Thursday, April 28, 2022

Revolution Rabbit Deluxe

 

 

 
POUT is the second single released from Revolution Rabbit Deluxe's forthcoming fourth album, The Great Divide. The album represents a whole new change in direction: more mature; more thoughtful; and also more reflective. POUT is a landmark as it is the first recording of a song written for RRD by the bass player, Ben Davies. Its infectious post-punk joy and exuberance is introduced by a scream and the pounding of a floor tom. This energy is maintained throughout the song. As Ben explains, "The song came after a jam session early in 2020. During the instrumental, I sang, “DO THE POUT!” The remaining lyrics fell into place after that." So, what is the POUT? "I think it's the feeling we all have had as children and can still have as adults. A child crying over not getting ice cream and grown men and women who feel entitled to have the world revolve around them like they're the hero in their own movie." Prepare for the dance moves on Tik Tok. Or simply make up your own dance moves. Dance in public or private. We won't tell. 
 
 Further info can be found at www.revolutionrabbitdeluxe.com/EPK

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Ohibo Paronti

 


 

Bass player and singer with Ohibo Paronti, Jazzy Africana Songwriter musician, producer. The NEW Ohibo Paronti Album The Ballad of Gould out 29/4/22

The album, the third from Ohibo, has been inspired by a front-page newspaper article from the Empire News, dated 26th March 1933. The ten songs all link to form one complete story about the tragic life and death of Ivy Gould at the hands of her estranged and violent husband Abel. Research into those involved, together with the newspaper article, enabled the songs to be written around facts, together with ‘artistic license’ to ‘fill in the gaps.’ 

The initial song ideas were passed to Keith and Ian by Allan and were developed in the studio to the recorded works you hear on the Album. The journey is designed to show how perceived joy and happiness can turn into deep sadness and horror, before giving a final song of eternal hope for all.
 
Forty years ago, Aberdare’s Rhode Island Red had a colourful past from being told to be quiet by boxer Howard Winston to waking the dead at a funeral parlour, cue the realisation that they were not the only band touring that moniker.  
 
Unfortunately, they had just produced a pile of merchandise so with the help of some public house graffiti they picked a band name that wouldn’t be replicated elsewhere.
 
Newly christened Ohibo Paronti, the group performed BBC Wales showcases and high-profile gigs including Hammersmith Odeon led to them being muted as support for a forthcoming North American tour with the mighty Queen, but then the wheels fell off when a management change at the record company left them out in the cold.
 

https://swnd1.bandcamp.com/album/the-ballad-of-ivy-gould

https://www.facebook.com/ohiboparonti

 

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Lawson Vallery

 


Lawson Vallery was born in the southern US state of Louisiana, but soon after his family moved to Texas, that is where he grew up, always moving from town to town as the family followed the great Texas oil boom of the 40’s and 50’s. Beginning in the early 50’s most of his entertainment came from listening to the Grand Old Opry and Louisiana Hayride on the radio or going to movies featuring singing cowboys like Roy Rogers, Gene Autry and Tex Ridder. It seems that he knew from an early age that a singing cowboy was what he really wanted to be, so he began to document his young life in the form of poems and lyrics.

Then at age 15 Lawson left home and struck out on his own. He went to work on an oil tanker and began to see the world. At 17 he joined the military and saw even more of the world, and all the while writing about his adventures and travels. When he returned from the military in 1964, he went to work as a welder on oil platforms in the Gulf of Mexico and all the while continued to write about his life and the lives of he met along the way.

In 1975 his oil platform experience brought him to Norway where he began working in the North Sea and Norway became his home. Even during all the years that he spent working in the oil industry around the world. Norway was home. In 2011 he published a book of poems and lyrics based on some of his worldly experiences.

Then in 2016 he decided to finish that dream he had started more than 65 earlier. He would finally try to become that singing cowboy he had always wanted to be when he grew up. He released his 1st album in 2016 and now his new one, "Texiana", is out.

Since 2016 he has played for a lot of people in a lot of places. He says that he has no regrets for waiting so long to start, because the of life he has lived provided him with enough stories to keep on writing songs for what ever time is left. And now with a very talented and experienced band he can share some of those stories in the form of country music.

 

 https://open.spotify.com/artist/6o1shjj1Wxg88LC6cZgs2P

 https://www.facebook.com/lawsonvalleryband

Monday, April 25, 2022

Arlene Bailey

 


 

‘I was thinking about my childhood just yesterday,” says country-rock singer Arlene Bailey. “And when it comes to mental-health issues, there regularly seems to be some sort of a trigger from some childhood experience, but my childhood was idyllic, it really was. I couldn’t have had a better mam and dad.”

