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Our partner Christian Bundgaard aka. Chris Copen is once again on the move.
This Saturday he’s teaming up with the UK piano player Dom Pipkin for yet another live stream episode of Piano Talk.
Cath the to piano players over on facebook: Click Here
About The Event:
Once again it’s time for some Piano Talk.
The British piano professor Dom Pipkin and the young danish piano player Chris Copen are once again meeting up online to talk about some of their piano heroes.
For this episode, they talk about the mastermind behind New Orleans funk, Allen Toussaint.
Tune in right here on Facebook and enjoy the music and stories of the great Allen Toussaint.
Straight Shooter partner Christian Bundgaard (Blue Dane Production ApS) har lanceret en ny podcast serie, der sætter fokus på hvordan man lever som kulturformidler i Danmark.
”Kulturens ansigter – Kunsten at leve af kultur” er en ny podcast, der forsøger at sætte fokus på, hvordan man som kulturformidler (musiker, billedkunstner, skuespiller, koncertarrangør/venue mv.) lever af og i en branche, der konstant er i forandring.
Hvad er det der gør, at man vælger et liv som musiker, billedkunstner, danser mv? Og hvordan holder man sig kørende i en uforudsigelig kulturverden?
I podcasten får de medvirkende mulighed for at reflektere over deres egen rejse og karrierer samt kigge ind i fremtiden for dansk kulturliv.
Hvordan lever man som kulturformidler? Hvilke valg er truffet for at være der, hvor man er i dag? Og hvordan ser ens egen fremtiden ud?
Du kan læse mere om podcasten og høre episoderne på kulturensansigher.dk
We are pleased to announce that Christian Bundgaard has become a partner in Straight Shooter. Christian and Peter have known each other for about 10 years and have worked together off and on in the music business. Christian has passion for New Orleans and the music around it, and has stayed in New Orleans for longer periods to develop his piano playing. Christian brings in talent both as a respected musician and as a person with a lot of media knowledge and experience. Christian will focus on PR, IT, social media, booking and business development.
Background:
Christian Bundgaard was from an early age exposed to the sounds of the blues, rock & roll, and jazz.
Chris did not grow up in a musical family, but both his parents were passionate about listening to music and attending concerts. When Chris was around nine years old his parents started bringing him to concerts and Chris got to experience B.B King, Buddy Guy, The Shadows, and a lot of danish musicians. But it was one concert in 2008 that changed a 14-year-old kid’s life. Chris and his dad went to see Dr. John in Amager Bio.
The Doctor worked his magic on the audience and that sparked an interest, in a young danish kid, to figure out where these sounds came from.
Sounds and vibes he had never experienced before.
Chris’s mother had been to New Orleans for the first time in 1987, and when Chris’s parents saw the growing interest for New Orleans music, they booked a trip for all three of them. So in 2011, at the age of 17, Chris spend time in The Big Easy.
This was the beginning of a long-distance relationship, with many journeys ahead for Christian Bundgaard.
Inspiration and music
Christian Bundgaard has learned from some of Denmark’s piano masters and legendary musicians such as Hans Knudsen, Esben Just, Peter Nande, and Peter Sørensen.
With this kind of inspiration around him, there was no doubt that he got turned on to keep learning and digging deeper into a genre which for a person born in 1994 can seem a little out of place.
When Christian Bundgaard started trips to New Orleans he started picking up knowledge from musicians such as Jon Cleary, John Boutté, and Josh Paxton.
Straight Shooter udgav d. 25. januar (2021) den færøske bluesmand Terji Krossteig’s nye album “Nordisk Blå” d. på div. digitale medier. Bluesnews.dk lavede denne omtale af albummet som er på færøsk og dansk. Se link
NORDISK BLÅ
01. Ik For Hvide
(Søren L. Hansen/Terji Krossteig)
Oscar Mukherjee: elguitar og sang
Terji Krossteig: resonator guitar, fod tamburin og sang
02. B L Ú S
(Terji Krossteig)
Uni Debess: akustisk guitar og mundharpe
Terji Krossteig: akustisk guitar og sang
03. Falsk Matematik
(Peps Persson)
Oscar Mukherjee: elguitar
Mads Dalum Poulsen: elbas
Terji Krossteig: akustisk guitar, fod tamburin og sang
04. Teit Blús
(Terji Krossteig)
Kristian Djernes: trommer
Terji Krossteig: akustisk guitar og sang
05. Flaskedrengen
(Terji Krossteig)
Frederik Tygesen: resonator guitar
Terji Krossteig: akustisk guitar og sang
06. Merkið
(Terji Krossteig)
Frederik Tygesen: resonator guitar
Peter Nande: mundharpe
Olav Gudnason: kontrabas
Uni Debess: kor
Terji Krossteig: guitar og sang
07. Pappegøjen Med De Flotte Fjer
(Terji Krossteig)
Terji Krossteig: resonator guitar, fod tambourin og sang
08. Spælimaður
(Tim Lothar)
Kent Thomsen: guitar
Kenneth Hove: bas
Terji Krossteig: akustisk guitar og sang
09. Thi Kendes For Ret
(Terji Krossteig)
Peter Nande: mundharpe
Terji Krossteig: resonator guitar og sang
10. Far Tú Væl
(Terji Krossteig)
Terji Krossteig: akustisk guitar og sang
Samfundsblues.dk er en dansk side som er et længere besøg værd. Den er lavet af blues-filosoffen Kai Christensen og indeholder Kai’s livsberetning, livserfaring og livsfilosofi og er fuld af humor og vid. Der er ingen tvivl om at Kai har levet og som få forstår hvad blues er.
