Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Magness earns three Blues Blast awards



Janiva Magness
Michigan native Janiva Magness received three 2012 Blues Blast Awards (presented by Blues Blast magazine).

Magness, who attended Mount Clemens High School while living with her grandparents, won awards for Female Blues Artist Of The Year, Contemporary Blues CD Of The Year for her new release “Stronger For It” (Alligator Records), and Song Of The Year for her original composition “I Won’t Cry” (co-written with Dave Darling).
"I never expected to win, especially up against this pool of talent,” Magness said in a release from Alligator Records. “All the same, I am humbled and very grateful."
Muddy Waters’ son, Larry “Mud” Morganfield, was a two-time winner, garnering the Sean Costello Rising Star Award and the award for Traditional Blues CD for his release “Son of the Seventh Son” (Severn Records).
Other winners include: Tab Benoit (Male Blues Artist), Trampled Under Foot (Blues Band of the Year), and the Sena Ehrhardt Band “Leave the Light On” (New Artists Debut Release).

To send info to JB Blues, please email Joe.Ballor@dailytribune.com


Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Detroit Blues Challenge Round 4

Round 4 of the Detroit Blues Challenge is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 15 at Freddy’s, 40000 Garfield Road in Clinton Township.
Competing acts in the band competition include: The Delta Twins, Dirty Basement Blues Band, Lady Sunshine and the X Band, Priscilla Price Band, and Al Savage and the Everyday People Band.
Lady Sunshine and the X Band won the Detroit Blues Challenge in 2004 and went on to finish second at the International Blues Competition in Memphis, Tenn.
The winner of Round 4 advances to the finals on Oct. 21 at Callahan’s Music Hall in Auburn Hills.
Other bands that have already advanced to the finals include the Dale Robertson Band, Smokin’ 45s, Big Ray and the Motor City Kings, and the 2011 Detroit Blues Challenge champion Chris Canas Band.
Competing in the finals in the solo/duo category will be Sweet Willie Tea and Pete “Big Dog” Fetters, the 2005 Detroit Blues Challenge solo/duo champ.
Winners in the band and solo/duo categories at the finals advance to represent Detroit at the International Blues Challenge in Memphis.
It’s guaranteed to be an afternoon and evening of top-notch blues entertainment.

DBS meeting and jam
Dale Robertson Band  (Blues Photos by Don McGhee)
The Detroit Blues Society will host its monthly meeting and jam session from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 8 at Andrews On The Corner, 210 Joseph Campau in Detroit. The event will feature the musical talents of the Dale Robertson Band.
Robertson is an energetic harmonica player/vocalist who is sure to get things heated up for the jam session, which always features an eclectic mix of Detroit’s blues musicians.

Blues, Brews & BBQ
On Sept. 15-16, the free Blues, Brews & BBQ festival returns to Westland City Hall.
On Sept. 15, entertainment will be provided by Sweet Willie Tea, Monsieur Guillaume and his Zydeco Hepcats, The Alligators, and Josh Gracin. On Sept. 16, check out Jones’n, Front Street Blues Band, and the Boa Constrictors.
Music starts at noon each day.

Acoustic jam
Fans and players of acoustic blues will want to check out the Attic Dwellers Acoustic Music Club jam at 1 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 9 at Celina’s Sports Bar in Hamtramck. Celina’s is in the location of the old Attic Bar, where the club started nine years ago. The Attic was one of Detroit’s top blues clubs for years, hosting many talented musicians, including the late Uncle Jessie White and the Butler Twins, among many, many others. If those walls could talk ...

At Callahan’s
You can always find quality blues music at Callahan’s Music Hall. This week, Callahan’s features Popa Chubby on Thursday, Sept. 6. The Hatchetmen open.
A CD release party with Doug Deming and Dennis Gruenling with the Jeweltones is scheduled for Friday, Sept. 7. Sonny Moorman comes to town on Sept. 14 and Ronnie Baker Brooks takes the stage Sept. 15.
A very special appearance by British blues legend John Mayall follows on Monday, Sept. 17. Sorry, that show is already sold out.
Upcoming shows include Roomful of Blues (Sept. 21) and Maria Muldaur and Her Red Hot Bluesiana Band (Oct. 13).
Check the venue’s impressive schedule at atcallahans.com.

To contact JB Blues, please email Joe.Ballor@dailytribune.com
 






   














Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Detroit mourns passing of Johnnie Bassett

It is with a heavy heart that I report that Detroit bluesman Johnnie Bassett passed away from complications of liver cancer on Aug. 4, 2012. He was 76 years old.

Bassett, known as Detroit's "Gentleman of the Blues," was a silky smooth singer-guitarist, who got his start in the mid-1950s with Joe Weaver and the Blue Notes (the studio band for Fortune Records), backing up musicians such as John Lee Hooker, Big Joe Turner, and Ruth Brown.

