Sunday, February 6, 2011

2011 International Blues Challenge Winners

The Blues Foundation
MEDIA ALERT
IBC logo

BLUES FOUNDATION AWARDS GERMANY'S

GEORG SCHROETER & MARC BREITFELDER & COLORADO'S LIONEL YOUNG BAND WITH TOP HONORS AT 27TH INTERNATIONAL BLUES CHALLENGE


2011 IBC winners

[Memphis, Tenn.] The Blues Foundation's 27th International Blues Challenge ended on Saturday February 5th, 2011 with two packed shows at the Orpheum Theatre. Out of 220 acts from 40 states and 13 countries that competed for top honors throughout the weekend only two can be called winner in the solo/duo and band competition.


For the second consecutive year a non-American act won the solo/duo category thus solidifying the global scope of the event. The solo/duo winner was Germany's Georg Schroeter & Marc Breitfelder, sponsored by the Baltic Blues Society in Eutin, Germany. The second place honors went to Canadian Harrison Kennedy from the Canal Bank Shuffle in Thorold, Ontario, Canada.

For the first time in event history, the top prize in the band competition goes to a former solo/duo category winner. 2008 IBC solo/duo winner Lionel Young returned with The Lionel Young Band to win on behalf of the Colorado Blues Society. Second place honors were earned by Mary Bridget Davies of the Kansas City Blues Society, and the third spot went to Rob Blaine's Big Otis Blues hailing from the Windy City Blues Society.

Another event first was the bestowing of IBC's Best Harmonica Player. Yet another international participant, Stephane Bertolino from the French band AWEK, won for Blues Sur Seine.

The Best Guitarist Award was given to Rob Blaine of Rob Blaine's Big Otis Blues. He walks away with beautiful blue custom Gibson guitar featuring The Blues Foundation's logo and a Category 5 amp.

In the Best Self-Produced CD contest, the judges crowned 'Get Inside This House'by Joe McMurrian of the Cascade Blues Association in Portland, OR.

The finalists in the solo/duo category were: Back Porch Stomp -(Washington Blues Society, WA), Izzy & Chris (West Virginia Blues Society), The Juke Joint Devils (Massachusetts Blues Society), The Mighty Orq (Houston Blues Society, TX), Big Jim Adam & John Stilwagen (Colorado Blues Society) and JT Blues (Billtown Blues Association, PA).


The finalists in the band competition were: Randy Oxford Band (South Sound Blues Association, WA), Stevie J & the Blues Eruption (Central Mississippi Blues Society, MS), Grand Marquis (Topeka Blues Society, KS), Alex Wilson (Grafton Blues Association, WI), The Sugar Prophets (Illinois Central Blues Club),


Blues societies all over the world will soon be starting all over again as they begin their own competitions to determine who they will send to the 28th International Blues Challenge, the finals of which will be staged January 31 - February 4
, 2012.

For more info visit www.blues.org.

Monday, February 8, 2010

BoPoMoFo Releases Debut Album



The members of BoPoMoFo (ㄅㄆㄇㄈ樂團) are proud to announce the release of their debut CD, ‘Hell Froze Over’. As the title may indicate, the album has been a long time coming. While not exactly ‘Chinese Democracy’, the long awaited, recording sessions at the legendary Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee by Taiwan’s foremost proponent of hard rockin’ Chicago Blues, BoPoMoFo in February of 2007 were becoming a near legend themselves.
After much delay (included the deportation of their ace mixing engineer, Max), the CD is available for streaming and for down-load at BoPoMoFo - Hell Froze Over">iTunes, Rhapsody, Amazon.com, Napster and other sites. The ‘ready date’ marked the third anniversary of BoPoMoFo’s pilgrimage to Memphis and the birth-place of Rock ‘n’ Roll, Sun Studio.
The home of the famous Sun Records sound is a long way from Taipei, Taiwan, the adopted home of all the members of BoPoMoFo. The decision to go so far afield to record their first album was founded on the desire to capture that distinctive Sun Records sound heard on the early vinyl of Howlin’ Wolf, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash and the King, Hims-elvis.
All of the basic tracks for the album were recorded ‘Live’ on February 4th & 5th, 2007. This means that BoPoMoFo eschewed the slick, modern production technique of recording each instrument alone and then patching all of them back together again, in favor of documenting the collective, synergistic energy of a tight, contemporary Blues band.
All 11 songs feature the ‘Live’, in-your-face performance that you’d hope to hear at a top-drawer Blues club. Drums, bass guitar, and rhythm guitars, lead guitar, slide guitar and sax were all recorded simultaneously. Even the lead vocal on the one surprising cover song was recorded without over-dubs, punch-ins or do-overs. The results of long hours of rehearsal and lots of club gigs resulted in a ‘Hell Froze Over’ being much more than just another ‘good enough for Blues’ CD.
There ain’t no re-hash here of Blues club standards, either. Of the 11 songs on the album, 10 are original compositions which run the gamut from Jump Blues to Blues-rock, contemporary Blues and even a West-side Blues rumba. We hope that folks will like our music as much as we love making it.

