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I started a quest to find terrific blues music and incredible musicianship when I was just a little kid. I also have a tremendous appreciation of fine musical instruments and equipment. One of my greatest joys all of my life was sharing my finds with my friends. I'm now publishing my journey. I hope that you come along!


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Showing posts with label The Blues Doctors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Blues Doctors. Show all posts

Monday, August 13, 2018

Modern Blues Harmonica label artists: The Blues Doctors - Same Old Blues Again - New Release Review

I just had the opportunity to review the most recent release, Same Old Blues Again, from The Blues Doctors and it's cool. Opening with The Champs' track, Tequila, a Latin flavored R&B number ever popular since it's inception in the late 50's. Handled here with melody on harp and rhythm just claps and guitar. This is a lively song and a super opener. Mud's Rollin' & Tumblin' is up next with Adam Gussow on harp and Alan Gross on lead vocal and cigar box guitar. Very nice. Another Chicago style blues track, Cry For Me Baby features Gussow on lead vocal and harp and Gross laying down some nice electric guitar riffs. Bog Boy Crudup's That's Alright gets a great workout with lead vocal and harp solo by Gussow and snappy picking by Gross. Very cool. Original instrumental track, Blues For Hank is one of my favorites on the release with a nice walking bass line by Bill Harrison and each Gussow and Gross taking nice solos. Kicking it into high gear with Jimmy Reed's You Don't Have To Go, Gussow alternates harp and lead vocal and Gross's electric rhythm guitar tone is great. Another of my favorites on the track is Take You Downtown with warm chord work and bright solo exchange by Gross and lead vocal and harp by Gussow. Wrapping the release is Robert Johnson's Crossroads Blues with an emphasis on harp rather than guitar... a different take for this popular blues track made popular by the Cream. This is not to say that Gross doesn't get his turn and he does a real nice job but Gussow does come back and close with some tight harp riffs. Nice closer.



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Thursday, May 15, 2014

Oxford, Mississippi's The Blues Doctors release debut CD

ROOSTERS HAPPY HOUR IS DEBUT CD FROM THE BLUES DOCTORS
 
Oxford, Mississippi — Got the rockin' pneumonia and the boogie woogie flu? Or perhaps a hole in your soul? Well, a new Mississippi-made blues release aims to cure it.
 
The Blues Doctors are in.
 
Leading up to their performance at Clarksdale, Mississippi's Juke Joint Festival, the Oxford-based blues duo of Adam Gussow and Alan Gross has released its debut CD as The Blues Doctors.
 
"We're really looking forward to this year's Juke Joint Festival," said Gussow. "A lot of the tracks on our new album are things we beat into shape on the streets of Oxford, so a big street festival in Clarksdale should feel just like home."
 
Named for the steady Friday gig at Rooster’s Blues House in Oxford, Mississippi, where Gussow and Gross hammered our their dynamic two-man sound, Roosters Happy Hour aims to please traditional and adventurous blues fans alike.
 
Gussow describes The Blues Doctors as "a power blues trio without the bass." The third leg of the duo is actually Gussow’s thumping kick drum. The result is a hard-swinging jump combo distilled to the bare essentials, propelled by Gross’s jangling guitar and Gussow’s over-the-top harp lines.
 
"Alan and I had crossed paths on the Ole Miss campus for ten years, but we didn't actually hook up musically until the summer of 2012," recalled Gussow. "I needed a local guitar-man to go along with my one-man band thing, and he needed a new challenge. That's how the Blues Doctors were born."
 
Describing Roosters Happy Hour — a mix of new originals and classic covers — as "down-home blues with a big-city angle of attack," the duo is always ready to take the show on the road. They headline Juke Joint Festival's Sunflower Avenue Gazebo Stage on Saturday, April 12th at 5pm.
 
For those who can't make The Blues Doctors upcoming festival show, the new album is available as a download or CD at www.thebluesdoctors.net. The album is also available via iTunes, Amazon and CDbaby.
 
