[Harp-L] Report from Tampa Bay Blues Festival (some, but not a lot of harp content)
- To: harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: [Harp-L] Report from Tampa Bay Blues Festival (some, but not a lot of harp content)
- From: Mjmeadors@xxxxxxx
- Date: Sat, 6 May 2006 11:45:08 EDT
Yesterday (Friday):
Anna Povavic - wow. Where did she come from? I must be behind the times.
This woman plays great guitar, great slide guitar. Sexy tex SRV rock. I'm a
new fan. To me, she's what Susan T. was shooting for but didn't quite make
it yet. A-
Curtis Salgado - many on Harp-L have sung his praises. For me he was ok, I
was expecting better on the harp. As a pro he's pretty good but my attention
was not focused after a while.
Just my personal taste in music. Voice was decent and he tried very hard.
Introducing every song with "...like THIS ..." got to be a bit repetitive.
Played straight through a Fender Bassman with some sort of bulb mic (not a
58). B-
Siegel-Schwall Band - one of my all-time faves since the early '70's. I've
copied a ton of Corky S.'s licks and arrangements. Have every album/cd.
This was a good show, but not their best, but great fun with their usual humor.
Corky did a show stopping solo where he ended up on his knees doing his
usual thing, and the crowd ate it up. The crowd wanted an encore but the
promoters wouldn't do it. Corky was clearly willing. He was playing through the
same Fender Bassman as Curtis, but had what looked like an SM57 as a mic. Sam
Lay was drumming and did a great show. B+ (they're always an A+ in my book,
but I'm trying to be objective here)
John Lee Hooker, Jr. - TIGHT back up band, rehearsed to perfection, and
energetic performance from JLH2. His voice is not what was expected, he can
sing. Some songs were too stretched out far too long and were too wordy,
however, and too much "I love you St. Petersburg!" kind of ass-kissing thing between
and during songs, but JLH2 is a really good performer if you like that kind
of thing. Kind of a Sammy Davis Jr. kissup thing. I also personally don't
like the use of a keyboard player who plays synthesizer horn parts instead of
having real horns or just going without the horn pretense. Although the
crowd ate it up, I give it a B- due to the excess bs in the middle of every song.
Johnny Winter - I used to see JW come in Manny's and hang out when I lived
in NYC in
the 90's (he looked weak then) and since then had heard he was in bad
health. He was. He came out, bent over like a really old man, and looked and
walked like he clearly had some medical problems, looked soooooo weak I thought
someone was going to have to take his arm and help him. They propped him up
in a chair and gave him a guitar. Then... he leaned forward and kicked into
"Hideaway", followed by "Sugar Coated Love", etc. and he was SMOKIN'. The
licks were flying off his fingers like the old days. How could a guy who looks
so bad play so strong? He's JW, nuff said. After one song he abruptly gets
up, the whole band leaves (nobody says anything), then he returns in 2
minutes with his Firebird and plays Mojo Boogie and others on SLIDE and again,
he's the still GREAT and can put it out. He had a harp player, maybe some of
you know his name, who looked like he was playing out of a Super Reverb amp.
Lots of energy from the harp player, he hit the right notes, jumped around a
lot, tried to look tough and traditional, but the tone wasn't there and got
lost in the mix of the music. Sounded tinny without much bottom. He played
too fast and too repetitive. The real show was JW and his bass player.
Maybe the harp player was just too excited and tried too hard. A
TODAY'S performances: Omar and the Howlers, Indigenous, Robben Ford, Johnny
Lang
TOMORROW: Rod Piazza, Taj Mahal and others
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