BoPoMoFo - Hell Froze Over">Here's the link again for buying 'Hell Froze Over' at iTunes.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Koko Taylor, Queen of the Chicago Blues Dies at 80



CHICAGO (AP) ‹ Koko Taylor, a sharecropper’s daughter whose regal bearing
and powerful voice earned her the sobriquet “Queen of the Blues,” has died
after complications from surgery. She was 80.
Taylor died Wednesday at Northwestern Memorial Hospital about two weeks
after having surgery for a gastrointestinal bleed, said Marc Lipkin,
director of publicity for her record label, Alligator Records, which made
the announcement.
“The passion that she brought and the fire and the growl in her voice when
she sang was the truth,” blues singer and musician Ronnie Baker Brooks said
Wednesday. “The music will live on, but it’s much better because of Koko.
It’s a huge loss.”
Taylor’s career stretched more than five decades. While she did not have
widespread mainstream success, she was revered and beloved by blues
aficionados, and earned worldwide acclaim for her work, which including the
best-selling song “Wang Dang Doodle” and tunes such as “What Kind of Man is
This” and “I Got What It Takes.”
Taylor appeared on national television numerous times, and was the subject
of a PBS documentary and had a small part in director David Lynch’s “Wild at
Heart.”
“What a loss to the blues world,” said Chicago blues legend Buddy Guy. “She
was one of the last of the greats of Chicago and really did what she could
to keep the blues alive here, like I’m trying to do now.”
In the course of her career, Taylor was nominated seven times for Grammy
awards and won in 1984.
Taylor last performed on May 7 in Memphis, Tennessee, at the Blues Music
Awards.
“She was still the best female blues singer in the world a month ago,” said
Jay Sieleman, executive director of The Blues Foundation based in Memphis.
“In 1950s Chicago she was the woman singing the blues. At 80 years old she
was still the queen of the blues.”
Born Cora Walton just outside Memphis, Taylor said her dream to become a
blues singer was nurtured in the cotton fields outside her family’s
sharecropper shack.
“I used to listen to the radio, and when I was about 18 years old, B.B. King
was a disc jockey and he had a radio program, 15 minutes a day, over in West
Memphis, Arkansas and he would play the blues,” she said in a 1990
interview. “I would hear different records and things by Muddy Waters,
Bessie Smith, Memphis Minnie, Sonny boy Williamson and all these people, you
know, which I just loved.”
Although her father encouraged her to sing only gospel music, Cora and her
siblings would sneak out back with their homemade instruments and play the
blues. With one brother accompanying on a guitar made out of bailing wire
and nails and one brother on a fife made out of a corncob, she began on the
path to blues woman.
Orphaned at 11, Koko (a nickname she earned because of an early love of
chocolate) at age 18 moved to Chicago with her soon-to-be-husband, the late
Robert “Pops” Taylor, in search for work.
“I was so glad to get out of the cotton patch and stop pickin’ cotton, I
wouldn’t of cared who come by and said, ’I’ll take you to Chicago,”’ Taylor
recalled in a 2004 interview with The Associated Press.
When she first entered the city, she thought, “Good God, this must be
heaven,” Taylor said.
Setting up house on the South Side, Koko found work as a cleaning woman for
a wealthy family living in the city’s northern suburbs. At night and on
weekends, she and her husband, who would later become her manager,
frequented Chicago’s clubs, where many the artists heard on the radio
performed.
“I started going to these local clubs, me and my husband, and everybody got
to know us,” Taylor said. “And then the guys would start letting me sit in,
you know, come up on the bandstand and do a tune.”
The break for Tennessee-born Taylor came in 1962, when arranger/composer
Willie Dixon, impressed by her voice, got her a Chess recording contract and
produced several singles (and two albums) for her, including the
million-selling 1965 hit, “Wang Dang Doodle,” which she called silly, but
which launched her recording career.
From Chicago blues clubs, Taylor took her raucous, gritty, good-time blues
on the road to blues and jazz festivals around the nation, and into Europe.
After the Chess label folded, she signed with Alligator Records.
In most years, she performed at least 100 concerts a year.
“Blues is my life,” Taylor once said. “It’s a true feeling that comes from
the heart, not something that just comes out of my mouth. Blues is what I
love, and blues is what I always do.”
In addition to performing, she operated a Chicago nightclub, which closed in
November 2001 because her daughter, club manager Joyce Threatt, developed
severe asthma and could no longer manage a smoky nightclub.
Survivors include her daughter; husband Hays Harris; grandchildren and
great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements will be announced, the label said.
Taylor was a mentor and inspiration to the next generation of female blues
singers, said 30-year-old blues singer Shemekia Copeland, who first met
Taylor when she was 15 at a club in New York.
“When I saw her, I couldn’t speak,” said Copeland, the daughter of late
blues artist Johnny Copeland. “You can’t ask a woman who sings blues right
now who influenced them and not say, ’Koko Taylor.’ If she didn’t pave the
way for us we couldn’t do this.”