Kai skriver selv om sin side:
“Denne hjemmeside handler om SAMFUNDSBLUES – i mit perspektiv. Det handler om et liv, jeg har levet og derfor ikke kan leves om! Mit liv – mit BLUESliv – som jeg levede på min måde! Herudfra ser jeg fremtiden”
Mit liv har været en lang vej. En gruset vej! Når jeg nu står og ser tilbage hvor jeg kom fra – så står jeg og undrer mig?!
Som filosoffen siger, så skal man forstå livet tilbageskuende.I dette perspektiv er dette liv måske ikke blevet levet så hovedkulds, som jeg har oplevet det?
Men jeg må konstatere: Det meste lykkedes ikke! Engang så jeg mit liv som en gentagende fiasko! Men en god veninde fik mig til at ændre hovedtemaet for min biografi til: ”Mit liv som mangel på succés”! Alligevel har jeg gennemlevet så mange utrolige situationer – som har beriget mit liv! Dette udgør nu – i sen alder – min livserfaring, min livsfilosofi. Som jeg med værdighed må bære! Og gerne vil viderebringe. Det er netop det min hjemmeside skulle indeholde! Det som jeg har gennemlevet – og som har aflejret sig i min bevidsthed! På grund af den følte dobbelte afhængighed af – natur og socialstruktur – har mit liv væsentligt været et liv i og med BLUES. Derfor vil BLUESOPFATTELSEN præge teksterne.
Læs mere på Samfundsblues.dk
Kai har også en facebook side hvor han løbende poster sine tanker samt info om de koncerter han afholder i hans have hvert år.
Her link til Kai’s Facebook.
My mentor and good friend blues legend James Harman need’s all the support he can get.
He has been diagnosed with esophagus cancer and will have to go through Chemo in the coming months.
Here a go fund me link: GO-FUND-ME
Pay him a visit on his facebook page: FACEBOOK
Below his comment on Facebook
Kr. Peter Nande
Down-Home Music – The story of Arhoolie Records
Arhoolie Records is the result of one man’s lifelong musical passion and journey—Chris Strachwitz. Arhoolie exposed the wider public to important
regional musics championing the artistry of such artists as Lightnin’ Hopkins, Mance Lipscomb, BeauSoleil, Flaco Jiménez, and others. It is the most important roots record label of the last sixty years.
Down-Home Music, the story of Arhoolie Records, A 55 Film by Chris Strachwitz and Kirk LeClaire. Chris walks and talks through an exhibition of the records, photographs, and films he recorded and collected along the way. This is that journey. The exhibition on display at Down-Home Music in El Cerrito California.
Links:
Down Home Music
www.downhomemusic.com/
https://folkways.si.edu/arhoolie
THE STORY OF ARHOOLIE RECORDS
An Immigrant’s Journey into American Vernacular Music
Chris Strachwitz (b. 1931) grew up in the German province of Lower Silesia, which became part of Poland following World War II. Towards the end of the war, Strachwitz and his family fled the advancing Russian army, staying with an uncle near Brunswick in the British Zone and eventually settling in the United States in 1947. Strachwitz’s maternal grandmother was an American, and one of his great-aunts, who lived in Reno, Nevada, hosted the family for many years before they moved to Carmel, California. During this time, Strachwitz quickly developed a passion for American vernacular music. As a shy, lanky teenager in private school, he saw the movie New Orleans, which starred Louis Armstrong and the Kid Ory band, and he instantly fell in love with New Orleans jazz. Strachwitz started listening to radio broadcasts of hillbilly-country, rhythm-and-blues, gospel, and Mexican music. Around this time, Strachwitz also began collecting 78-rpm records, a passion that he has continued to pursue throughout his life.
After college and a two-year stint in the United States Army, Strachwitz worked as a German teacher at Los Gatos and Saratoga high schools in California. In the summer of 1959, he traveled by bus to Houston, Texas, where he met and saw blues legend Lightnin’ Hopkins perform in a small beer joint. Struck by his improvised lyrics and spontaneous exchange with the audience, Strachwitz knew he wanted to record him in that setting. Strachwitz returned the following year hoping to capture Hopkins live—only to discover that the musician was on his way to California. Strachwitz’s friend and host Mack McCormick, an amateur folklorist, musicologist, and taxi driver, then took him north to the rural town of Navasota, where the pair met and recorded Mance Lipscomb, a Texas sharecropper skilled at performing a variety of folk songs, ballads, dance tunes, and blues.
