Roadhouse Album Review: Gráinne Duffy’s vocal talents shine in “Dirt Woman Blues”

Gráinne Duffy — “Dirt Woman Blues” — Blue Heart Records

Gráinne Duffy may not be a familiar name to fans of Americana music (roots, blues, folk, country, and all that), but it should be.

Her fifth album, “Dirt Woman Blues,” should help a bunch. Not just because she traveled from her home in Ireland to Southern California to record it (although I’m sure that made a difference), but because she’s a first-class singer, songwriter, guitarist and storyteller.

She and husband / guitarist Paul Sherry wrote the nine originals here, and then filled out their musical lineup with guitarist Marc Ford, formerly of the Black Crowes, Gary Clark Jr.’s Austin rhythm section, drummer/percussionist JJ Johnson and bass/keyboard player Elijah Ford (Marc’s son), plus Grammy-winning producer Chris Goldsmith, Jimmy Hoyson, Sam Goldsmith, John Ginty and Peter Levin.

Duffy’s vocals on this session flow magically from ethereal to earthy; her musical framework roams freely from lyrical to roadhouse tough. And she makes it all sound easy. Her lyrics have made her a three-time Blues Matters Writers’ Poll winner.

The album opener, “Well Well Well,” rocks easily behind strong vocals that set a thematic and musical tone for what’s to come. “Dirt Woman Blues” follows with a slow, steady, rhythmic groove, and a darker story line: “Heaven and hell can’t help me now from the devil within….”

“What’s Going On” is a bluesy vocal turn toward the joys of love, “Running Back To You” is a soft and lovely R&B-tinged track with a lyrical guitar interlude, “Rise Above” delivers rootsy Celtic rhythms.
On “Sweet Liberation,” Duffy opens with slow southern rock feel and then shifts into a ripping Allman Brothers-flavored climax.

Duffy turns more soulward (if that’s possible in this heartfelt collection) with “Hold On To You,” then turns personally and musically defiant with the hard-rocking “Yes I Am.” The closer is “Killycrum,” a gentle, lyrical, acoustic guitar-led tribute to her home in County Monaghan.

In “Dirt Woman Blues,” Gráinne Duffy has given us a thoughtful, intelligent album filled with her soul-stirring vocals and the soaring music that powers them. Fans of all musical flavors should treat themselves to this excellent album and Duffy’s engaging talents.


Digression: The County Monaghan that’s home to Duffy is also home to the long-running (since 1991) Harvest Time Blues Festival, which returned last year after a three-year absence, and which has attracted blues performers from around the world. In addition to local and national artists, the fest has seen some names that are well-known on these shores, including Bobby Rush, Van Morrison, Honeyboy Edwards, Gary Moore, Philip Walker, Guitar Shorty, Eric Bibb, Johnny Dyer, Peter Green, Earl King, Melvin Taylor, Luther Allison, Byther Smith, Long John Hunter, Phil Guy, William Clarke, Coco Montoya, Tommy Castro and Walter Trout.

Now maybe it’s just a coincidence that Duffy grew out of this environment. But maybe not.


Here’s “Dirt Woman Blues”:

1. Well Well Well (4:07)
2. Dirt Woman Blues (3:49)
3. What’s It Going to Be? (3:12)
4. Running Back to You (3:22)
5. Rise Above (3:38)
6. Sweet Liberation (4:55)
7. Hold On to You (4:16)
8. Yes I Am (4:17)
9. Killycrum (3:31)

Roadhouse Album Review: Lil’ Jimmy Reed digs deep into the blues on “Back to Baton Rouge”

Lil Jimmy Reed — “Back to Baton Rouge — Nola Blue Records

From the opening bars of “Down in Virginia,” you can hear the echoes of the legendary Jimmy Reed, who wrote this tough shuffle, accented by a piercing high-end harp, with some very tasty piano runs.

This is the song that opens the new album “Back to Baton Rouge,” but now the artist is Leon Atkins, better known as Lil’ Jimmy Reed. He earned the nickname in 1958, when, as a teenage guitarist and Reed fan, he filled in for the original Reed, who was purportedly too far under the influence to perform himself. Lil’ Jimmy Reed was born.

