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Live Trout documents Walter Trout and the Free Radicals' performance at Tampa Bay Blues Festival on March 26, 2000. [2] In a review of the album for Blues Revue magazine, Art Tipaldi explained that due to travel difficulties, "this performance almost didn't happen", quoting Trout as recalling that "Two hours before we went on, I was in a restaurant trying to eat and I literally broke down.
It received a Blues Music Award (formerly W. C. Handy Award) nomination as the best 'Traditional Blues Album of the Year'. [6] Margolin is a columnist for the Blues Revue magazine. In 2013, Margolin was nominated for a Blues Music Award in the 'Traditional Blues Male Artist' category.
Rhythm and Blues Revue is a plotless variety show, one of several compiled for theatrical exhibition from the made-for-television short films produced by Snader and Studio Telescriptions, with newly filmed host segments by Willie Bryant. Originally 86 minutes, the "short" version available on public domain collections and websites is missing a ...
Hummel began working professionally after moving to the San Francisco Bay Area in the early 1970s. [3] A number of jazz and blues artists had already made their mark on Hummel at this point in his early career, including Billie Holiday, Count Basie, Ella Johnson, Lester Young, Jimmy Reed, Little Walter, Muddy Waters, Big Walter Horton, Paul Butterfield, Sonny Boy Williamson II, and Charlie ...
Jefferson Blues Magazine; Juke Blues; L. Living Blues This page was last edited on 30 March 2020, at 13:17 (UTC). ... Contact Wikipedia; Code of Conduct; Developers;
In late September 1977 Barton joined a new Austin blues group, Triple Threat Revue, with Stevie Ray Vaughan and W. C. Clark. [2] It was renamed Double Trouble when Clark left in May 1978, and Barton continued with Double Trouble until November 1979. [3] In the early 1980s, she did a stint with the jump blues band Roomful of Blues. [2]
Bachtrack; BAM; Bananafish; Bandwidth Street Press; Banjo Newsletter; Bass Frontiers; Bass Guitar; Bass Musician; Bass Player; Bass Quarterly; Bayreuther Blätter
Blues Matters! was founded by Alan Pearce in 1999. [1] It is published on a bimonthly basis. [2] [1] Alan King and Darren Howells (until 2009) previously served as the magazine's editor-in-chief. [1] The Blues Foundation, in Memphis, Tennessee, awarded the magazine the "Keeping the Blues Alive" (KBA) Award for 2007, in the Print Media category. [1]