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Blues Quotes from 'Democracy Matters'

As Ralph Ellison wrote in “Richard Wright’s Blues,” “The blues is an impulse to keep the painful details and episodes of a brutal experience in alive in one’s aching consciousness, to finger its jagged grain, and to transcend it, not by the consolation of philosophy but by squeezing from it a near-tragic, near-comic lyricism.” This powerful blues sensibility – a black interpretation of tragicomic hope open to people of all colors – expresses righteous indignation with a smile and deep inner pain without bitterness or revenge.
As taken from ‘Democracy Matters’ by Cornel West.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Claiming Our Oyster - BoPoMoFo's Tour of Japan


The time has come the Walrus said…
Not to talk of sealing wax but rather to wax on about BoPoMoFo’s ‘Claiming Our Oyster’ tour of Japan.

The tour title might at first blush appear to over-state the case a bit but as this was BoPoMoFo’s first sojourn to the Land of the Rising Shun to preach the gospel of the Blues, it could be said that this trip was an historic one and so deserves a grandiose title. We’re talking personal history, here, naturally but every little story is a part of the larger cosmic epic. Om Shanti Om. Cosmic consequences aside for the moment, the trip was an opportunity for the band to play for a tried and true, Blues-knowledgeable audience in Japan and a chance for our resident sons of the Chrysanthemum Throne, Aki and Dafu to strut their stuff before the home crowd.

We headed to Nagoya, Dafu’s home turf on Oct 30 where we played a great little juke-joint called ‘Slow Blues’. http://www.slowblues.com/ The gig was set up by Dafu and had been where Dafu got called to the stage by our good buddy, Shogun of the Blues Guitar, Shun Kikuta, to sit in on a couple of tunes. This immediately established some serious cred for our boy with his homies, as you can imagine. Now, here we were putting his cred on the line. As the place started to fill up on this Thursday evening, we could see our own expectations mirrored in the demeanor of the Slow Blues staff and clientele.

No brag, but we did not disappoint.