Fast forward 60-plus years. The original is long gone, but the Lil’ One is 84 and still cranking out the only music he wanted to play in his younger days. He’s since branched out into other blues styles, but “I still stick to my Jimmy Reed numbers.”

He’s joined here by the very young piano man Ben Levin, who at 23 is finely tuned in to some of the great old blues piano masters, despite his youth. Levin and Lil’ Jimmy worked together for a song on Levin’s fourth album, “Take Your Time,” and the
bond apparently stuck. Levin also produced the session.

The rest of the band includes Aron Levin, Ben’s father, on second guitar; Walter Cash on bass; with Ricky Nye and Shorty Star on drums. There are five covers and five originals written by Lil’ Jimmy and/or the Levins.

Although the album’s title pays tribute to the Louisiana area when Lil’ Jimmy grew up and earned his stage name, the music begins with the gritty “Down in Virginia,” one of the many songs instantly recognizable as a Jimmy Reed creation. The harp work is especially memorable.

“They Call Me Lil’ Jimmy” is the story of Lil’ Jimmy’s origin and musical travels, written by Ben Levin, highlighted by stinging guitar; “Wish You Wouldn’t” pairs Reed and Levin trading bluesy solos; “Cincinnati’s The Place to Be” is Reed’s original tribute to Levin’s home town; Levin repays the favor with the lovely and languorous “Back to Baton Rouge.”

Lil’ Jimmy Reed and Ben Levin.

“In The Wee Wee Hours” turns the focus on Levin’s piano in a rugged version of this slow-boogie romp from Joe Liggins and the Honeydrippers; “Engine Light” is a kind of slow shuffle warning of a love breakdown; “I’m The Man Down There,” was a 1965 Jimmy Reed answer song to “It’s a Man Down There” (Interesting explanation below*), and Lil’ Jimmy does it just right.

“A String To Your Heart” is another masterful take on the Reed original, with a stinging guitar intro; and the closer, “Mailbox Blues,” is a fine tribute to Slim Harpo, another Baton Rouge contribution to swampy blues.

This is a deeply felt album of down-home blues. Lil’ Jimmy Reed / Leon Atkins takes his inspiration from Jimmy Reed and transforms it into a set of good old-fashioned blues. Ben Levin on piano is worldly beyond his years, adding a mood that could’ve been ripped from any juke joint. Highly recommended for late-night sipping and listening.


*Interesting explanation as promised above: The story of Jimmy Reed’s 1965 song “I’m The Man Down There” actually begins with the song “One Way Out,” reportedly written in 1960 by Sonny Boy Williamson II (Aleck Miller). Or maybe written with Elmore James. It’s unclear.

Anyway, James recorded the song in late 1960, but his version was not released until 1965. Sonny Boy recorded the song in 1961, and it was released then with some success. In 1965, G.L. Crockett reworked and recorded the song as “It’s a Man Down There.”

These lyrics from “It’s a Man Down There” help explain the answer version:

“Girl, I ain’t going out that door,
“Cause it’s a man down there.
“May be your man, I don’t know.”

Crockett’s version was enough of a hit (number 13 on the Billboard R&B chart) that Jimmy Reed created his version: “I’m The Man Down There.” I guess he just wanted to be The Man.


“They Call Me Lil’ Jimmy” from the new album:

Roadhouse Album Review: Lady J Huston storms through powerful “Groove Me Baby”

Lady J Huston — “Groove Me Baby” — Earwig Music / Unison Productions

Joyce Huston, or Lady J as she is known in the blues world, has been around the music world for a while.

She got her first taste of musical fame as a teenager, singing with Johnnie Johnson, Chuck Berry’s original pianist. And it didn’t hurt that her mother was Loyce (Pickens) Huston, a noted blues and jazz singer in St. Louis.

Then her musical training (including her trumpet playing skills) got her a spot as lead trumpeter touring with Albert King’s band in 1981. She was just 18. It wasn’t too long before she was King’s lead trumpeter, then his musical director.

That’s not a bad way to start your career.

After all that, “Groove Me Baby” is her first full-length studio album. And so this debut session begs the question: What took her so long?