Johnnie Bassett performs on June 23, 2012 at the WCSX Blues Brews & BBQ Fest. Bassett passed away Aug. 4 from complications of liver cancer. (Blues Photos by Don McGhee)
"Johnnie Bassett was a wonderful musician and a good friend," said Gretchen Valade,  owner of Mack Avenue Records, parent company of Sly Dog Records, in a press release. "Whenever I walked into a room where he was playing, he would start singing 'Georgia,' my all-time favorite. He was sympathetic and loyal to his friends, and had a good sense of humor. He was a heck of a blues singer who wasn't appreciated as much as he should have been, and didn't have as many gigs as he should have had, but he never complained about anything. Johnnie was one in a million, and I will miss him terribly."

Bassett, a Florida native who moved with his family to Detroit in 1944,  recently celebrated  the release of  "I Can Make That Happen” on Sly Dog. It was one of his best albums ever.

“He hasn’t lost anything,” keyboardist Chris Codish said at the time of the June release. Codish first started jamming with Bassett 20 years ago. “He’s gotten better and better and is still at the top of his game," Codish added. "It’s exciting to play music with him, even after all this time. He’s a master of the blues.
“It’s his presence and the way he plays, his phrasing is absolutely amazing."

After a stint in the U.S. Army,  Bassett lived for a time in Seattle, where he hosted a Sunday night jam session often attended by a young guitarist named Jimmy James, who later became well-known as Jimi Hendrix.

Bassett returned to the Motor City in the late 1960s, but didn't headline his own band until the early 1990s, when he formed the Blues Insurgents. Bassett made up for lost time with a series of outstanding recordings.

He received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Detroit Blues Society in 1994.
Bassett was one of Detroit's most loved and treasured musicians.  Comments flooded his Facebook page following his passing.
"Our loss is heaven's gain," wrote Blues Society board member Wolfgang Spider. "The jam band up there has a new and wonderful member."
Drummer Todd Glass wrote,"It's hard to imagine this world without Johnnie Bassett in it. Thank you Johnnie for sharing your gift with all of us and for allowing me to share the stage with you here and there. So many great nights I was able to spend playing, talking and just plain having fun with you."
"Johnnie, smooth as silk," wrote guitarist Cliff McClanahan. "The best Detroit had to offer to the World."
In an interview with this writer less only two months ago, Bassett talked about continuing to perform.

“Especially when you walk in a club and everybody is glad to see you coming in. What can you say? You have to love it," Bassett said ... "I’d rather be doing this than anything else I know. It gives you so much joy just to see other people enjoying what you’re doing.  That’s what keeps me doing it.”

Bassett is survived by his wife Deborah, daughter Benita Litt, and his wife's children, Lynn Tolbert, Courtney Campbell and Kenneth Pringle. 

Funeral arrangements include a public visitation from 3-8 p.m. Friday at Pye Funeral Home, 17600 Plymouth Road, in Detroit. Floral tributes will be accepted at the funeral home, and condolence notes can be sent via pyefuneralhome.com. The funeral service will start at 11 a.m. Saturday at New St. Mark Church Baptist Church, 24331 Eight Mile, in Detroit. It will be preceded by a family hour at 10 a.m.

For more information on Bassett's music, click  www.johnniebassett.netwww.johnniebassett.net.

To send info to JB Blues, please email Joe.Ballor@dailytribune.com
 

Friday, July 27, 2012

Carl Henry fundraiser a success

CARL HENRY
Gary "Shadowhawk" Ellis reports that a well-attended fundraiser for ailing Detroit musician Carl Henry on Thursday at Scooter's Bar in Flint raised $2,000 to help with Henry's medical expenses.

Henry was not well enough to attend the event, but kept up by viewing photos posted on Facebook, and was able to thank the crowd via a phone call that was broadcast through the PA.

Two other Carl Henry Fund benefits are on the horizon: an Irish music benefit on Aug. 19 at Nancy Whiskey’s in Detroit and a blues music benefit on Aug. 26 at Cooley Lake Inn in Commerce Township.

You can make donations to the Carl Henry Fund on the Detroit Blues Society’s website (www.detroitbluesociety.org). Donations can also be mailed to the Detroit Blues Society, attn. Carl Henry Fund, at P.O. Box 488, Goodrich, MI 48438.
 

To send info to JB Blues, please email Joe.Ballor@dailytribune.com

 

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Benefit for Carl Henry


CARL HENRY
Blues musician Carl Henry has always been a strong supporter of those in need, donating his talents to numerous benefits, including the Detroit Blues Society’s Headstone Project. Now, the “big man with the big heart” needs some help himself.