The opener was a sweet duo called ‘Red Dirt Boogie Sisters’ who picked some very tasty country Blues and sang tantalizing duets in clear young voices. They’ve really got it going on and are as charming in their innocence as they are dedicated to their craft. Check ‘em out if you get the chance.

BoPoMoFo took the stage and broke forth with our trusted opener, Jimmy Reed’s ‘Baby, What You Want Me to Do?’- our guaranteed good ju-ju tune. It never fails to set the tone and the tempo for a night of fun. Without going song by song, the energy generated in Slow Blues that night could have blown out the walls of Bob’s Country Bunker. Walking in, we’d been an unknown commodity; hired on the strength of Dafu’s credibility with Shun. Walking out after the second set, we had made ourselves known as an electric Blues band of passion and quality.

This was no time to get cocky, though. We had a jazz festival and two more club dates to play in front of audiences that Aki and Dafu had confided and warned would be much more critical of our performances than the folks at Slow Blues.
On All Hallows E’en, we bullet-trained our way from Nagoya to Aki’s old stomping grounds, Utsunomiya, a city of over half a million, about 100 miles from Tokyo. Utsunomiya is also the hometown of the Bluesman who has become our patron saint in Japan, Shunsuke-san. We were to meet up with Shun later that day at the BeatClub, a live-house that also served as a recording studio.

That evening Shun performed with some traditional Japanese musicians playing the Shamisen (三味線) – a three-string banjo, the shakuhachi (尺八) - vertical bamboo flute used for Zen meditation, various percussion instruments and a vocalist. The performance was, in a phrase, transcendently ethereal. Costumed in formal traditional court dress, the trio of classical performers was stunning in appearance and mesmerizing in their performance. (The shamisen is an exquisitely hand-crafted instrument that is played with a plectrum that looks like a windshield ice-scraper made from tortoise shell. It would be best, for the sake of feline-lovers, to forgo disclosure of the composition of the resonating head of the shamisen’s frame. Poor kitty.)

Adding a modern, solid-body electric guitar to this ensemble was an anomalous marvel unto itself for it worked beautifully. Shun and each of the brilliant performers that evening flawlessly integrated the sound of the pentatonic Blues scale, bent notes and all, in to a wonderful musical mélange.

Our cross-cultural experiences continued the next day when Aki’s mom opened her home most hospitably to us, setting a very delicious spread of sushi, sashimi and assorted other traditional Japanese comestibles. This was a delightful experience for all of us; most especially for those of us who had never before had the honor and pleasure of visiting a Japanese home. We ate and drank and drank and ate for hours, enjoying every minute.



Sunday, Nov 2nd was our center-piece gig; the one around which our tour had been built by Aki and Dafu. The Miya Jazz Inn, a long well-established festival hosted by the city of Utsunomiya that features great players from all over Japan. http://www.utsunomiyamusic.jp/jazz/index.html Aki had finagled this gig as a hometown boy and we were truly psyched to show the folks what we had to offer in the way of tried and true Chicago-style Blues. Although we weren’t on the main stage, the energy of our music drew a very substantial crowd of young and old music fans dancing, clapping and feeling the good times roll. (We were told later that we drew the largest crowd ever for that venue. )

One venerable senior patiently waited until we’d stowed our gear to greet us with deep respectful bows of gratitude, touching his heart with tears in his eyes. When presented with a BoPoMoFo name card, he held it as if it were a temple offering and repeated his deep bows. Here was a moment to treasure; one that epitomized the universal language of music and the power of the Blues.

After reflecting briefly on the emotionally moving scene, we headed over to the main stage to hear Shun, who entranced the capacity crowd with his most exquisitely artistic guitar-work, mixing jazz, Blues and rock. Shun shows himself as a master whenever he picks up a guitar, not only as a soloist but also as an accompanist. Then, his skills as a rhythm guitarist serve to elevate and enhance the performance of the soloist whoever that may be. Possessing this tandem of talents, brought to full fruit by discipline and dedication, is what make Shun such a remarkable guitarist.