There isn’t, she believes, any easy answer to why she has suffered with mental-health issues from the age of about 15, only finally being diagnosed as having bipolar II within the last couple of years. “It’s just not always as black and white as ‘you went through something traumatic in the past’,” she says.

Arlene, now 43, brought up in Kildare, has just released her third album, Bailey, a collection of fierce, beautiful, country-rock songs in which she sings about love, lust, loss and pain, all with a deep reservoir of experience and hard-won knowledge in her voice. It is, she says with a laugh, “music that’s got a bit of arse to it”.

Her father’s side were singers, her mother’s side were musicians, and Arlene, from the age of about four, was a performer. “I sang mostly because of my dad,” she says now. “He recognised something in me. He’d give me stuff and say, ‘Listen to this, learn this’. A lot of it was American country. If we went on holidays — Salthill, Tramore — any opportunity he had to get me on stage with a band, he’d take it. I’d go up grudgingly, and then never want to get back down again.” Keep reading here

 

 https://linktr.ee/arlenebailey1

 

 

Sunday, April 24, 2022

Kid Norkjen

Kid Norkjen is a singer songwriter recording in Nashville. 5 albums is released. New single in 2022 January.

 


https://www.facebook.com/Kid.Norkjen

Saturday, April 23, 2022

Studeo

 


When Jeremy and Christine Stork first joined forces in the late '70s (in the popular cover band Casablanca)​, they had no idea what the future would bring, or that their union (both matrimonial and musical) would evolve into the beautiful, genre-defying mix of melody, vocals, and top-notch production which, as Studeo, ​has led to - in less than three years - multiple single, EP, and album releases, a record deal, and international acclaim​.  

​Bringing a wealth of talent and decades of experience (Jeremy played guitar for Melbourne's Moby Dick prior to the formation of Casablanca, opening for such legends as the ​Little River Band, AC/DC, and ​Skyhooks​; Christine has played in multiple cover bands and is a formally-trained vocalist), Studeo'​s songs are as refreshingly real as their love for the music and one another is enduring. 
 
Following 2017's release of not one but three ​EPs (including two songs which rose on international charts to levels previously unseen by an Australian independent act), ​Studeo ​signed with Bongo Boy Records, who included their song "Our Perfect Place to Be" on a compilation CD, "Love Is." That song went on to win the Jazz/Blues Song of the Year honors at the 2018 Josie Awards (considered the Grammys of Independent music), held in Dollywood​ in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. In August of 2018, the label released the duo's first full-length album, "These Are Our Days."

2019 saw the release of the duo's second full-length album, "You're The One," followed in 2020 by another full-length album, "Dancing On the Beach" and an EP, "The Storm."  Jeremy and Christine continued to expand their musical and songwriting horizons in 2021 with a new full-length album, "Life's a Journey."  The album's first single, "Secret Hideaway," won the "Jazz" category in the World Songwriting Awards for Spring 2021, and the duo was honored as well with the ​Akademia 2021 Rising Star Award for exceptional talent and perseverance in the field of music during extraordinary times. "Secret Hideaway" also picked up a very prestigious InterContinental Music Award for “Best Of Australasian Jazz,“ with worldwide winners chosen by a judging panel of multi-award-winning composers and songwriters who have worked with Ricky Martin, Celine Dion, Gloria Estefan, Selena Gomez , Miley Cyrus, and Grammy-nominated artists and music supervisors.

https://www.studeomusicaustralia.com/

Friday, April 22, 2022

Buddy Guy


 

American blues guitarist and singer, born July 30th, 1936 in Lettsworth, Louisiana, and one of the pioneers of the Chicago blues sound. Began performing with bands in Baton Rouge in the '50s before moving to Chicago in 1957. He originally recorded for Cobra Records (and, under the pseudonym Friendly Chap, for Delmark Records) before moving to Chess, where he worked as a sideman and leader when Cobra folded. He moved to Vanguard in 1967, and then went on to work with a variety of labels. He is the brother of Phil Guy.

Buddy Guy has won six Grammy awards, 23 W.C. Handy Awards, and, in 2003, he was awarded the National Medal of Arts. He was inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame in 2005, and into the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame in 2008. 

 https://buddyguy.com/

Thursday, April 21, 2022

Kike Jambalaya

 


 

Singer, pianist and composer of rock and roll, boogie woogie, blues and country, born in Madrid. His first album was an EP, "Esto si que es Rock and Roll" (Black Star Records - Feb 1991) which was followed by Treaty of Estrecheces edited by La Fábrica Magnética in January 1992. In 1997 "Eldorado Producciones" released "We "Remember The King", a tribute album to Elvis Presley for the 20th anniversary of his death, from then on he focused his activity on concerts. 

