Posted on April 18, 2008 in Blues, People by Susan GetgoodNo Comments »


Sean Costello performing Hard Luck Woman

A few weeks ago, I received a review copy of Sean Costello’s new album We Can Get Together. I was literally just about to start writing up some thoughts on the music when the news crossed the wire of his untimely death Tuesday.

It’s a great album, worthy of inclusion in any blues fan’s library. It’s especially good for long car rides when you just gotta keep going. Just be careful of the lead foot. Last time I drove back from our house in Vermont while it was playing, I found myself edging up to 80 mph more than once.

Some of my favorite cuts: Can’t Let Go, Same Old Game, Hard Luck Woman, Have You No Shame and Going Home. Hear the album on MySpace.

I’ll leave you with some words from the press release issued by his record label Delta Groove. I couldn’t say it any better:

As blues music fans, we unfortunately grow somewhat accustomed to the sadness of the inevitable passing of musical elders after long and fruitful careers. Losing someone as young, vibrant, and talented as Sean, who had accomplished so much in just a few short years and still had so much potential, is a terribly difficult blow, not only to those who knew him personally, but for the music community as a whole.”

 

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Posted on April 17, 2008 in Chicago Blues, People by Susan GetgoodNo Comments »


Live at Rosas’s DVD Trailer

Little Arthur Duncan was hospitalized last week for emergency brain surgery. According to Blueswire, he is still in intensive care. More of his music on his MySpace page.

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I was able to make it down to Austin, Texas for the Red Gorilla Music Festival, March 10-12, and it was a wonderful experience. Del Breckenfeld, of Fender Guitars (a sponsor of Red Gorilla) had suggested that we show “Electrified” and “Cheat You Fair” at this relatively new festival, which runs concurrently with South By Southwest, and hooked us up with Roger Martinsen, one of the producer’s of the event. We decided we’d show both films, back to back, at a venue called The Chuggin’ Monkey in downtown Austin.

On the first day I arrived, I met with Roger, a fast-talking, former New Yorker, also sporting a shaved dome, and we immediately sprang into action. Our promotional postcards had already arrived — 5000 of them — and we had lots of “passing out” to do. About 1000 into it, Roger noticed a minor problem — there was no date on the postcard! Ever the undaunted promoter, Roger immediately suggested that we go to Office Max and purchase a date stamp, collect all of our postcards, stamp them and distribute them again. So, we did… and we did. At times like this, there is no time for feeling defeated or down, and we both gleefully sprang into action to make the best of what proved to be a minor obstacle.

Throughout Austin, from bar to bar we hoofed… from the Civic Center, to restaurants, and to public places of all kinds. There were mountains of fliers and postcards for films and events of all kinds, promoted mostly by exhibitors at the gargantuan South By Southwest Film/Music Festival. There were rockers from around the world, filmmakers, auteurs and fans. Billy Bob Thorton and his band were playing that night; there were rumors that REM would be playing at some local dive. In any case, Roger and I had a great time together and walked almost every inch of Austin on that first day. Five Starbucks coffees later, by evening, my dogs were blistered and battered, but I felt a great sense of achievement having passed out a good (properly stamped) 3500 postcards, promoting my film screening the next day.

On the day of the event, not a whole lot happened. Roger had some preliminary things to take care of, but our work had already been done. At around 1pm, we made it down to The Chuggin’ Monkey.

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The screening was at 3pm. A photographer name Nikki Paschen was at the bar, already taking pics of people in the club and passerbyers. She had a great story how her boyfriend, a professional charter boatman, had recently captured a 600 lb. Mako shark with a tiny hook. mako.jpg

The screening was about to begin.

A group of guys from Sweden (one of whom had visited Maxwell Street) showed up, along with several other locals. Nanci Walker, Director of Creative Affairs from Universal Music Publishing, was also there.

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It was a typical hot afternoon in downtown Austin, except for the fact that Maxwell Street was now being rediscovered at the Chuggin’ Monkey!