Since the BeatClub is a working recording studio, we took the opportunity to book a couple of hours to lay down some basic tracks on Monday, the 3rd of November. We chose two original numbers; first was ‘Her Name Was Ruth’ penned by Klaus ‘Mr Fixer’ Tseng – a song that is always requested at our club gigs in Taipei. We also laid down a tune written by DCR, ‘Late Night Drive’, the first instrumental we’ve ever recorded, and Junior Wells’ ‘Messing with the Kid’. ‘Messing’ is very special to us as it was taught to us by Shun who had learned it himself from the late, great master of Blues harp, the man who wrote the song. To us, this was another instance of the Blues torch being passed along; from Junior to Shun to us. To make it even more poignant, Shun sat in on the session and ripped off a beautiful solo.

That night was our turn to take the stage as performers at BeatClub. http://www.beatclub.jp/ We were the opening band for Shun and he would do us the honor of joining us for a couple of tunes at the end of our set. As good as all this was for us, our portion of good luck was enhanced by the fact that Shun had arranged for a professional video crew to tape his shows at the BeatClub with 5 remote-control cameras. As a result, they also taped our set from start to finish. This thrilled us to no end, because we’d also have a choice digital document of our gig at BeatClub. (We’ll get that posted online soon.)



The house was packed once again with Shun fans and fellow musicians curious about hearing a Blues band from Taiwan. Also in attendance were members of Aki’s family including his lovely mom, who had never seen him perform before. They were in for a treat as Aki, our ‘Flame’, burned a bright acetylene blue all night, inspired. Our set was a mix of standard Blues and originals, showcasing all the styles of Blues in our repertoire. The SRO crowd moved and grooved and ate it up with gusto. Aki’s mom continued in her most gracious efforts to make us feel at home in her country by presenting us with flowers and gifts after our set, making us really feel like VIPs.
Tuesday was a scheduled day off and most of us chose to chill while Aki and Dafu took a sight-seeing trip to Nikko National Park, site of Japan's most lavishly decorated shrine complex, the mausoleum of Tokugawa Ieyasu, the founder of the Tokugawa shogunate as well as beautiful autumn foliage. As sorry as we were to miss the gorgeous sights, the gaijin members of the band felt the need to rest up for the last leg of our expedition – Tokyo.



How Aki was able to get BoPoMoFo booked at Jirokichi, Tokyo’s oldest and most respected Blues club is a bit of a mystery. http://www.jirokichi.net/ Certainly, our long association with Shun was a feather in our cap but Jirokichi is a place where some of the greats of modern Blues have played; Sugar Blue, Eddy Clearwater, Big Time Sarah, Billy Branch and Lonnie Brooks to mention but a few of the autographs seen on the walls of the club.

The disconcerting query, ‘Were we out of our league, here?’ undoubtedly ran through all of our minds, though it was thankfully never given voice. Jirokichi was a place where we’d better bring our ‘A’ game, mos’ def’. With the pressure on and the room filling up with Tokyo’s Blues cognoscenti, we fired up ‘Baby, What You Want Me to Do?’ and proceeded to put the place into over-drive. The dragon was charmed by our music and the owners and patrons of the club warmed to us as a bona fide Blues band worthy of being asked for a return engagement. Hoo-Hah!

The year before, BoPoMoFo had played BB King’s Blues Club on Beale Street in Memphis as part of the Blues Foundation’s International Blues Challenge. We’d held our own amongst the hi-caliber competition there, finishing respectably in the middle of the pack. Eighteen months later, we knew we’d truly come into our own as a Blues band, judging from the response of the very discerning, very knowledgeable and highly critical audiences in Japan. There’s always more to learn, playing music; it’s a never-ending quest. BoPoMoFo’s brief experience in Japan showed us that we had come a long way from our Memphis shows. We had arrived at a new standard of professional performance. As Dafu so succinctly put it, ‘We exceeded all expectations.’

Amen to that, brother. BoPoMoFo had claimed our oyster, pried it open and found a pearl – the spirited appreciation of our brand of the Blues by the fans in Japan. That is a precious gift, indeed.

Arigato-gozaimas.