Showing posts sorted by relevance for query john primer. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query john primer. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, April 26, 2025

#742- > John Primer - Grown in Mississippi (PhillyCheezeBlues.Blogspot.com)

2025 – Blues House Productions
Release Date : April 11, 2025
 
By Phillip Smith; April 26, 2025
 
Original source : phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com

 

John Primer moved from Mississippi to Chicago with his mother in 1963 when he was eighteen years old. Shortly after landing in the Windy City, he began busking on the legendary Maxwell Street. That led to his gigs at Theresa’s Lounge which eventually catapulted him to bandleader positions for blues luminaries such as Willie Dixon, Magic Slim, and Muddy Waters. He was with Muddy when the band filmed the Live at the Checkerboard Lounge, Chicago 1981 with the Rolling Stones (which by the way is one of my all-time favorite live blues films).  This latest album from Primer, Grown in Mississippi is a meaningful tribute to his birthplace Camden, Mississippi where he grew up in a sharecropping environment. Primer stated, “The songs on Grown in Mississippi have a lot of meaning to me.  They represent sounds from my childhood, feelings I had while singing in church, rhythms and beats I heard on the radio and while working in the fields.”. Recorded in Clarksdale, Mississippi, this album delivers fourteen blues-soaked tracks evenly split between inspired originals and influential covers. The recording features a jaw-dropping list of guest artists comprised of Bobby Rush, Charlie Musselwhite, Watermelon Slim, Eden Brent, Lightnin’ Malcolm, Gary Vincent, Lee Williams, Deak Harp, Rickey ‘Quicksand’ Martin, Harvell Thomas Jr., Billy Earheart, Steve Bell, Aliya Primer, and Rosalind Wilcox.

Primer’s performance on Leroy Carr’s “Blues Before Sunrise” is pure bliss.  When I hear those opening harmonica notes pour from Deak Harp,  I am captivated. Earheart adds another layer of authenticity on piano. His cover of “Walkin’ Blues” hits me with a timeless energy as I cozy up to the slide guitar of Lightnin’ Malcolm. and steady beat of Lee Williams on drums. I love the way Malcolm and Williams later usher the listener to North Mississippi Hill Country with “When I Met the Blues”. Primer sings “it’s not good if it ain’t got no hot sauce on it”, and I have to say, there is plenty of hot sauce slathered all over the fun and funky “Nothin’ But a Chicken Wing” with Bobby Rush on harmonica. For another solid dose of classic delta blues, Primer and Musselwhite join forces for Big Joe Williams’s “Baby Please Don’t Go”. It’s absolutely wonderful. I’m always thrilled to hear Watermelon Slim and to hear him play with Primer and Steve Bell on Louisiana Red’s “Let Me Be Your Electrician” is a plumb delight. When Slim’s dobro rings out, it sounds so damn good. Worries and troubles vanish each time I listen to the traditional spiritual “Lay My Burdens Down” featuring the beautiful vocals of John’s daughter Aliya. This magical song also features the wonderful talents of Eden Brent on piano and background vocals.

John Primer is a modern-day blues legend, and Grown in Mississippi is as pure of a blues album as one can be.  This is a recording blues fans will surely want to take note of.      

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For more information about John Primer, visit his website https://johnprimerblues.com

For other PhillyCheeze reviews of John Primer, visit this link https://phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com/search?q=john+primer

 


Saturday, September 24, 2022

#577 > John Primer - Hard Times (PhillyCheezeBlues.Blogspot.com)

 


2022 – Blues House Productions

By Phillip Smith; Sep. 24, 2022

 

Original source : phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com

 

Hard Times, the very latest release from Chicago Blues great John Primer captures my ‘real-deal’ blues-loving heart with thirteen new originals.  With Steve Bell on harmonica, Lenny Media on drums, and David Forte on bass, this recording also features special guests Rick Kreher on 2nd guitar, Johnny Iguana on piano and organ, and John’s seventeen-year-old daughter Aliya Primer on vocals.  Primer states: “The name of my new CD reflects the world we’re living in today.  I recorded this CD to help us get through these really hard times.”.

I’m drawn right in to Primer’s churning delta-blues riffs on title-track “Hard Times”.  The slide guitar is absolutely wonderful as it sits in front of the spectacular piano and harp accompaniment.  Immediately following is the intoxicating and soul-warming homage to the genre “Blues-Blues-Blues”.  It’s one of my favorites.  With daughter Aliya on lead vocals for her debut recording session, “Tough Times” is an endearing track about sticking together.  The chemistry John and Aliya share brings to mind the Mississippi Delta Blues father/daughter duo Bill ‘Howl-N-Madd’ Perry and Shy Perry.  Filled with attention-grabbing guitar runs, waves of organ sounds, and doses of searing harp, “Trying To Make You Mine” is a hands-down fabulous track which I immensely enjoy.  With his great talent of painting pictures with words, Primer piles healthy scoops of certifiable blues on “Hot Meal”.  It doesn’t get much better than this.