The album overflows with the power of nine original songs (and three outstanding covers), written or co-written by Huston, backed by a lineup of razor-sharp musicians.


Here’s an excellent article by Bob Baugh on STLBlues.net that elaborates nicely on Lady J’s multifaceted career.


The session opener is the original “Your Call,” a tough old-school blues kicked into gear by a horn section that’s done to a crisp. The fierceness of Huston’s commanding vocals set the tone for everything that follows.

“Mean Stud Lover’s Blues” is another terrific, hard-charging blues with a message, and the message ain’t carpentry; On “I Want A Man Like That,” Huston reprises a big and bold jazzy blues sung by her mother in 1963 with the Chick Finney combo; “Tearing Me Apart” is a gorgeous smooth and soulful ballad.

Lady J Huston with Albert King at Club 54 in St. Louis in 1982. Photo: Elcardo Moore Sr.

That’s followed by Huston’s R&B-flavored version of the Albert King classic, “Born Under a Bad Sign;” her ode to the Covid pandemic is the sly uptempo “Corona, You Make Me Sick!;” On “Hide-Away,” Huston adds a strong vocal turn with the Jazz Edge Orchestra, who recorded the track with her in 2019 for a St. Louis Blues Society compilation.

“Groove Me Baby” is sophisticated soul; “Messin’ ‘Round On Da Bayou,” is laced with a funky New Orleans beat driven by Huston’s Las Vegas drummer, Jimmy Prima, nephew of the legendary Louis Prima; he hot swing number “500 Pounds Good Gizzay,” is an almost not-so-double entendre that updates a raucous little ditty from her mother’s repertoire.

Two bonus tracks close it all out: an instrumental take on “Mean Stud Lover’s Blues” so you sing along, and a stirring live version of “At Last,” the Etta James’ classic.

This is, simply put, an outstanding album in every respect. The musicians dramatically underline Huston’s commanding presence and keep her fierce vocals front and center while she storms through the set. Even the slower numbers are steamy enough to fog your soul.

It took long enough for Lady J to cook up this special musical feast; I’m ready for a second helping.


Official video of “Groove Me Baby”:

Tracklist:

01. Your Call
02. Mean Stud Lover’s Blues
03. I Want a Man Like That
04. Tearing Me Apart
05. Born Under a Bad Sign
06. Corona You Make Me Sick!
07. Hide-Away
08. Groove Me Baby
09. Messin’ Around on Da Bayou
10. 500 Pounds Good Gizzay
11. Mean Stud Lover’s Blues
12. At Last (Live)

Roadhouse Album Review: Michael Jerome Browne revives great old folk blues on “Gettin’ Together”

Michael Jerome Browne — “Gettin’ Together” — Borealis Records

There’s nothing like a set of great old acoustic blues to remind us of some of the origins of this classic American music,.

That’s just what Michael Jerome Browne provides on his latest album, “Gettin’ Together,” which he does with a handful of artists who perform 14 songs that reach deep into blues obscurity for much of this session.

Born in Indiana, Browne has lived in Canada since he was nine, where he and his musical versatility became part of Montreal’s coffee-house scene by age 14. He’s since developed into a world-class singer, multi-instrumentalist and musicologist.

More recently, he’s been a three-time Canadian Folk Music Award winner (Traditional Singer, 2015; Solo Artist, 2012 & 2008), won the Blues With A Feeling Award at the 2020 Maple Blues Awards (with 35 nominations since 1999), five-time Juno Award Nominee in both the Roots/Traditional and Blues categories, and Kerrville (Texas) New Folk Finalist.

On this latest session, Browne “gets together” with Harrison Kennedy, J.J. Milteau, Eric Bibb, Mary Flower, John Sebastian, Colin Linden, Stephen Barry, Julian McColgan, Teilhard Frost, and Happy Traum. Browne sings and plays a resonator guitar, tremolo 12-string, or his gourd banjo with this talented group of pickers, harpists, fiddlers, and percussionists.

The result is plenty of fine music, and not incidentally, a history lesson rich in folk music and the blues.

