Duke Robillard - Living With The Blues (2002) Lossless

  • 22 Sep, 06:41
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Artist:
Title: Living With The Blues
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Stony Plain Records
Genre: Blues, Contemporary Blues, Electric Blues, Jazzy Blues
Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 55:10
Total Size: 405 Mb (scans)
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Buy Me A Dog
02. If Walls Could Talk
03. Use What You Got
04. Goodtime Charlie
05. Painful Memory
06. Stratisfied
07. Hard Road
08. I Live The Life I Love
09. I'm Mad About It
10. Sleepin' On It
11. Living With The Blues
12. Long Gone Baby

Best known as the founder of Roomful of Blues and for his short stint with the Fabulous Thunderbirds (replacing Jimmie Vaughan), Duke Robillard had only released two blues albums between 1996 and 2002. Although he was awarded the W.C. Handy Best Blues Guitarist award for 2000 and 2001 and his tireless road work always included plenty of stinging solos, Robillard left the jazz and worldbeat tangents behind for this welcome return to his first love. Those who have followed Robillard's career know that he's never been tied to one style, and Living With the Blues highlights his eclectic talents. Robillard crackles on everything here, from the straight-ahead Chicago approach of Willie Dixon by way of Muddy Waters' "I Live the Life I Love" to the Roomful-styled hard swing of the obscure Willie Egans' "I'm Mad About You Baby" to the acoustic treatment of Tampa Red's "Hard Road" and the jump blues of his own "Sleepin' on It" (reprised from the Roomful years). He turns the Brownie McGhee title track into a tough Chicago shuffle, featuring the rollicking tenor sax of old Roomful alumnus Doug James, and closes with a bluesy rhumba-styled version of B.B. King's "Long Gone Baby." He also adds tough spunk to Little Milton's "If Walls Could Talk," throwing in one of the disc's greasiest solos along the way. Through it all, Robillard is obviously having a blast, whipping out tight guitar solos with white-hot precision and snazzy arrangements that never overwhelm the band or the song. The horns that dominate the album return Robillard to the Roomful sound that he clearly loves and, even though his gruff vocals are still an acquired taste, his singing is filled with such enthusiasm that you can forgive its technical shortcomings. There's a real sense of joy that infuses every track here, making it perfect for established Duke Robillard fans or newcomers who want to get a taste of the man's substantial talents.




  • myto
  •  07:17
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Many thanks for good blues
  • whiskers
  •  10:39
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Many Thanks