| | Don Covay House Of Blue Lights CD Don Covay Discography of CDs
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Don Covay & The Jefferson Lemon Blues Band includes: Don Covay, Joe Richardson, John Hammond.
This album, credited to Don Covay and the Jefferson Lemon Blues Band, is not only a great record on its own terms, but it's sort of a black parallel/precursor to a few blues-rock LPs by white artists that sold a hell of a lot more copies around the same time. On the one hand, it's as solid a blues album as anyone associated with R&B was making in 1969 and contains some of the best guitar-based blues on Atlantic this side of that one-off Blind Willie McTell record that they did at the end of the '40s. The guitar blues, interspersed with some organ-based numbers, mixes with Covay's whooped and hollered vocals like someone caught a performance at some roadhouse 20 miles from nowhere in Mississippi -- except that it's perfectly recorded, like someone sneaked Atlantic producer Herb Abramson and a late-'60s tape unit into a roadhouse 20 miles from nowhere. But the repertory ranges wider than that description would lead one to believe, from standards like "Key to the Highway" and "But I Forgive You Blues" to a brace of Covay originals, including the jaunty "Four Women," the soulful "Homemade Love" (which manages to be smooth, raw, and cute, all in six minutes), and two parts of "House of Blue Lights" -- not the Freddie Slack/Don Raye song popularized by the Andrews Sisters, Merrill Moore, and Chuck Berry, but, rather, a mournful lament akin thematically and in tempo to the original "House of the Rising Sun," only more intense and serious. The organ, mouth harp, and guitar textures achieved on that seven-minute song ripple and shimmer as though lifted and slowed down from the Rolling Stones' "Street Fighting Man," while "But I Forgive You Blues" goes back to '20s and early-'30s basics (and is really cool, with the guitars isolated on one channel so you can appreciate the playing up close and personal). Much of the album sounds like the sonic and spiritual blueprint for Let It Bleed and Exile on Main Street and parts of Layla & Other Assorted Love Songs. Reissued in 2002 by the Sepiatone label in state-of-the-art sound and worth tracking down at twice the price they're charging (which is about what a vinyl copy would cost if you did find one). ~ Bruce Eder
Don Covay & The Jefferson Lemon Blues Band. On CD for the first time ever (originally released in 1969) with classic sought-after tracks by R&B / Soul songwriting kingpin. A rare and potent marriage of soul, blues and rock. 2002.
& The Jefferson Lemon Blues Band.
Personnel: Don Covay (vocals); Joe Richardson (vocals, guitar); John Hammond, Jr. (guitar, harmonica); Daniel Jones, Charles "Honeyman" Otis (drums).
Audio Remixer: William Arlt.
Arranger: Don Covay. House Of Blue Lights Music Don Covay House Of Blue Lights Songs House Of Blue Lights Music Review Purchase House Of Blue Lights CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Who Tommy CDs (1969) Hybrid; Bonus Tracks; SACD Hybrid; Remastered; Deluxe Edition
House Of Blue Lights album
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| | B B King Mr. Blues CD (2006)
House Of Blue Lights album
$6.39 With Hip-O Select's North American CD reissue of B.B. King's Mr. Blues (1963) in 2006, this comparatively inferior and overpriced import is rendered inconsequential. The original long-player was the artist's first for ABC-Paramount and centers on a trio of early-'60s sessions -- March 1, 1962 with the Maxwell Davis Orchestra, September 19, 1962 as Belford Hendricks arranges, and April 11, 1963 under the guidance of Teacho Wilshire. Perhaps producer Sid Feller is the common denominator, however there is an immediate stylistic kinship between King's presentation of "Young Dreamers" and that of labelmate Ray Charles circa his groundbreaking Modern Sounds in Country & Western Music (1962) era. Among the most startling similarities are the strong presence of the backing singers -- who, frankly might as well be co-leads along with King -- and the tinge of gospel influence heard in the soulful organ accompaniment. All of which occurs before King even sings or plays his first note. "On My Word of Honor" is the other entry from the same Teacho Wilshire-led recordings and bears a similar full-bodied production. The four Belford Hendricks-directed cuts are more ...
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House Of Blue Lights album
$10.59 CD Review: Michael Dyer – Nothing Seems Like What It SeemsBy Staff Writer L. Anne CarringtonFor Indie Music Stop (indiemusicstop.blogspot.com)April 14, 2007 Michael Dyer has been described as a master-level guitarist, composer, and arranger, with a rich baritone voice that is complementary to his musical style, falling within the genres of folk-rock and adult alternative contemporary rock/pop. Nothing Seems Like What It Seems is a CD of mystical acoustic rock with dual interacting lead guitars, intricate fingerpicking, strong bass themes, haunting voice and poetic lyrics. The majority of his songs are romantic; selections describing everything from love to loss, and disappointment and anger in love, can be found in titles such as "Union of Souls," "You're the One," "Luck of The Night," "The Dawn Is Still," "Nothing Seems Like What It Seems," "Translucent," and "Full Of It." The CD also contains other songs with other themes: the search for spiritual meaning in "The Trek," and the state of the environment in "Earthsong." Nothing Seems Like What It Seems is a very personal and emotional, ...
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House Of Blue Lights CD music
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