Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Jim SUHLER. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Jim SUHLER. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 23 de octubre de 2009

Jim SUHLER and Monkey Beat - Tijuana Bible 2007


Jim SUHLER and Monkey Beat - Tijuana Bible 2007

Blues

Texan Jim Suler has been George Thorogood’s lead guitarist for the past decade. But he’s also led his own band, Monkey Beat, for quite a while, and with it, Suler conjures up a serious Texas roadhouse blues-rock mojo. The album opens with the title track, simmering in a low-down buzz that truly sets the tone for what’s to follow. Elvin Bishop takes on the slide guitar chores on his song “Drunken Hearted Boy,” and Suler and his crew take on AC/DC’s “Up to My Neck in You,” summoning the requisite fury in preparation for Suler’s blazing guitar solo. The beautiful thing about this album is that it starts out nasty and just gets meaner. “Chaos in Tejas,” “Years of Tears,” “Mexicali Run” and “I Could’ve Had Religion” deepen a groove that is ultimately Texas juke-joint paradise.
By Philip Van Vleck.
**
Jim Suhler- Vocals, Guitar
Jimmy Morgan - Drums
Carlton Powell- Bass, Vocals
Shawn Phares- Keyboards
Tom Hambridge- Percussion, Background Vocals
**
01. Tijuana Bible 4:11 
02. Devil in Me 3:31 
03. Drunken Hearted Boy 4:42
04. Up To My Neck in You 4:53
05. Long Hot Summer 5:24  
06. Black Sky 5:10 
07. Deep Water Lullaby 6:08 
08. Years of Tears 5:14 
09. Po' Lightnin' 4:10 
10. Border Rock 3:30  
11. Mexicali Run 4:03  
12. Sunday Drunk 3:45 
13. Chaos in Tejas 3:56
14. Juice 4:07 
15. I Could've Had Religion 5:22 
16. Cold Light of Day 3:36
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*

martes, 20 de octubre de 2009

Jim SUHLER & Alan HAYNES - Live at Blue Cat Blues Club 1998


Jim SUHLER,Alan HAYNES - Live at Blue Cat Blues Club 1998
Label: TopCat
Recorded live at the Blue Cat Blues Club, Dallas, Texas in 1998
Release Date: Jun 20, 2000

Blues

You can count on Jim Suhler and Alan Haynes to do vigorous and exciting music. This live set was recorded at the Blue Cat Blues club in Dallas' Deep Ellum district. It has none of the studio touchup work that's fashionable on many albums that purport to be "live". On bass and drums respectively are Carlton Powell and Paul Hollis, a famously solid rhythm section that regularly backs Suhler.
The kickoff cut is "Too Poor To Die", the chunka-chunk rhythm of which hosts as sardonic and macabre a lyric as the version of "Black Cat Bone" by the poet laureate of Texas death music, Lightnin' Hopkins. The tune has tons of slashing, volcanic slide. A slide swapmeet of epic proportion brings on "Knockin' On My Door", a hard-hitting shuffle. Suhler sings the former song, Haynes the latter.
Another audience fave is Suhler's reworking of psychedelic bluesmaster Jimi Hendrix's "Are You Experienced?". It's replete with requisite feedback and sonic weirdness wrought not from a Strat, as you'd expect but from of all things, a National steel acoustic guitar!
So, kick back and imagine yourself at a stageside table at the Blue Cat. slam a beer. Slam another. and there you are, in Texas, set for an immersive, knock-out blues experience with Jim Suhler and Alan haynes.
By Tim Schuller.
**
The Blue Cat Blues club in Dallas' Deep Ellum district is where this live performance was recorded. It has none of the studio touchup work that's fashionable on many albums that purport to be "live". It figures, you could trust Suhler, Haynes, and TopCat.

The Blue Cat Blues club in Dallas' Deep Ellum district is where this live performance was recorded. It has none of the studio touchup work that's fashionable on many albums that purport to be "live". It figures, you could trust Suhler, Haynes, and TopCat Records to bring to you the music just as it happened, in a true-life Texas saloon on a winter night in '98. There is edge, tension and spontaniety as well as high caliber musicianship.

Suhler, the Dallas-born singer/guitarist has accompanied such blues notables as George Thorogood and Zuzu Bollin, and works with his own band (Monkey Beat). He's that rare sort of bluesrocker who can play straight blues more to the liking of blues hard-liners than many who're supposedly specialists in the idiom. He's reckoned to be one of the most formidable slide men on the sphere. Suhler's been seen on national TV on Conan O'Brien's show, backing Thorogood. He's currently a member of Thorogood's touring band.

Haynes is generally considered to be the more traditional blues stylist, though that's not to say he's restrained. Alan has played with some of the real heavy guys, like Muddy Waters, Albert Collins, Hubert Sumlin, and Stevie. "One of my earliest blues/rock influences was Johnny Winter and Alan knows Johnny from way back", offers Suhler.

The kickoff cut is "Two Poor To Die", the chunka-chunk rhythm of which hosts as sardonic and macabre a lyric as "Black Cat Bone" by the poet laureate of Texas death music, Lightnin' Hopkins. The tune has tons of slashing, volcanic slide. A slide swapmeet of epic proportion brings on "Knockin' On My Door", a hard-hitting shuffle. Suhler sings the former song, Haynes the latter. They tear into "My Baby's Gone", a fast-paced item made famous on North Texas' blues circuit by Fort Worth's Ray Sharpe. Then come room-rattling tom-toms of the sort that either mean you're either in a Tarzan movie or else Paul Hollis is pounding out the intro to "Don't Do It". Another audience favorite is Suhler's reworking of psychedelic bluesmaster Jimi Hendrix's "Are You Experienced?". It's replete with requisite feedback and sonic weirdness wrought not from a Strat as you'd expect but from a National steel acoustic guitar!
From CD Universe.
**
Carlton Powell- Bass
Paul Hollis- Drums
Alan Haynes- Vocals, Guitar
Jim Suhler- Vocals, Guitar
**
01.Too Poor To Die 6:47
02.Knockin' At Your Door 8:04
03.I Wonder Why 7:44
04.Down And Out In Texas 6:27
05.Don't Do It 4:18
06.Oh My Baby's Gone 3:43
07.Say Your Prayers 5:25
08.Are You Experienced 6:36
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*