Henry contracted a flesh-eating virus that landed him in intensive care and near death. According to Henry, doctors gave him a 17 percent chance of survival. But, following four surgeries, Henry pulled through, minus about 25 percent of his left thigh. Now, he faces another challenge as he embarks on a long rehab program with three visits weekly at a wound care center.

“I truly believe that it was the power of prayer from all my friends, which I called my ‘Mojo Warriors,’ that pulled me from the brink,” Henry wrote on his Facebook page. “I truly believe without all my Mojo Warriors’ good wishes, I'd be pushin’ daisies.”

Like many musicians, Henry does not have health insurance, so it’s not surprising that dwindling finances are another hurdle he must clear. But, Henry is receiving a boost on that front from his many friends in the Detroit music community.

The first of three fundraisers will be held at 6 p.m. Thursday, July 26, at Scooter’s Bar and Grill, 6004 Torrey Road, in Flint. An impressive array of musicians have donated their time and talents, including Broken Arrow, Lester’s Blues, The Boa Constrictors, Big Bill Harwell, Flying Crowbars, Greg Nagy, Tim Freeman, Motor City John and Sweet Willie Tea.

A $10 donation will be accepted at the door.

The fundraiser will include the release of Henry’s new CD, “Carl Henry and Tony Berci Live in Detroit – Eat, Drink, Boogie, Repeat.” Many of Henry’s friends, including Gary “Shadowhawk” Ellis (Broken Arrow Entertainment), Motor City Josh (Sound Shop Studios), Peter Jay (Peter Jay Audio) and Steve Somers (Alley Records) donated their time and talents to complete and print the CD, which will be for sale at the event and later available on Henry’s website www.CarlHenryMusic.net.

“He’s the first guy in line when somebody needs something,” said Shadowhawk, drummer for Broken Arrow. “Carl’s always right there. He’s paid it forward tenfold and now it’s his time.  He has a lot of equity in the bank and he’s being paid back by a lot of people.

“We’ve got his back.”

You can make donations to the Carl Henry Fund on the Detroit Blues Society’s website (www.detroitbluesociety.org). Donations can also be mailed to the Detroit Blues Society, attn. Carl Henry Fund, at P.O. Box 488, Goodrich, MI 48438.

The Detroit Blues Society has already delivered a check for $2,500 to Henry as a result of the first wave of generous donations.

Henry expressed sadness that he is not well enough yet to attend Thursday’s fundraiser. Two other benefits are on the horizon: an Irish music benefit on Aug. 19 at Nancy Whiskey’s in Detroit and a blues music benefit on Aug. 26 at the Cooley Lake Inn in Commerce Township.

“I want to thank everyone involved, from the performers to the organizers, for everything they have done for me in holding this, you will never be forgotten,” Henry wrote on Facebook, which now includes a Mojo Warriors page for those musicians needing prayers and positive thoughts. “When people ask you what love is, point at things like this. Thank you all.”

In another post, Henry wrote: “To see the outpouring of love from all sides as my friends help me carry a torch I can't do alone right now, is simply humbling, and re-affirms the love we share of life and music and more is so real. I will be better. And I will always be there for all of you. That is what life is supposed to be about, screw the other stuff. Thank all of you for joining me on that road.”

Johnnie Bassett ailing

JOHNNIE BASSETT
Another wonderful and giving person, singer-guitarist Johnnie Bassett, is ill and dealing with his health issues in a local hospital. He is getting stronger and his family appreciates the support he’s received and asks for continued prayers for a speedy recovery.
Known as “The Gentleman of the Blues,” Bassett is one of the finest people in the Detroit music scene.  So, Mojo Warriors, send your prayers and positive energy his way.

Salgado on mend

Alligator Records reports that soul blues singer/harmonica player Curtis Salgado underwent successful surgery on July 18 in Portland, Ore., to remove a cancerous growth from his lung, according to his manager Shane Tappendorf.

Doctors removed the entire lower lobe of his left lung where a metastasized mass was found. Doctors anticipate a complete recovery. Salgado had a similar mass removed from his lung in 2008. Salgado, who was diagnosed with liver cancer in 2006, underwent successful liver transplant surgery on Sept. 30, 2006 at the Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, Neb.

Donations to help with Salgado's expenses can be made online at: http://curtissalgado.chipin.com/curtis-salgado-medical-fund. Donations can also be made to the Curtis Salgado Fund c/o Odaglas LLC Donation Account at all US Banks or by mail to US Bancorp, 2550 NW 188th Ave., Hillsboro, OR 97124. For additional information, please visit www.curtissalgado.com.



 To send info to JB Blues, please email Joe.Ballor@dailytribune.com