Some of the musical sources here should be very familiar to folk-blues fans: Brownie McGhee, Mississippi John Hurt, Booker White and Mary Flower. But much of the music Browne has picked (literally) for this album includes songs from virtually unknown names, such as Black Boy Shine, Rube Lacy, Bayless Rose and Big Charlie Butler, that go back nearly a century into the 1920s and ’30s.

Browne’s begins this blues time-travel on Hurt’s easy-riding “Monday Morning Blues” from 1928 with his 12-string and Kennedy’s lyrical harmonica. Next, Bibb and Milteau help out on Booker White’s “Shake ‘Em On Down.” Mary Flowers adds lap slide on the instrumental “I’ve Got the Big River Blues” by the Delmore Brothers. Sebastian on harp and Flowers join in on Hurt’s chestnut, “Coffee Blues.”

Just a little historical digression: “Coffee Blues” is the song that provided the name for John Sebastian’s band, the Lovin’ Spoonful, since that phrase is repeated in the lyrics. And now Sebastian turns up here playing harp on “Coffee Blues.” Coincidence? I think not.

Next, Browne duets with Linden on “Ham Hound Crave,” s song by the almost literally unknown Rube Lacy; slide guitarist J.B. Hutto’s electric “Please Help” gets an acoustic makeover; Booker White’s “Fixin’ to Die Blues,” shows up with banjo and fiddle treatment; the instrumental “Reverend Strut” is named after the Rev. Gary Davis, with Browne playing Davis’s original banjo.

“Married Man Blues” is from the little known Houston pianist Harold Holiday, or Black Boy Shine, noting that the original title should have been “Married Woman Blues”; another pairing with Flower on a lap slide produces a plaintive “Black Dog Blues” by Bayless Rose; Flower follows on a 12-string with her own instrumental “Wisecrack.”

A somewhat less obscure William Buch (Peetie Wheatstraw, who also called himself the High Sheriff from Hell or the Devil’s Son-In-Law)) wrote “Six Weeks Old Blues,” followed by “Diamond Joe,” by Big Charlie Butler while in the Parchman Farm Prison in the 1930s. The closer is Brownie McGhee’s “Living with the Blues,” with Browne, Sebastian, McColgan, and Happy Traum join the finale.

That’s a lot of history and a lot of music — there’s much more information in the carefully notated booklet that come with the CD. When you put all that together, it’s a smartly crafted set of acoustic folk blues that goes down easy. Browne has gathered the music and the players and they’ve woven a magical tapestry of this music and its historic sources.


Here’s “Coffee Blues” by Michael Browne:

Tracklist:

1. Monday Morning Blues
2. Shake ‘Em On Down
3. I’ve Got the Big River Blues
4. Coffee Blues
5. Ham Hound Crave
6. Please Help
7. Fixin’ To Die Blues
8. Reverend Strut
9. Married Man Blues
10. Black Dog Blues
11. Six Weeks Old Blues
12. Wisecrack
13. Diamond Joe

Roadhouse News: Here are the winners of the 2023 Blues Music Awards

Tommy Castro is B.B. King entertainer of the year for the second straight year.

Buddy Guy, Albert Castiglia and John Németh were big winners in the Blues Music Awards, held last night (May 11) in Memphis.

The evening’s top award winners were Buddy Guy, Albert Castiglia and John Németh, each earning two BMAs. Buddy Guy’s The Blues Don’t Lie picked up Album of the Year and Contemporary Blues Album. Albert Castiglia won Blues Rock Album as well as Blues Rock Artist, and John Németh’s May be the Last Time won Traditional Blues Album; Németh was also awarded instrumentalist Harmonica.

Here’s a complete list of the nominees and winners. Congratulations to everyone.