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Nanci had to leave before the end of the film, but she gave me her card and asked that I call her about producing similar documentaries for Universal in the future. She thought my Maxwell Street film was very powerful and, potentially, marketable.

When it was over, I left for my hotel to take a nap and Roger and I planned to hook up later in the evening and hit some local clubs. From my hotel window, I could see the convention center, which was the focal point of South By Southwest.

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That night, Roger and I met up and hit several places in downtown Austin, enjoying the local flavor along the way.

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We discovered one little bar where 95 yr. old Chicago blues icon, Pinetop Perkins was playing the piano with his band.

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Before we left, Roger and I were lucky enough to get our picture taken with Pinetop, a true, blues legend and generous man.

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See you next year, Austin!

Phil Ranstrom Writer/Producer/Director

“Electrified: The Story of the Maxwell Street Urban Blues” “Cheat You Fair: The Story of Maxwell Street”

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Posted on March 28, 2008 in Giveaway, People by Susan Getgood1 Comment »

The winner of the first Electrified t-shirt giveaway is Danny Morrison, who told us about Pete Karnes, a harp player who played with John Lee Hooker, among others. I couldn’t find too much about Pete on the Internet, other than that he was a staple of the Portland Oregon blues scene, and had a pretty terrible auto accident in 2004. Perhaps Danny will pop in and tell us more….

Anyway, I did find a 2006 podcast from Portland that includes one track from the Pete Barnes Blooz Band. Enjoy!

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Posted on March 25, 2008 in Chicago Blues, Electrified, Maxwell Street, People by Susan Getgood2 Comments »

Jimmie Lee Robinson performing Boss Man, from the DVD Extras of Electrified

Jimmie Lee Robinson (1931- 2002) was a lifelong resident of Chicago whose musical career was truly bracketed by Maxwell Street. He started playing guitar on Maxwell Street in the 1940s when he was still in his teens, and in 1998 he joined the Maxwell Street Historic Preservation Coalition and dedicated himself to the effort to save what then remained of old marketplace. Among his contributions to the cause: the protest song The Maxwell Street Tear Down Blues and two lengthy protest fasts, one in 1998 that lasted 62 days and another in 2000 for 81 days.

Jimmie Lee played with just about every Chicago bluesman, and woman, one can think of, starting with Memphis Minnie and Big Bill Broonzy in the late 40s. In the 50s, he formed his first band The Every Hour Blues Boys, played with Elmore James and eventually joined Little Walter’s band. He left Little Walter in the late 50s and recorded a few singles of his own.

In the ’60s, he worked with Willie Mabon, Sunnyland Slim, Mighty Joe Young, Shakey Jake, and Howlin’ Wolf and went to Europe as part of the 1965 American Folk Blues Festival with John Lee Hooker, Buddy Guy, Big Walter Horton, Big Mama Thornton and Eddie Boyd. By the 70s though, he had opened a candy store on Chicago’s South Side, and only played part-time, pretty much abandoning his music by the 80s.

Encouraged to return to the blues in the late 80s, he appeared at the Chicago Blues Festival in 1991 and 1993, and eventually recorded his first full-length album, Lonely Traveler released on Delmark in 1994. In the last decade of his life, he mostly performed as an acoustic solo artist, and contributed his energies to the efforts to save Maxwell Street.

Resources:

 

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Posted on March 15, 2008 in Chicago Blues, Festivals, People by Susan GetgoodNo Comments »

In our Electrified t-shirt giveaway — details here — we asked you to tell us who your favorite blues artist is and why. There’s just over a week left to enter, and we’d really appreciate your help in spreading the word about the giveaway and Notes of the Urban Blues. Leave your comment here, on the original post or on your own blog. If you do it on your own blog, which we’d love, please leave a comment here. When I use the random number generator to pick a winner, it helps to have everything in one place.

