Showing posts with label Delmark Records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Delmark Records. Show all posts

Saturday, July 5, 2025

#757- > Bob Stroger & the Headhunters - Bob is Back (PhillyCheezeBlues.Blogspot.com)

 


2025 – Delmark Records
Release Date : May 5, 2025
 
By Phillip Smith; July 5, 2025
 
Original source : phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com 

It’s been a big year for Bob Stroger. The ninety-four-year-old blues legend was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame this year in Memphis, Tennessee. To help celebrate his induction, Stroger was invited to throw the first pitch at Wrigley Field, in Chicago on April 5th. On top of all that, he has a new CD release called Bob is Back, and it is a fabulous slice of classic Chicago blues. This twelve-track record features Stroger front and center on bass guitar and lead vocals with Joe Marhofer on harmonica, Ricardo Maca on guitar, Arthur Catuto on bass, Leandro Cavera on drums, and Ben Levin on piano and organ.

The album opens with an attention-grabbing cover of Elmore James’ “Look Over Yonder Wall”. Stroger’s vocals are strong and authentic, with Marhofer’s searing harp performance superbly backed by Levin’s barrelhouse piano. This track sets the perfect tone for the rest to come. Over a tight and hot rhythm, Stroger claims “Jazz ain’t nothing but a blues-man blowing his horn” on his smokin’ original “Jazz Man Blues”.  The walking bassline solo is a grand one. I really dig their cover of Tampa Red’s “Don’t You Lie to Me”.  The song is played to perfection, with amazing performances from Maca, Levin, and Marhofer. It’s a treat to hear special guests Candice Ivory and RenĂ©e Gros accompany Stroger on backing vocals for “Love You Baby”.  In a groovy burst of Stax mojo, the funk-laden instrumental “Bob is Back” slides into the mix for an absolutely fabulous listen. For the closer, Bob wisely reminds us all to “Let the Good Times Roll”. I can’t help but sing along with this party song.

I was able to catch Stroger perform at the Pinetop Perkins Boogie & Crawfish Boil a couple of months ago at Ground Zero Blues Club in Clarksdale, Mississippi. To be up close to blues royalty of this caliber felt pretty damn good. It’s great to see Stroger still performing on stage, and recoding new tracks. Blues fans will definitely want to pick up a copy of Bob is Back. It’s an instant blues classic indeed.    

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Bob Stroger at Pinetop Boogie & Crawfish Boil
Ground Zero Blues Club
Clarksdale, Mississippi
May 10, 2025

Photo by Phillip Smith


Saturday, November 26, 2022

#586 > Mud Morganfield - Portrait (PhillyCheezeBlues.Blogspot.com)



2022 – Delmark Reoords

By Phillip Smith; Nov. 26, 2022

Original source : phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com

 

Mud Morganfield, the oldest son of the legendary bluesman Muddy Waters takes his music seriously.  Closely following the path of this father, Mud sets the bar high when it comes to performing the blues.  Additional influences of Motown, soul, and R&B are absorbed into his songs.  Portrait is a remix of Mud’s entire debut album Son of the Seventh Son topped off with two additional brand-new songs.  With the exception of the two new songs, this work was produced by Bob Corritore with Mud on vocals, Rick Kreher on electric guitar, Billy Flynn on guitar, E.G. McDaniel on bass, Kenny “Beedy Eyes” Smith on drums, Barrelhouse Chuck on piano/organ, and Harmonica Hinds and Bob Corritore on harmonica.

Portrait opens with the funky southern soul track “Praise Him”.  With Mike Wheeler on electric guitar, Luca Chiellini on keys, and the backing vocals of Felicia Collins, Shantina Lowe, and Demetrius Hall, the song is indeed a glorious one.  Barrelhouse, Beedy Eyes, and Hinds sound downright amazing as they turn the flame on to the slow-cooked blues of “Son of the Seventh Son”.  The intoxicating groove on “Catfishing” reels me right in.  Mud’s vocals are strong and confident just like his father’s.  “His presentation is smooth and buttery on “Blues In My Shoes” while the band gels perfectly together.  Portrait comes to a close with a spectacular cover of John Lee “Sonny Boy” Williamson’s “Good Morning Little School Girl. 

It was great to hear this remastered release of Mud Morganfield’s.  The songs are fantastic, and the sound is fresh and clean.  I’d recommend this album to anyone who is a blues fan.   

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For more information about Mud Morganfield, visit this website :

https://www.mudmorganfieldblues.com

 

Saturday, November 13, 2021

#528 : Dave Specter - Six String Soul : 30 Years on Delmark

 


2021 – Delmark Records

by Phillip Smith; Nov. 13, 2021

 

Dave Specter has appeared on over fifty albums and DVDs either as guitarist, bandleader, or producer, and was inducted into the Chicago Blues Hall of Fame in 2018.  For an artist to have a three-decade-long career on one label is indeed a rarity.  Specter’s latest release celebrates that exact accomplishment with Six String Soul: 30 Years on Delmark.  This fabulous two-disc set covers his amazing career with 28 magnificent tracks representing fourteen albums.   The list of legendary blues artists appearing on this compilation album is a dazzling one to say the least.  It includes Barkin’ Bill Smith, Ronnie Earl, Jesse Fortune, Tad Robinson, Sharon Lewis, Barrelhouse Chuck, Floyd McDaniel, Lurrie Bell, Jimmy Johnson, Otis Clay, Brother John Kattke, and Jorma Kaukonen (Jefferson Airplane, Hot Tuna).

“Wind Chill”, from the album Bluebird Blues he recorded with Barkin’ Bill Smith, and Ronnie Earl is a delectable jazz instrumental complete with a smooth walking bassline and coupled with organ, and horns.  Specter’s guitar performance is superb.  From the same album, a sweet cover of T-Bone Walker’s “Railroad Station Blues” immediately follows.  Barkin’ Bill takes on the lead vocals as Specter and Earl join on guitar.  From the album Kiss of Sweet Blues by Lurrie Bell with Dave Specter and the Bluebirds, “You’re Gonna Be Sorry” is an exquisite blast of Chicago Blues, with Bell on vocals and guitar.  A track that absolutely cooks is “Can’t Stay Here No More” off Wild Cards with Tad Robinson’s soulful vocals riding a wave of Stax-inspired rhythm, complete with hornsI absolutely love this one.  W.C. Handy’s “St Louis Blues” from Floyd McDaniel’s West Side Baby album totally captivated me.  This is one of the first songs I learned how to play on organ back in the Seventies, and it will always be a special song to me.  Specter teams up with Otis Clay for a ripping good time in “Chicago Style”.  This homage to the Windy City and the blues artists who make their mark there is a swinging one.  Jorma Kaukonen and Brother John Kattke collaborate wonderfully with Specter on the album Blues From the Inside Out.  “The Blues Ain’t Nothin’”, a song from that album and co-written by Kaukonen and Specter is a wonderful jam loaded with smoldering riffs, and hot licks.

Six String Soul closes with Specter’s brand new single “The Ballad of George Floyd” which he recorded with Billy Branch.  Showcased now at the Woody Guthrie Center in Tulsa as part of the Songs of Conscience, Sounds of Freedom exhibit, the song’s hand-written lyrics are on display among Woody Guthrie’s tenor banjo, Steven Van Zandt’s guitar used for the “Sun City” recording, and Pete Seeger’s five-string banjo.

Six String Songs : 30 Years on Delmark is definitely an album blues fans will want to give a listen to.  This thirty year journey of Dave Specters musical career is highly recommended.

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 For more information about the artist, visit this website : davespecter.com