B.B. King entertainer of the year 

WINNER: Tommy Castro

Sugaray Rayford

Eric Gales

Bobby Rush

Mr. Sipp (Castro Coleman)

Band of the year 

Anthony Geraci & The Boton Blues Allstars

John Németh and the Blue Dreamers

Rick Estrin and the Nightcats

Southern Avenue

WINNER: Tedeschi Trucks Band

Song of the year

Altered Five Blues Band “Great Minds Drink Alike” (Jeff Schroedl)

WINNER: Buddy Guy “The Blues Don’t Lie” (Tom Hambridge)

Eric Gales “I Want My Crown” (Eric Gales, Joe Bonamassa)

John Németh “The Last Time” (John Németh)

Shemekia Copeland “Too Far to Be Gone” (John Hahn/Will Kimbrough)

Best emerging artist album

Blue Moon Marquee / Scream, Holler & Howl

DaShawn Hickman / Drums, Roots & Steel

WINNER: Dylan Triplett / Who Is He?

Jose Ramirez / Major League Blues

Yates McKendree / Buchanan Lane

Acoustic blues album

WINNER: Charlie Musselwhite / Mississippi Son

Corey Harris / The Insurrection Blues

Duwayne Burnside / Acoustic Burnside

Harrison Kennedy / Thanks for Tomorrow

Rory Block / Ain’t Nobody Worried

Blues rock album

WINNER: Albert Castiglia / I Got Love

Bernard Allison / Highs & Lows

Colin James / Open Road

Eric Gales / Crown

Tinsley Ellis / Devil May Care

Contemporary blues album

WINNER: Buddy Guy / The Blues Don’t Lie

Diunna Greenleaf / I Ain’t Playin’

Janiva Magness / Hard to Kill

Larry McCray / Blues Without You

Shemekia Copeland / Done Come Too Far

Soul blues album

Kat Riggins / Progeny

Kirk Fletcher / Heartache by the Pound

WINNER: Sugaray Rayford / In Too Deep

The Love Light Orchestra / Leave the Light On

Trudy Lynn / Golden Girl

Traditional blues album

Kenny Neal / Straight From the Heart

Bob Corritore / Bob Borritore & Friends: You Shocked Me

Duke Robillard / They Called it Rhythm & Blues

WINNER: John Németh / May Be the Last Time

John Primer / Hard Times

Acoustic blues artist

WINNER: Doug MacLeod

Guy Davis

Harrison Kennedy

Rhiannon Giddens

Rory Block

Blues rock artist

Walter Trout

WINNER: Albert Castiglia

Tommy Castro

Joanne Shaw Taylor

Tinsley Ellis

Contemporary blues female artist

WINNER: Ruthie Foster

Beth Hart

Janiva Magness

Teresa James

Vanessa Collier

Contemporary blues male artist

Selwyn Birchwood

Chris Cain

WINNER: Christone “Kingfish” Ingram

Ronnie Baker Brooks

Mr. Sipp (Castro Coleman)

Soul blues female artist

Annika Chambers

Trudy Lynn

WINNER: Thornetta Davis

Kat Riggins

Vaneese Thomas

Soul blues male artist

John Németh

Johnny Rawls

WINNER: Curtis Salgado

Don Bryant

Billy Price

Traditional blues female artist (Koko Taylor award)

Dietra Farr

Diunna Greenleaf

Rhiannon Giddens

Rory Block

WINNER: Sue Foley

Traditional blues male artist

Billy Branch

Duke Robillard

WINNER: John Primer

Johnny Burgin

Sugar Ray Norcia

Instrumentalist – bass

Bob Stronger

WINNER: Danielle Nicole

Larry Fulcher

Michael “Mudcat” Ward

Willie J. Campbell

Instrumentalist – drums

Chris Layton

Cody Dickinson

Derric D’Mar Martin

WINNER: Kenny “Beedy Eyes” Smith

Tony Braunagel

Instrumentalist – guitar

Chris Cain

Christoffer “Kid” Andersen

Joanna Connor

Kirk Fletcher

WINNER: Laura Chavez

Instrumentalist – harmonica

Billy Branch

Bob Corritore

Jason Ricci

WINNER: John Németh

Dennis Gruenling

Instrumentalist – horn

WINNER: Deanna Bogart

Gregg Piccolo

Jimmy Carpenter

Mark Kaz Kazanoff

Sax Gordon Beadle

Instrumentalist – piano (Pinetop Perkins piano player award)