 In 2013 he produces Back Home Again (Rockanbole), a collection of jazz songs from the 10s and 20s with "The Swanee River Band", a sextet that accompanies him in the purest New Orleans style, being the first part of his "American Trilogy". In June 2016 "Snap Records" released "Hard Times", the second part of the "American Trilogy", an album also produced by himself. At the end of 2017, "Snap Records" releases "Rock´n´Roll Brother!" again, this time produced by Kike together with Leo Sánchez, thus closing his "American Trilogy!". 

In May 2019 he released "Tiempos Traidores", a Spanish album with his own songs full of blues and "swampy" sounds. During 2020 he makes periodic digital releases of a series of Eps (PIANO SOLO) dedicated to intimate conversations with his piano through the favorite songs of his entire life: Blues & Boogie, Standards, Country Style, Elvis I & II, Hank Williams Preview I & II.

 https://twitter.com/kikejambalaya?lang=es

 

 

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

New Section: PODCASTS

From today the podcasts of JAM Radio are available on this blog. Latest broadcasts, the new releases, interesting episodes... all in the PODCASTS section of this blog.

 

 

I forget Myself

 


 Behind the name "I forget Myself" is a musician with over two decades of experience, writing and recording his own music. This is available on all major platforms such as Spotify, Apple Music, Deezer, Bandcamp, YouTube Music, SoundCloud, etc. I have released two full-length albums so far.

He reviews PC games and is an active YouTuber, occasionally livestreaming to platforms such as Twitch and Steam.

He is an artist who loves painting as a medium. He creates original artwork, mostly abstract pieces.

He is a tabletop gaming enthusiast and enjoys painting miniatures too, particularly those made by Games Workshop.

He is also an aspiring fiction writer with a love of English literature, being an avid reader.

In terms of live experience he has played more than one hundred live performances throughout six actively-gigging bands for over a decade, mostly in the capacity as a guitarist and backing vocalist. The most notable band he was the bassist and backing vocalist for from 2007 – 2012 signed an album distribution deal with Sony BMG, headlined national music festivals, had a successful national tour and opened for US rock giants Underoath when they toured in 2008.

He has attempted forming a live band from 2018 to 2019, without managing to find suitable musicians he is now planning to play live shows solo and acoustically from 2022 onwards. Stay tuned for more details.

https://www.iforgetmyself.com/

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

The Water Dogs

 


 

The Water Dogs are an Indie/Alternative sibling trio based out of Buffalo, NY, USA. The Water Dogs have been heard on radio stations in England, Spain,Italy, Germany, Australia, South Africa, NYC, and in their hometown of Buffalo, NY.They perform at various venues, including Staten Islands Richmond County Fair, Artparks Artbar, and six years at the Music is Art Festival! 
 
The Water Dogs have been actively creating music together since 2014. The siblings released their first full length album in 2018, entitled:‘For Someone Else, an EP in 2020: Pure Confusion, and in 2021 they
released their second full length album: Kind Words! In February 2022 they released their single: Kaleidoscope. Their latest single: Come on Now was released on April 8th. They look forward to
their next single Human Mind which will be made available in May! 
 

Monday, April 18, 2022

Tony Joe White

 


An unforeseen album more than a decade in the making, Smoke From the Chimney offers nine previously unknown home recordings by the legendary songwriter Tony Joe White. Discovered after his death, these unadorned voice/guitar demos have been transformed by producer Dan Auerbach (The Black Keys) and Nashville’s most seasoned studio players, in service to White’s eclectic style.

“It’s tough to put Tony Joe into a genre and always has been,” says Jody White, his son and longtime manager. “But, Dan took some of the songs I felt were the most difficult to fit in any genre and built them into amazing, amazing tracks.”

Listening to Smoke From the Chimney as a whole, the result is stunning. Not only are these songs magnificently written, the rich layers of production harken back to the albums he recorded in the late ’60s and early ‘70s in Nashville and Muscle Shoals, just as he was emerging as an internationally recognized songwriter and recording artist.

The imagery and character development in narratives like “Over You” and “Billy” are especially staggering when you consider they are purely fiction. Meanwhile, “Scary Stories” and “Bubba Jones” will satisfy fans of the swamp rock side of Tony Joe’s discography, even as the pulsating “Listen to Your Song” stands out as a modern message of empowerment. 

