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Сатана и Адам: об альбоме 1991 г. и более свежие новости
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Satan & Adam "Harlem Blues" 1991
В связи с тем, что наш дорогой и куда-то надолго запропастившийся Бульдозерист обожает гармонику, рекомендуем ему этот чудесный дуэт.
Треклист: 01 - I Want You 02 - Groovy People 03 - Read My Lips 04 - Don't Get Around Much Anymore 05 - Ride the Wind 06 - Down Home Blues 07 - Sweet Home Chicago 08 - I Create the Music 09 - C.C. Rider 10 - Sunshine in the Shade
Тhe Harlem/Mississippi blues duo (with drums!)
They’re back! After almost a decade’s absence from clubs and festival stages, Sterling Magee and Adam Gussow returned to action in the summer of 2008, playing selected dates throughout the Southeast in support of Gussow’s new book, Journeyman’s Road: Modern Blues Lives From Faulkner’s Mississippi to Post-9/11 New York (University of Tennessee Press) and a new live double LP, Word on the Street: Harlem Recordings, 1989. Joining them on tour was drummer David Laycock, a noted Tampa-area performer who has now become—as Magee and Gussow put it—"the third member of the duo.”
[To hear a sample from Word on the Street, hit this link] As Satan and Adam, Magee and Gussow were an integral part of the New York blues renaissance of the 1990s, along with Shemekia Copeland, The Holmes Brothers, Michael Hill and the Blues Mob, and Popa Chubby. They burst on the scene in 1991 with their critically acclaimed debut release, Harlem Blues, featuring Magee on guitar, percussion, and vocals and Gussow on amplified harmonica. "[This is blues] so unbelievably raw and real,” wrote CMJ, "it’s hard even to describe it. Satan sounds like the heaviest and scariest parts of Robert Johnson and Muddy Waters reincarnated as a whole band and then somehow crammed back into the body of one man, and Adam fills in some piercing harmonica wails that seem to come from the same dark, primeval place as Shakey Horton’s or Little Walter’s.” Harlem Blues was nominated for a Handy Award as "Traditional Blues Album” in 1991.