BIOGRAPHIES:
 
Adam Gussow needs little introduction to blues harmonica fans. Founder of ModernBluesHarmonica.com, organizer of the Hill Country Harmonica festival, Gussow is best known for his twenty-five year partnership with Mississippi-born guitarist and one-man-band Sterling "Mr. Satan" Magee as the duo Satan and Adam. Their releases include the W. C. Handy-nominated Harlem Blues (1991), Mother Mojo (1993), Living on the River (1996), and Back in the Game (2011). A longtime member of the New York City blues scene before relocating to Mississippi in 2002, Gussow has performed and recorded with many guitar-men, including Wild Jimmy Spruill, Larry Johnson, Charlie Hilbert, Robert Ross, Andrew "Shine" Turner, Bill Sims, Jr., Irving Louis Lattin, and Brian Kramer. Gussow's debut solo album, Kick and Stomp (2010), rose to the #2 position in the "picks to click" category on Bluesville (SiriusXM), America's premier satellite radio blues show. His second solo album, Southbound (2011), spent March and April 2012 at the #1 position on the Mississippi Roots Radio Airplay Chart. An associate professor of English and Southern Studies at the University of Mississippi, Gussow has written three award-winning books about the blues, including Mister Satan's Apprentice (1998), a memoir about his time as a Harlem street musician.
 
Alan Gross is perhaps best-known for his long association with Mississippi bluesman Terry "Harmonica" Bean — he's played guitar in his band for a decade — and work with hill country performers Kenny Kimbrough, Lightnin' Malcolm and Eric Deaton. He's also gigged with R. L. Boyce, a mainstay of Otha Turner's Rising Star Fife and Drum ensemble, and played numerous festivals across the state of Mississippi. A professor of clinical psychology at the University of Mississippi for almost thirty years, his guitar influences include Muddy Waters, Duke Robillard, Jimmie Vaughan, and Warren Haynes.


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For hi-res album art and photos, please email asgussow@aol.com

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Take You Downtown - The Blues Doctors

Adam Gussow and Alan Gross, a.k.a. The Blues Doctors, are Mississippi-based blues veterans who play a mix of down-home Delta standards and urban grooves from the Texas-to-Chicago axis with some New Orleans funk thrown in. They're a two-man band with a full-on sound: Gussow on harmonica and drumset, Gross on guitar, with both men sharing vocal duties. Adam Gussow needs no introduction to fans of the blues. Founder of ModernBluesHarmonica.com, organizer of the Hill Country Harmonica teaching festival, Gussow is best known for his twenty-five year partnership with Mississippi-born guitarist and one-man-band Sterling "Mr. Satan" Magee as the duo Satan and Adam. Their releases include the W. C. Handy-nominated Harlem Blues (1991), Mother Mojo (1993), Living on the River (1996) and Back in the Game (2011). Gussow has performed and recorded with many guitar-men during his career, including Wild Jimmy Spruill, Larry Johnson, Charlie Hilbert, Robert Ross, Andrew "Shine" Turner, Bill Sims, Jr., Irving Louis Lattin, and Brian Kramer. In recent years Gussow has reinvented himself as a one-man band--singing, blowing amplified harp, and stomping out some thump-and-metal grooves. Gussow's debut solo album, Kick and Stomp (2010), spent many weeks at #1 in the "Hot New Releases in Acoustic Blues" chart at Amazon mp3's and rose to the #2 position in the "picks to click" category on Bluesville (SiriusXM), America's premier satellite radio blues show. His second solo album, Southbound (2011), spent most of March and April 2012 at the #1 position on the Mississippi Roots Rado Airplay Chart. An associate professor of English and Southern Studies at the University of Mississippi, Gussow has written three award-winning books about blues literature and culture, including Mister Satan's Apprentice (1998), a memoir about his time as a Harlem street musician. Alan Gross is best-known for his long association with Mississippi bluesman Terry "Harmonica" Bean--he's played guitar in his band for a decade--and work with hill country performers Kenny Kimbrough, Lightning Malcolm, and Eric Deaton. He's also gigged with R. L. Boyce, a mainstay of Otha Turner's Rising Star Fife and Drum ensemble, and played numerous festivals across the state of Mississippi. A professor of clinical psychology at the University of Mississippi, his guitar influences include Muddy Waters, Duke Robillard, Jimmie Vaughan, and Warren Haynes.

  If you support live Blues acts, up and coming Blues talents and want to learn more about Blues news and Fathers of the Blues, ”LIKE” ---Bman’s Blues Report--- Facebook Page! I’m looking for great talent and trying to grow the audience for your favorite band!