WINNER: Anthony Geraci

Ben Levin

Dave Keyes

Jim Pugh

Kenny “Blues Boss” Wayne

Instrumentalist – vocals

Curtis Salgado

Danielle Nicole

Diunna Greenleaf

John Németh

WINNER: Shemekia Copeland

Roadhouse Album Review: Jennifer Lyn & the Groove Revival breathe life into “Gypsy Soul”

Jennifer Lyn & The Groove Revival — “Gypsy Soul” — J and R Collective

Just to make the rocking theme clear, Jennifer Lyn kicks off this fine little album with the title track, a bluesy rock ‘n’ roll song that would be right at home in any roadhouse worthy of the name. It’s filled with fierce guitar licks, some hot piano, and best of all, Lyn’s tough vocals.

I use the word “little” here not in a musical sense, since the music is actually quite large, but in the sense that this is a five-song EP, a throwback to those olden times when four songs on a 45 made up a mini-album called — an EP.

“Gypsy Soul” is a follow to the band’s Independent Blues Music Award nominated Best Blues Rock Album “Nothing
Holding Me Down.”

Lyn and fellow guitar-wielder Richard Torrance, who together wrote and produced, create a rich, rocking texture, very ably complemented by Jim Anderson (drums), Chris Addison (bass), and Barb Jiskra (keys).

Another rocker, “Low Down Dirty Shame” follows, with some fine harmony on the vocals and dance-floor-friendly beat. “Going Round in Circles” takes a soulful vocal turn wrapped in torchy blues guitar that stings in just the right places. “Give Me All of Your Lovin’” rocks hard again with Lyn’s vocal focused on a guy who might well be hanging at the jukebox in the corner.

The all-too-soon closer is “You Can Take It All,” shifting into sweet, sensuous harmonies and liquid guitar notes. A beautiful ending.

This is a fine “little” gem of an album. The music is a masterful blend of style, substance and songwriting. Lyn’s vocals come alive in front of these crackling musicians. They rock hard in and out of the blues and turn up the heat on the soulful end.

Maybe size doesn’t matter, but I wish there had been a lot more of what is truly a Groove Revival on this session. I guess I’ll just have to play it again.


Here’s a video of the album’s “Low Down Dirty Shame”:

Tracklist:

Roadhouse Album Review: William Bell’s smooth and sexy soul music defines this classic singer’s “One Day Closer to Home”

William Bell — “One Day Closer to Home” — Wilbe Records

William Bell is one of the original soul men. One of the last standing. Still creating that sweetly satisfying soul music — and more.

On his latest and 15th album, Bell turns loose his still-smooth 83-year-old pipes on a dozen finely crafted and perfectly executed songs that stretch the boundaries of soul music into a broader picture of American music.

Those varied skills are why, in 2017, Bell was awarded a Grammy for Best Americana Album for “This Is Where I Live.” He performed on the show as well, offering a reprise of his “Born Under a Bad Sign” (yes, I know it’s usually associated with Albert King, but Bell created it).

“One Day Closer to Home” offers a touch of all his creative powers. There are funky moments, R&B flavors, soulful interludes and even a little countrified honk.

“I Still Go To Parties” is the opener, slyly letting you know he’s still ready with a touch of funkiness, even if a bit subdued. “I Will Remember Tonight” is sweetly sexy and soulful, but with a lyrical fiddle echoing his vocals.

The magical soul continues through “In A Moment Of Weakness,” “Brag About You,” “Human Touch,” and “I’ve Got Feet,” all driving with echoes of the Stax/Volt sound, where Bell was a major contributor in the 1960s. “Let’s Make Loving Great Again” is simply a beautiful sentiment, gorgeously expressed. And that pretty much describes all the great tracks I haven’t even mentioned.

The closer, “Georgia Peach,” picks up the tempo, adds a touch of Otis Redding toughness, and leaves you wanting more of everything. So, play it again, and then dig deep into Bell’s recordings. Soul music doesn’t get much sweeter.


Learn more about William Bell and his vast musical experience at his web site bio.