As usual, John Primer and his Real Deal Blues Band perform the blues as it should be heard.  Hard Times is as authentic as it gets.

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For more information about John Primer, visit this website : https://johnprimerblues.com

 

 


Friday, April 5, 2024

#671 : John Primer and Bob Corritore - Crawlin' Kingsnake (PhillyCheezeBlues.Blogspot.com)

 


2024 – Vizztone Label Group
By Phillip Smith; April 5, 2024
Release Date : .Mar. 29, 2024

Original source : phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com

There are not many artists around who instill Chicago blues authenticity into their music as Blues Hall-of-Famer John Primer and Bob Corritore do. Paired together for the fourth time since 2013, this dynamic duo returned to the studios and cut yet another fabulous album. Crawlin’ Kingsnake is the name, and it contains a dozen ripping tracks. With Corritore on harp and Primer on guitar and vocals, they are joined by bassist Bob Stroger, Jimi “Primetime” Smith on second guitar, Anthony Geraci on piano and Wes Starr on drums.

After the smoke clears from the opening James Cotton song “Take a Message”, their title-track cover of John Lee Hooker’s “Crawlin’ Kingsnake” digs its claws in deep. Primer’s experienced vocals and precision guitar are fantastically supported by Geraci and the rhythm section. Then they roll right into Willie Dixon’s “Down in the Bottom” with Corritore keeping the song barreling down the tracks on harp. It sounds fantastic. They bring the fire to “Hiding Place”, a Primer original from his 1991 album Poor Man’s Blues. The song absolutely cooks. When they hit B.B. King’s “Chains and Things”, they play it sweet and slow. This one really brings me into my blues zone. When the big entrance of guitar and keys on Muddy Waters’ “Rosalee Blues” kick in, and I hear Primer start belting out the lyrics, I’m gob smacked for a simmering delightful listen. I absolutely love their performance of Magic Slim’s “Gravel Road”. It’s a signed, sealed, and delivered favorite.

It's hard to beat the lineup of artists on Crawlin’ Kingsnake. This album is about as real-deal blues as an album can get. I highly recommend it,

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For more information about these artists, visit their websites at : https://johnprimerblues.com/ and https://bobcorritore.com/

 

For other PhillyCheeze review regarding John Primer and Bob Corritore, follow these links:

https://phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com/search?q=John+Primer

https://phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com/search?q=Bob+Corritore

Monday, May 12, 2025

#744 : BratGirlMedia All-Star Showcase and Big Llou's Fun-Raiser : Memphis on Beale St. - May 7, 2025 (PhillyCheezeBlues.Blogspot.com)

 


Beale Street

Memphis, Tennessee

May 7, 2025

 

By Phillip Smith; May 12, 2025

 

Original source : phillycheezeblues.blogspot.com

 

I made it down to Memphis for the Blues Music Awards this year for the third time.  The parties going on at Rum Boogie CafĂ© and Alfreds on Beale Street were spectacular.  There was so much fun to be had with the never-ending musical talents of all who performed.

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·       All photos by Phillip Smith using iPhone




