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We are happy to be performing at this popular live music venue in Soquel, CA. Specialty coffees, excellent food and a friendly staff and funky decor. Delicious pastries, too, and we’ll provide you with some mighty fine Americana roots and blues and a lot of original music. See you there! Red’s Blues~~You Knock Me Out With this second release, You Knock Me Out, Red’s Blues has stepped up another notch into blues big league with the exemplary songwriting team of singer Beth Reid-Grigsby and her Blues Music Award-winning stand up (bass-playing and singing) husband RW Grigsby. Couple that with all their music friends joining in on the fun, and this new CD makes a very strong case for Northern California being the new torch-bearing center of the classic Chicago and Texas blues sound. Six stellar originals tell the couple’s individual and combined personal histories in an honest and cosmic way. Beth & RW’s love of the classic blues vibe pays off and yet, these songs could easily be covered by well-known singers in many roots music idioms. Nestled alongside are songs by their mid-20th century heroes Jimmy Reed (lead track, “There’ll Be a Day”, “Ain’t That Loving You Baby”), Memphis Minnie (“Lookin’ the World Over”), Big Bill Broonzy (“Lonesome Road Blues”), jump blues brother-sister act, Buddy & Ella Johnson (“Why Don’t You Stop It”) and Memphis Slim (“Mother Earth.”) Red’s Blues has a finger-poppin’ attitude—straight outta the afore-mentioned golden years when blues, R&B and swing all meshed together and dance floors every night were filled with snake hips and slow drags. Beth, with her sensual, southern voice and classy behind-the-beat phrasing is more a Julie London or Bobbie Gentry-styled singer: smoky with languid, sexy sophistication. She can swing too, just check out the big fun on “Why Don’t Ya Stop It.” This rich nightclub feel is missed on too many modern singers. The yearning confidentiality, the wise heart that Beth brings to her true-life stories reveal tales of youth seen through grown up reflection. RW, who has not lost his hometown Rome, Georgia accent has this quality also. Upright bass never had a better companion—it’s no wonder that RW has anchored the doghouse rhythm for Mark Hummel’s legendary Harmonica Blowouts for ten years. Together, Beth & RW have a rare and beautiful combination of poetry, humor and groove in their music. What other couple in more recent music memory had this? Could they be the blues Sonny & Cher? Johnny & June? Whether up-tempo or ballad, this makes for a great live show —part juke joint, part nightclub. They are uptown and lowdown. Their friends on this release are California harp masters Rick Estrin and Mark Hummel, Texas guitar masters Anson Funderburgh and Mike Keller, Texas drummer and RW Grigsby’s childhood music sidekick, Wes Starr (the dazzling team from Hummel’s Golden State-Lone Star Revue) guitarist and harmonica player Dave Earl and two Sacramento Hall of Famers, guitarists Robert Sidwell and Steve Randall. Veteran Bay Area Musician Dave Earl, now living in the Sierra foothills, played guitar and rack harmonica in Red’s Blues for two years. “Doug Crumpacker of Hucklebucks reknown, is currently Red’s Blues’ guitar player. When we have another guitar player on stage with us, he knows when to drop back and support the other artist. He’s a fine addition to our band and is up there with the best. Also a great part of our rhythm section is Tim Wilbur, Sacramento’s own shuffle king.” Doug, Tim and RW are all members of the Sacramento Blues Hall of Fame. Drummer/studio owner/engineer Larry Carr understands the great 1950s Chicago drummers like Jimmy Reed’s great shuffle drummer Earl Phillips. He also has a terrific beatnik bongo/shakers turn on one of the album highlights, “I’m Trouble (Hillbilly Bongo Blues)” penned by RW. If Robert Mitchum were still around, THIS 2-minute warning would absolutely be his theme song. Young Hammond B-3 lions are here too. James Pace (Tommy Castro) and Kid Andersen (award-winning blues producer; and formerly with Terry Hanck, Charlie Musselwhite, now Rick Estrin & The Nightcats), and John Cocuzzi all take turns and elegant swingman Cocuzzi adds his deep blues piano touch on three songs. It is always good to know what the artists themselves want to say about each song choice they carefully made and the originals they wrote: 1. There’ll Be A Day- the flip side of Jimmy Reed’s 1963 hit “Shame, Shame, Shame.” Original 3rd verse written by Beth contains the album title You Knock Me Out. 2. Poor Girl- inspired by RW and Beth’s time managing a ghetto bingo hall in Montgomery, Alabama and a girl with a gambling problem. 3. Lookin’ The World Over- Memphis Minnie’s tale of travels with her righteous man. Killer Estrin harp solo. 4. That’s All- written after Beth found a picture of her mother’s. A family tale of living, loving and dying. 5. Ain’t That Loving You Baby- Jimmy Reed cover features Mark Hummel on harp and the Golden State Lone Star...
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Website: https://go.evvnt.com/2072559-0