Here’s “Let’s Make Loving Great Again”:

Tracklist:

01 – I Still Go To Parties
02 – I Will Remember Tonight
03 – In A Moment Of Weakness
04 – Brag About You
05 – Human Touch
06 – I’ve Got Feet
07 – Let’s Make Loving Great Again
08 – We Can Never Go Back
09 – One Day Closer To Home
10 – When I Stop Loving You
11 – Ain’t Gon’ Let It Bother Me
12 – Georgia Peach

Roadhouse Album Review: Big Harp George swings the chromatic harp on “Cut My Spirit Loose”

Big Harp George — “Cut My Spirit Loose” — Blues Mountain Records

The San Francisco Bay Area’s Big Harp George (Bisharat) makes his chromatic harmonica sound like he belongs in a big band full of swinging jazz and blues — which of course, he does. And on his latest album, “Cut My Spirit Loose,” he is.

The band is an impressive group, including guitarist Kid Andersen, bassist Joe Kyle Jr., drummers June Core and Derrick D’Mar Martin, Chris Burns on keys, Jeff Lewis and Ed Morrison on trumpet, Michael Peloquin and Doug Rowan on sax, Mike Rinta on trombone and tuba, and Ben Torres on flute.

Add Lisa Leuchner Andersen, Lulu Bisharat, Loralee Christensen, and the Sons of the Soul Revivers (James Dwayne and Walter Morgan), and you’ve got a choir of backup singers.

That’s quite a list, but it’s worth mentioning in detail, since the music here romps easily behind Bisharat’s supersonic harp work and clever songwriting. Twelve sprightly Bisharat originals grace this session, along with a cover of the Lennon-McCartney song, “She’s a Woman.”

The album kicks off with a swinging “It’s Tuesday,” an ode to the memories of Covid lockdowns; “Pile Driving Sam” is a bouncy little ditty that doubles down on double-entendre; “Give Me The Dark” argues that the night time is indeed the right time with a bluesy little tune that made me feel like I could do a soft-shoe routine; “Bustin’ Out” is a New Orleans-themed instrumental that stretches out the harp work; “She’s a Woman” gets remade with Latinesque leanings; “My Dog Is Better Than You” unleashes more Bisharat wit, begging for more canine values in a cruel human world.

“Jump Abu Lula!” is another canine tribute to his dog that’s a rollicking jump blues instrumental (except for a chorus that periodically chants the title); “Prince Of Downward Mobility” exclaims a reverse success story; “Ranty Town,” with a fine harp intro, expresses rhythmic disdain for rants of conspiracy; “Behind The Eight Ball” is a slow and bluesy examination of a bluesman’s troubles; “Take A Knee” is a back-porch-flavored down home blues with a country feel tackling that controversial NFL issue with the Soul Revivers on the gospel-like call and response; a gorgeous little instrumental, “Sunrise Stroll,” features the melodic virtues of the chromatic harp; “Captain Jack” closes with the dirge-like account of the fate of Kintpuash, Captain Jack, the chief of the indigenous Modoc people.

“Cut My Spirit Loose” is a fine effort by Big Harp George and his multi-talented backers, smartly pulling together his skills as a singer, songwriter and chromatic harp master for this swinging session.


Here’s a great interview with George from the December, 2020, edition of Blues Blast Magazine.


Here’s “It’s Tuesday,” from “Cut My Spirit Loose”:

Tracks & Credits:

01. It’s Tuesday
02. Pile Driving Sam
03. Give Me the Dark
04. Bustin’ Out
05. She’s a Woman
06. My Dog Is Better Than You
07. Jump Abu Lula!
08. Prince of Downward Mobility
09. Rantytown
10. Behind the Eight Ball
11. Take a Knee
12. Sunrise Stroll
13. Captain Jack

Big Harp George: vocals, harmonics
June Core: drums, percussion
Derrick D’Mar Martin: drums, percussion
Joe Kyle, Jr.: bass
Jeff Lewis: trumpet
Ed Morrison: trumpet
Michael Peloquin: tenor and baritone sax
Mike Rinta: trombone, tuba
Doug Rowan: baritone sax
Ben Torres: flute
Lisa Leuchner Andersen, Lulu Bisharat, Loralee Christensen, Sons of the Soul Revivers (James Dwayne and Walter Morgan): backing vocals