“These songs feel like a collection to me and they all seem to work together, in a weird way, even though they’re so different,” says Auerbach, who is releasing the album on his Easy Eye Sound label. “There’s some heartbreaking ballads and some really raunchy carnal blues. But it all works together like scenes of a movie.”

Across five decades as a performer and storyteller, Tony Joe White left an indelible mark on American music. His catalog offers indisputable classics such as “Polk Salad Annie” and “Rainy Night in Georgia,” and his songs have been recorded by Ray Charles, Kenny Chesney, Waylon Jennings, Tim McGraw, Willie Nelson, Elvis Presley, Dusty Springfield, and Tina Turner.

In the last 10 to 15 years of his life, Tony Joe would preserve new compositions or revisit older tracks in his home studio with only a guitar (usually his Stratocaster) and that inimitable voice. Most of that material would ultimately wind up on his late-career albums. But when an unproven song didn’t make the cut for a release, or if he couldn’t get another artist interested, the song stayed right where it was, as Tony Joe moved on to other things. This dismissal was not a reflection of the song’s quality; in fact, it meant quite the opposite, as he would only consider pitching his best material.

After his father’s death in 2018, Jody started transferring those multitrack home recordings to digital files. Looking back on the moment he unearthed the demo of “Smoke From the Chimney,” he recalls a mix of happiness, gratification, and shock. As he continued to find other songs that didn’t make an album, he moved the material into a separate folder. Within a year, those select recordings would evolve into Smoke From the Chimney.

Jody says that even in those basic tracks, that definitive Tony Joe White groove instantly stood out. “He always finds a tempo and a pocket that is exactly right. And it’s a little bit different than anybody else would choose themselves,” he says.

On the songs “Del Rio You’re Making Me Cry” and “Boot Money,” that groove allows the storyline to unfold at precisely the right pace, ensuring that the listener doesn’t miss the West Texas rainbow or the end-of-the-work-week reward. Drawing from the natural landscape, the dramatic visuals of “Someone Is Crying” call to mind the opening moments of an epic film, or perhaps the point of no return. In contrast, the wistful title track simply wouldn’t capture such intimacy at any other tempo.

Ever since meeting Tony Joe backstage at an Australian music festival in 2009, Auerbach sought to make a record with him. For nearly a decade, Jody tried to line up session time for them but Tony Joe demurred. “For one reason or another, my Dad would never just want to go into a studio and write with somebody, or go work with somebody,” Jody says. “He liked to do it at his place, and his way, and it turned out how it turned out, you know what I mean? So, this album really all worked out perfectly. He was making these tracks for Dan all along, but we just didn’t know it.”

Auerbach agrees. “Jody and I had been talking about this record for so long, and it didn’t happen for a reason,” he says. “It’s because it wasn’t supposed to happen. I was in a nervous cast of characters until the last few years, and if you’d given it to me any earlier, it wouldn’t have been right. I felt like all these people on the record were the right people and they laid in there behind Tony Joe. It felt really magical when we were making it happen.”

While recovering these recordings, Jody encountered an envelope of vintage photographs of Tony Joe White in his prime, taken during some downtime at his Nashville-area farm. Auerbach opted to hang those pictures in the studio as the session players and special guests like Marcus King built around the guitar-vocal demos. There was no speeding up or slowing down the source material, nor was there any vocal manipulation. When Auerbach realized that Tony Joe didn’t have any treble in his voice, he arranged the songs with a darker approach, one that suits the mood of these nine songs.

Jody believes that his father would love the way Smoke From the Chimney turned out. “I feel like it’s validation that Tony Joe was one of the greatest of all time,” he says. “That he could make something so potent, even so late in life, is something that not many people can do. I think it’s going to make people who loved him already love him even more.”

  https://www.tonyjoewhite.com

Sunday, April 17, 2022

Jay Hawkins

 


 "Screaming" Jay Hawkins was born and raised in Cleveland, Ohio. At the age of 18 months, Hawkins was put up for adoption and shortly thereafter was adopted and raised by Blackfoot Indians. Hawkins studied classical piano as a child and learned guitar in his 20s. In a 1993 interview, Hawkins recounts telling his music tutor,   ...to leave before I make your life miserable [...] because with the type of music I want to play. The things I want to do with music and don't want to do it the old conventional way that everybody knows. I want to come up with my own ideas. I've got all the information that I need to get from you to do what I want, now if you stick around, I'm going to make your life miserable.