I found my dream blues team on YouTube yesterday: Muddy Waters, Junior Wells and Buddy Guy at the 1974 Montreux Jazz Festival. Here’s a clip from YouTube.

That Same Thing

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Posted on March 14, 2008 in Bo Diddley, Guest Posts, People by David Blakey1 Comment »

Guest post by David Blakey, Webmaster of BO DIDDLEY-The Originator

Cats like me, Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Memphis Minnie, Jimmy Reed, Howlin’ Wolf, Little Walter Jacobs, all of us came to Maxwell Street. This is the backbone and the roots of what everyone is listening to today. It started right here.”

Rock legend Bo Diddley was speaking in Chicago in 1997, prior to a benefit concert for the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless.

The unique sound and style that Bo Diddley honed in his teenage years playing for nickels and dimes in Chicago’s bustling Maxwell Street market, has resonated right around the world.

One of the founding fathers of rock & roll, his unique look and sound, mixing Chicago electric urban blues with elements of Latin-American, hillbilly, spiritual, African and calypso with a whole lot more of his own feelings, were a major source of inspiration for an army of British Invasion bands in the 1960s. Bands like The Animals, The Downliners Sect, The Kinks, Manfred Mann, The Pretty Things, The Rolling Stones, Them, The Who and The Yardbirds.

Today, Bo Diddley receives fan mail and requests for signed photographs from countries as diverse as Australia and Belorussia. On the Internet, YouTube and MySpace carry videos and tracks by bands from Argentina, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Japan, Poland and the UK, performing Bo Diddley’s songs and tributes that pay homage to the world-famous Bo Diddley beat.

The story of Maxwell Street and the urban blues that Bo Diddley, John Lee Hooker, Jimmy Reed, Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters and Little Walter transformed into what we now call rock & roll, is truly of global importance.

I don’t know any city that has anything like Maxwell Street,” said Bo Diddley. “People come from all over the world to see Maxwell Street. When I am overseas, people ask me about Maxwell Street. What do I tell them now?”

Thanks to the remarkable work of writer/director/producer Phil Ranstrom and his dedicated team, they can now watch “Cheat You Fair” and “Electrified.”Two movies about Maxwell Street that document the story of an incredibly important era in American music. A story from Chicago that the whole world needs to hear. And don’t forget… Bo knows.

If you’d like to contribute a guest post to Notes of the Urban Blues, please email us at electrifiedblues@gmail.com

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Posted on March 13, 2008 in Chicago Blues, Delta Blues, People by Susan GetgoodNo Comments »

Another website I must share with you all: Dead Blues Guys.

At first it seems a bit morbid. A website devoted to collecting and sharing photos of the final resting places (FRPs) of deceased blues musicians. But once you start clicking around, it’s pretty addictive. You can’t help but look for your favorite dead blues guys.

One of my favorites, Junior Wells, died just over 10 years ago. Phil Ranstrom was lucky enough to capture some of his memories for Electrified shortly before Junior passed away.

Here’s a clip that I found on YouTube of a very young Junior performing Hoodoo Man Blues.

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Posted on March 12, 2008 in Chicago Blues, People by Susan GetgoodNo Comments »

Today’s Chicago Blues posted the clip of Little Walter shown at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony Monday night.

The clip includes interviews with a number of Little Walter’s contemporaries, including the late Junior Wells and Jimmie Lee Robinson, both of whom are also in Electrified.

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Posted on March 11, 2008 in Chicago Blues, People by Susan GetgoodNo Comments »

Little Walter was among those honored at last night’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in New York. One of the best, if not the best, blues harmonica players of his generation, Little Walter was inducted into the Hall of Fame due to his influence on rock & roll.

We can only imagine where his career might have gone had it not been cut short by a street brawl in 1968.

According to his Wikipedia entry, these clips of him backing Hound Dog Taylor and Koko Taylor on a Danish television program in 1967 are his only known filmed performances.

Hound Dog Taylor, Wild About You Baby

Koko Taylor, Wang Dang Doodle

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