Criticized by some as a Led Zeppelin clone, Kingdom Come’s In Your Face was one of the best albums I’ve ever heard. I won’t embed the clips because it’s audio only, but here are some gems off the album (if you like hard rock music)
- Who do you love?
- Gotta Go
- Get it on
- Do you like it?
If you like those two, here are more songs:
- Living out of Touch
- Should I
Enjoy.
Rock and Roll started with the Blues. The Blues has influenced and inspired rock artists through the years. Kenny Wayne Shepherd, a Blues star in his own right, traveled the south with a documentary film crew and a portable recording studio to capture several veteran blues players on their home turf. The resulting album and film, 10 Days Out: Blues from the Backroads, has been nominated for two Grammy Awards (Best Traditional Blues Album and Best Long Form Music Video) and is touted as “…a blues fan’s dream…” The album and film features Blues greats; B.B. King, Etta Baker, Gatemouth Brown, and many others whose music has shaped today’s music culture.
Check out the trailer for 10 Days Out here: http://youtube.com/watch?v=eseBs8SXhmw
Kenny Wayne Shepherd’s critically acclaimed CD/DVD Ten Days Out: Blues From The Backroads (Warner Bros./Reprise Records) has been nominated for two 2008 Grammy Awards—“Best Traditional Blues Album” and “Best Long Form Music Video.” The awards will be telecast from Los Angeles February 10 on CBS. In addition to the Recording Academy’s recognition, The Blues Foundation will honor Shepherd’s album and accompanying documentary with the prestigious “Keeping the Blues Alive” award for Film, Television or Video. The ceremony will take place on February 2, 2008 in Memphis, TN. The documentary is also nominated for “Best DVD” at the 2008 Blues Music Awards, which will take place in Mississippi on May 8. Shepherd will also be playing at the Sundance Film Festival on January 25th at Harry O’s in Park City, Utah with special guest, Hubert Sumlin.
The #1 Album on Billboard’s Top Blues Albums chart for 2007, Ten Days Out: Blues >From The Backroads chronicles the journey of renowned blues and rock guitarist Kenny Wayne Shepherd—along with a film crew, a portable recording studio and producer Jerry Harrison (Talking Heads)—through a ten-day journey into the heart of the American South. USA Today heralds the resulting documentary and accompanying live CD as “…a blues fan’s dream…,” while Billboard Magazine writes, “Kenny Wayne Shepherd passed for an old blues soul when he was just 18 and released his first album…So it shouldn’t be surprising that, at 29, he can hang convincingly with some real old blues souls…”
Directed by Noble Jones, Ten Days Out captures the stories of some of America’s best-known blues artists including B.B. King, Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown and Honeyboy Edwards as well as some of the genre’s lesser-known talents. Shepherd is joined by longtime collaborator and vocalist Noah Hunt as well as friends Chris Layton and Tommy Shannon who make up the esteemed rhythm section Double Trouble (Stevie Ray Vaughan’s longtime band). Shepherd and his team immersed themselves in the environments, which shaped these essential blues musicians, talking, recording and performing in kitchens, living rooms, front porches and local clubs. The goal was to get to know these amazing artists and to produce intimate recordings in intimate settings maintaining authenticity—no overdubs were used. “What happened is what you hear,” says Shepherd, “We kept it as real as possible.” This historic trip culminated in a once in a life time performance at a church in Salina, Kansas where Shepherd and friends were joined by the remaining members of Howlin’ Wolf and Muddy Waters’ bands at the aptly named Church at Blue Heaven Studios.
“A project like this, with all these great people, it’s not about me—it’s about the music,” says Shepherd, “and about the people who inspired me to pick up an instrument and make music. You’ve got to listen to what they sing or write about, and you’ll hear the people behind the music, the players behind the blues. And that’s what the blues is about—the lives these people led, and that we are living today.”
Since the making of Ten Days Out: Blues From The Backroads six of the featured musicians—Etta Baker, Henry Townsend, Wild Child Butler, Neal Pattman, Cootie Stark, and Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown—have passed away, sealing the documentary’s fate as an important historical work in the tradition of Alan Lomax’s The Land Where Blues Began. A portion of the proceeds will be donated to the Music Maker Relief Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping the true pioneers and forgotten heroes of Southern musical traditions gain recognition and meet their day-to-day needs.
This is hilarious:
Robbie Williams is going on strike in protest at the private equity firm that has taken over his record company, as other stars down tools in an artists’ revolt.
Williams, who has sold 70 million records for EMI, is leading a number of stars refusing to work for the company since its £3.2 billion takeover by Terra Firma, the financier. He is withholding the next album in his £80 million deal from EMI and his manager said Guy Hands, the new boss of EMI, was behaving like a “plantation owner”.
Coldplay, one of EMI’s few US chart-toppers, are also prepared to withdraw their labour. Their manager said that the band was considering its options after EMI’s head of music left this week, with thousands more redundancies expected.
Radiohead and Sir Paul McCartney have already walked out on EMI, which has cut advance payments to stars and told artists to work harder at promoting their music. EMI’s share of the British album market, already damaged by downloading, fell from 16 per cent to 9 per cent last year.
Read more.