Bobby Black - 70 Years of Swinging Steel (2021)

  • 02 Jul, 16:33
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Artist:
Title: 70 Years of Swinging Steel
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Little Village Foundation – LVF-1044
Genre: Country, Blues, Jazz
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 38:57
Total Size: 90 / 205 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Pan Handle Rag (Live) [feat. Larry Black] (2:50)
02. Lady Be Good (Live) [feat. Larry Black] (2:27)
03. Arkansas Traveler (Live) [feat. Larry Black] (1:43)
04. Tippin' In (Live) [feat. Larry Black] (2:45)
05. Water Baby Blues (Live) [feat. Larry Black] (3:56)
06. A Foggy Day in London Town (feat. Larry Black) (1:53)
07. Take the a Train (feat. Larry Black) (1:40)
08. Do Nothing 'til You Hear From (feat. Larry Black) (2:15)
09. Guitar Haven (feat. Larry Black) (3:16)
10. My Window Faces South (Live) [feat. Larry Black] (3:02)
11. The Honky Tonk Downstairs (Live) [feat. Larry Black] (3:01)
12. The Buccaneer Saloon Medley: San Antonio Rose / Don't You Ever Get Tired (Of Hurting Me) / Heartbroke [Live] [feat. Larry Black] (10:15)

It’s easy for people who appreciate music, to completely overlook some incredibly talented musicians from yesteryear. Not all were famous as Glen Campbell, Chet Atkins, or Roy Clark. Like Arizona-born trailblazing, world-renowned pedal steel guitarist Bobby Black. Along with his younger brother the late 6-string guitarist Larry Black, both grace this CD of 12-tunes that at times sends off sparks in all directions.

On 70 Years of Swinging Steel the proof is in instrumentals & vocalizations that show that there was indeed masterful guitar playing long before Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Roy Buchanan, or Stevie Ray Vaughn.

The short “Arkansas Traveler,” (presumedly from a Big Jim DeNoon radio broadcast) is fiery as the guitarists play fast marvelously, cleanly & with taste. Many are live takes with announcer break-ins to give the songs source credibility & show how they were presented originally.

“Tippin’ In,” (recorded at the Balconades Ballroom, San Jose, CA (1956-7) is also a stirring performance but the added charm: durable trumpet solos by Jim Hurley. The recordings are field-oriented, crude but they don’t sound amateurish. They’re well-recorded for the era, location & conditions.

Clearer is cut 5 – “Water Baby Blues,” (location unknown) taped in the early 60s. It’s a hurricane of notes with driving drums. A captivating example of talent caught in the web of another era. Larry & Bobby indulge in a cutting contest captured on this hot jump blues with swing jazz riffs.

Cut 1 & 2 (“Panhandle Rag,” & “Lady Be Good” recorded at Hale’s Dept. Store, San Jose, CA in 1954-5). Track 7 “Take the A Train,” may appeal to younger listeners since it was studio-recorded in 1991-2. One of 4 last studio songs by Larry who passed away soon after. “Guitar Haven,” is a marvel. Black imitated many well-known steel guitarists in their own tunings & called out their names.