Styles: Acoustic Blues
Label: Independent
Released: 2010
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 95,2 MB
Time: 41:34
Art: full
1. So Long Rosalee - 3:42
2. Traveling Blues - 2:39
3. Your're Gonna Find The Blues - 3:21
4. Lay Down My Sorrow - 3:35
5. If I Had A Nickel - 3:52
6. Your Woman Quit You - 3:02
7. Going Down To Louisiana - 2:22
8. Going To The River - 1:59
9. Detroit "Motor City" Blues - 3:57
10. Love Like Heroin - 3:39
11. Once Loved A Cowgirl - 3:37
12. Walking Blues - 3:01
13. Going Down The Road Feeling Bad - 2:41
Notes: When spring looks like it is going to stick and stay on the prairies, what comes with it is almost a feeling of salvation for those of us who plodded through another long winter. As calendar pages flip to the last weekend of April, many fine roots music practitioners and fans descend on a charming place slightly off the beaten path. The place is East Coulee, Alberta and the East Coulee Spring Festival announces the arrival of everything that isn't snow or bone chilling winds blowing across everything east of the Rocky Mountains. Arriving in East Coulee is like being transported back to 1958. An old hotel, an old schoolhouse and store fronts from another era stand a few hundred metres from a lazy and beautiful river.
On this late April day bluesman Marshall Lawrence brought his brand of acoustic blues to East Coulee. With resonator guitar in hand, perched on a stool with one leg resting comfortably on a vintage suitcase, Lawrence dug into a batch of new original tunes, many of which are tied to decade's old Delta grooves, yet sewn to his lyrics embracing timeless themes. It was a memorable evening, in a year that had been remarkably memorable for Marshall Lawrence. The singer-songwriter, interpreter and performer had, a few months earlier, received the nod from the national blues community through being nominated for a prestigious and national Maple Blues Award. This nomination pushed this hard working and passionate musician’s profile up a couple of plateaus, and deservedly so.
Lawrence had also been working hard in the studio with two of his respected peers, harmonica player Sherman Doucette and onetime B.B. King bassist Russell Jackson. At those Edmonton recording sessions Lawrence captured his best recorded performances to date, which is what you are listening to now. Assisted by award-winning engineer Barry Allen, Lawrence found his comfort zone and dispensed his acoustic blues with conviction, and a voice that is distinctly his own. The four participants also produced a disc with fine dynamics where the instrumental interplay was given room to breath.
While listening to this disc, picture an old, character school house in a magical prairie hamlet, and an attentive audience soaking up the sounds of a prairie bluesman who for an hour or so owns the stage, and that all involved are loving this traditional sound that is announcing a new beginning.
Read more
Blues Intervention
• Marshall Lawrence - House Call •
• Celso Salim & Rodrigo Mantovani - Diggin' The Blues •