BratGirlMedia All-Star Showcase @ Rum Boogie Cafe

Gabe Stillman & Tate Berkey

Gabe Stillman

Gabe Stillman, Tate Berkey, Billy Bellino

Gabe Stillman

Billy Bellino

Billy Bellino & Richard Rosenblatt

Long Tall Deb and Colin John

Colin John and Gabe Stillman

Long Tall Deb, Billy Bellino, & Richard Rosenblatt

Long Tall Deb & Richard Rosenblatt

Gabe Stillman & Colin John

Sugaray Rayford

Danny Avila

Mike Zito & Albert Castiglia 

Mike Zito & Albert Castiglia

Albert Castiglia


Bob Stroger, Bob Corritore, & Anthony Geraci

Jimi 'Primetime' Smith, John Primer, Bob Corritore, & Bob Stroger

John Primer, Bob Stroger, Bob Corritore

Bob Stroger, Bob Corritore


Albert Castiglia, John Primer, Bob Stroger, Bob Corritore

John Primer, Albert Castiglia, Bob Stroger, Bob Corritore


Big Llou's Fun-Raiser @ Alfreds


Big Llou with Vince Johnson & the Plantation Allstars

Jeremy Powell

Vince Johnson

Vince Johnson and the Plantation Allstars

Vince Johnson and the Plantation Allstars

Vince Johnson and the Plantation Allstars

Vince Johnson and the Plantation Allstars

Jeremy Powell & Deanna Bogart

Deanna Bogart with Vince Johnson & the Plantation Allstars

Deanna Bogart with Vince Johnson & the Plantation Allstars



Kat Riggins

Kat Riggins

Kat Riggins

Thornetta Davis and Joseph Veloz

Joseph Veloz

Thornetta Davis

Thornetta Davis

Thornetta Davis

Johnny Rawls

Johnny Rawls

Johnny Rawls




Saturday, April 25, 2020

#442 : John Primer & Bob Corritore - The Gypsy Woman Told Me



2020 - Vizztone
By Phillip Smith; April 25, 2020

John Primer and Bob Corritore have teamed up once again to record yet another fabulously legitimate record of blues.  Primer instantly connects with his vocals, and enthralls me with his guitar phrasing.   He sounds so damn good as Corritore absolutely rips it up on harmonica.  Produced by Corritore, Clarke Rigsby and Kid Andersen, The Gypsy Woman Told Me also features Jimi “Primetime” Smith (guitar), Billy Flynn (guitar), Bob Welsh (piano), Kid Andersen (organ), Ben Levin (piano), Kedar Roy (bass), Mike Hightower (bass), Troy Sandow (bass), June Core (drums), and Brian Fahley (drums).  This twelve-track album contains ten deep covers and a pair of splendid Primer originals. 

Muddy Water’s “The Gypsy Woman Told Me” makes for a captivating listen as the title track.  With Welsh on piano, Roy on bass, and Core on drums, this one is slowly steeped in old-fashioned Chicago blues.  Corritore wonderfully takes on the legendary Helena, Arkansas harp player Sonny Boy Williamson II with “My Imagination”.  Primer’s guitar sizzles and Welsh holds nothing back on the ivories.  Dripping with emotion, their cover of Jimmy Rogers’ “Left Me with a Broken Heart” is exquisite.  With the driving rhythm of a rolling freight train, “Little Bitty Woman”, is a smashing song.  This Primer original features spirited vocals, tremendous harp topped with Welsh’s attention-grabbing barrelhouse piano.  Flynn, Hightower, and Fahey provide the backing for the guys as they close with “Ain’t Gonna Be No Cuttin’ Loose”, a James Cotton song from 1984.  Primer plays this with precision against Corritore’s textured and nuanced performance.

The musical chemistry between Primer and Corritore is incomparable as they continue to produce some of the best blues being produced these days.  An absolute must for the blues fan, The Gypsy Woman Told Me is a sheer delight.     

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For more information about the artists, visit their websites : www.johnprimerblues.combobcorritore.com


Thursday, July 4, 2019

#399 : Tony Holiday - Porch Sessions




2019 – Vizztone
By Phillip Smith; July 4, 2019

It’s the Fourth of July, and today I’ll be spinning Porch Sessions from Memphis blues-man Tony Holiday.  I love the concept for this record.  In the spirit of classic blues field recordings, Holiday visited and jammed with a ton of big names in the business, right on their front porch.  With Holiday on harmonica, he is joined by guitarist Landon Stone, and bassist Kid Anderson on all tracks.  Guests include Charlie Musselwhite, James Harman, John Nemeth, John Primer, Bob Corritore, Aki Kumar, Rockin’ Johnny Burgin, Kid Ramos, Mitch Kashmar, Jake Friel, Ronnie Shellist, and more.

The raw stand-out blues guitar of two-time Grammy nominated John Primer joined with both Holiday and Bob Corritore on harp, makes for an amazing listen on “They Call Me John Primer”.   It’s always a treat to hear Musselwhite.  He lets loose on “That’s Alright” as Kumar takes on the vocals to this six-and-a-half-minute blues jam.  And for an extra blast of cool, Burgin appears on guitar.  I dig the cover of Little Sonny’s “Woman Named Trouble” with Nemeth on harp and vocals, Matthew Wilson on guitar and Danny Banks on drums.  It has such a funky groove.  Harman and Ramos sound so great together as they break out a briefcase full of blues on “Goin’ to Court”.  “Hip To It” is a delightful harp blues instrumental.  It’s a rare treat to hear three harp players at once as Holiday, Shellist, and Kashmar interestingly play off each other’s performance.  

Hearing the musical collaborations recorded on this album, is like staring blues right in the eye.  With the Porch Sessions, Holiday reiterates exactly what the Blues is all about. 

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For more information about the artist, visit this website.. https://tonyholidaymusic.com/