His initial goal was to become an opera singer (Hawkins cited Paul Robeson as his musical idol in interviews), but when his initial ambitions failed, he began his career as a conventional blues singer and pianist. Other influences included Mario Lanza, Enrico Caruso, Lionel Hampton, Dizzy Gillespie, Charles Brown, Amos Milburn, Wynonie Harris, Nellie Lutcher, Roy Brown, Jimmy Witherspoon, Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, Roy Milton, Elmore James, Lightnin' Hopkins and H-Bomb Ferguson.

He joined the US Army with a forged birth certificate in 1942 (aged 13), and allegedly served in a combat role, with his fellow soldiers and higher-ups around him ignoring the fact he was substantially underage. During this time, he also entertained the troops as part of his service. In 1944, he enlisted in the Army Air Forces, being honorably discharged in 1952. Hawkins was an avid and formidable boxer during his years in the US Army (and later Air Force) boxing circuit. In 1949, he was the middleweight boxing champion of Alaska. In 1951, he joined guitarist Tiny Grimes' band, and was subsequently featured on some of Grimes' recordings. When Hawkins became a solo performer, he often performed in a stylish wardrobe of leopard skins, red leather, and wild hats.

Hawkins' later releases included "Constipation Blues" (which included a spoken introduction by Hawkins in which he states he wrote the song because no one had written a blues song before about "real pain"), "Orange Colored Sky", and "Feast of the Mau Mau". Nothing he released, however, had the monumental success of "I Put a Spell on You". In Paris in 1999 and at the Taste of Chicago festival, he actually performed "Constipation Blues" with a toilet onstage.

He continued to tour and record through the 1960s and 1970s, particularly in Europe, where he was very popular. Hawkins released a single recording of mainstream ballads in 1969, "Too Many Teardrops" and the Hawaiian styled "Makaha Waves" on the flip-side. In February 1976, he suffered facial injuries when he was burned by one of his flaming props while performing with his guitarist Mike Armando at the Virginia Theater in Alexandria, Virginia. He appeared in performance (as himself) in the Alan Freed bio-pic American Hot Wax in 1978. Subsequently, filmmaker Jim Jarmusch featured "I Put a Spell on You" on the soundtrack – and deep in the plot – of his film Stranger Than Paradise (1983) and then Hawkins himself as a hotel night clerk in his Mystery Train and in roles in Álex de la Iglesia's Perdita Durango and Bill Duke's adaptation of Chester Himes' A Rage in Harlem.

In 1983, Hawkins relocated to the New York area. In 1984 and 1985, Hawkins collaborated with garage rockers the Fuzztones, resulting in Screamin' Jay Hawkins and the Fuzztones Live album recorded at Irving Plaza in December 1984. They performed in the 1986 movie Joey.

In 1990, Hawkins performed the song "Sirens Burnin'," which was featured in the 1990 horror film Night Angel.

In July 1991, Hawkins released his album Black Music for White People. The record features covers of two Tom Waits compositions: "Heart Attack and Vine" (which, later that year, was used in a European Levi's advertisement without Waits' permission, resulting in a lawsuit), and "Ice Cream Man" (a Waits original and not a cover of the John Brim classic). Hawkins also covered the Waits song "Whistlin' Past the Graveyard", for his album Somethin' Funny Goin' On. In 1993, his version of "Heart Attack and Vine" became his only UK hit, reaching No. 42 on the UK singles chart. In 1993, Hawkins moved to France.

When Dread Zeppelin recorded their "disco" album, It's Not Unusual in 1992, producer Jah Paul Jo asked Hawkins to guest. He performed the songs "Jungle Boogie" and "Disco Inferno". He also toured with the Clash and Nick Cave during this period, and not only became a fixture of blues festivals but appeared at many film festivals as well, including the Telluride Film Festival premiere of Mystery Train.

His 1957 single "Frenzy" (found on the early 1980s compilation of the same name) was included in the compilation CD, Songs in the Key of X: Music from and Inspired by the X-Files, in 1996. This song was featured in the show's Season 2 episode "Humbug". It was also covered by the band Batmobile.

In 2001, the Greek director and writer Nicholas Triandafyllidis made the documentary Screamin' Jay Hawkins: I Put a Spell on Me about various stages of his life and career, including a filming of his last-ever live performance, in Athens on December 11, 1999, two months before his death, following a performance the day before in Salonica. In the documentary notable artists such as Jim Jarmusch, Bo Diddley, Eric Burdon, Frank Ash, Arthur Brown and Michael Ochs talked about Screamin' Jay Hawkins' early life, personality and career, and about his incredible talent. 

Hawkins died after emergency surgery from an aneurysm on February 12, 2000, in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France, near Paris, at 70 years old.