucks with Rob Witham on guitar and Tom Darnell on bass playing Drums to fill out lineup emulating the music of the Rolling Stones and Creedence Clearwater Revival Troy Turner An emerging Louisiana blues guitarist and vocalist, Troy Turner's sound symbolizes the "contemporary" '90s artist. He includes soul, funk and rock elements in his playing, but can also sang powerhouse straight blues tunes, and his solos range from flamboyant displays to sensitive, cutting accompaniment. Smokehouse The lowdown guitar sound of Robert ‘’Town Crier’’ Thomas. The deep Blues vocals and harp playing of Anthony ‘’Packrat’’ Thompson that make you think of the pine flatwoods and cypress bottoms of Central Florida. The swamp sound of Baton Rouge has spread and taken root in these steamy Florida lowlands. The Town Crier is from New Smyrna Beach; Packrat is from Lake Helen. Although they have shared bandstands since the late 1970’s, It wasn’t until 1988 that they began to explore their common roots and their love of the Blues. They recruited Gary and Ture to provide a fat bottom and they began to hypnotize audiences throughout the South-East with their simple, straight-forward and powerful music. Don’t expect Rock-Blues pyrotechnics of trick arrangements… or even the familiar, horn-lead King Snake sound! This is straight down-home Blues, played with emotion and conviction. The Swamp Blues… Florida style and as only Smokehouse can play’em! Bill Wharton, aka "The Sauce Boss," takes a novel approach to blues performing, combining his love of cooking with his passion for gutsy guitar playing and singing. Wharton, who cooks up gumbo while on stage, is no flash in the pan, nor is his live act meant as some kind of cheap gimmickry; he is simply combining two things he's always loved to do: play music and cook dinner. Known mostly for his live shows around Florida, where he sells his own homemade Liquid Summer Hot Sauce, By no means a straight-ahead blues player, the guitarist, singer and songwriter's recordings are a rootsy mix of blues, classic R&B and rockabilly-flavored tunes. Eric Culberson Every once in a while, an artist emerges from the Deep South and bursts fully mature upon the blues scene. Eric Culberson is one of those few. His style is unmistakably authentic, energetic, and blessed with sex appeal and charisma. He is a breath of fresh air for the blues. Eric Culberson hails from Savannah, Georgia, where he started out working the usual club circuit. Soon Eric Culberson and his band became a local phenomenon. It was just a matter of time before he was introduced to Bob Greenlee at Kingsnake Records. One trip to the Kingsnake studios in Sanford, Florida, and Eric Culberson was signed and recording his first Kingsnake release Sharing Widget |