In November of 1960, Strachwitz released the first LP on his Arhoolie label featuring Mance Lipscomb. McCormick suggested the name Arhoolie to Strachwitz; it allegedly meant “field holler,” though “hoolie” was likely the correct term. Strachwitz and his friend, graphic designer Wayne Pope, single-handedly pasted the front covers on 250 black cardboard record jackets. Pope created the guitar-shaped logo that appears on every Arhoolie recording.
Strachwitz’s recordings continue to introduce generations of fans to a variety of vernacular musicians who might otherwise have remained unknown. He has recorded several important blues singers, and his Cajun, Creole, and zydeco releases—including the “King of Zydeco” Clifton Chenier—aided in popularizing these genres. Strachwitz’s numerous Mexican American recordings include Flaco Jiménez, who won a Grammy for the Arhoolie album Ay Te Dejo en San Antonio y Más! Strachwitz also traveled around the country recording a number of gospel steel guitarists in their homes and churches. He also made country and jazz recordings as well as releasing records of older ethnic and regional music. In 2016, Strachwitz won the Grammy’s Trustees Award, which parallels a Lifetime Achievement Award. The same year, Ed Littlefield’s Sage Foundation purchased the Arhoolie label and gifted it to Smithsonian Folkways Recordings in order to preserve Strachwitz’s important contributions to the history of American traditional music in perpetuity.
Chris Strachwitz’s Influence on the Berkeley Folk Music Scene
In 1962, Chris Strachwitz moved to Berkeley from Los Gatos, California, to focus on his record label. Strachwitz continued to make field recordings of living regional artists from bluesmen Big Joe Williams, K.C. Douglas, Mercy Dee, and electric-guitar-playing gospel musician and preacher Reverend Louis Overstreet to the legendary Cajun string band the Hackberry Ramblers. In addition to the original recordings he released on Arhoolie, Strachwitz began reissuing older country, Cajun, and blues records on two additional labels—Old Timey Records and Blues Classics. Strachwitz “rediscovered” early artists previously issued on 78-rpm discs, compiling their songs onto LPs—long-playing 33 1/3-rpm vinyl records. His first Blues Classics release featured the music of the extraordinary blues singer and guitarist Memphis Minnie (1897–1973), whom he met in Memphis, Tennessee. He later purchased the Folk-Lyric label from Professor Harry Oster, and on that he reissued historic Texas–Mexican border music and other types of older regional and ethnic music. Strachwitz also reissued Oster’s important field recordings on his Arhoolie label.
The popularity of folk music in the 1960s fostered an interest in vernacular music. The Berkeley Folk Music Festival, directed by Barry Olivier, took place at the University of California, Berkeley, from 1958 to 1970. This preeminent folk festival featured both traditional and contemporary artists. Strachwitz, at Olivier’s invitation, introduced a number of artists to the Berkeley festival and folk scene, including Mance Lipscomb, Fred McDowell, Big Mama Thornton, J.E. Mainer’s Mountaineers, the Hackberry Ramblers, and Los Tigres del Norte. Mance Lipscomb, with whom Strachwitz made his first record, performed at the festival in 1961, where he faced an audience of 4,000 people—a far cry from the small East Texas dances he was accustomed to playing. Lipscomb would continue to perform at folk festivals and clubs around the country and became an influential figure in the folk music scene, inspiring a number of musicians such as Bob Dylan, whom he met in Berkeley.
In 1965, Strachwitz produced the first Berkeley Blues Festival. The successful event featured Arhoolie recording artists such as Big Mama Thornton, Mississippi Fred McDowell, and Chuck Berry, among others. The following year, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Mance Lipscomb, and “King of Zydeco” Clifton Chenier—nationally unknown then—performed at the festival, as did Muddy Waters and his band. Many of these artists also played in the American Folk Blues Festival, which toured Europe annually beginning in 1962, introducing European audiences to preeminent blues musicians of the day.
Ed Denson, a friend of Strachwitz’s, introduced him to local protest and folk singer Country Joe McDonald in 1965. Strachwitz recorded him in his living room performing “I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-to-Die Rag,” an anti–Vietnam War protest song, and casually garnered the publishing rights to the song. The soon-to-be famous song later appeared in the Woodstock Festival movie and soundtrack. Royalties from the song eventually enabled Strachwitz to purchase a building in El Cerrito, California, which served as Arhoolie’s headquarters, and today continues to house the Arhoolie Foundation and Down Home Music Store. For over fifty years, Strachwitz introduced eager listeners to music that moved him. Boldly ignoring commercial trends, Strachwitz insisted, “I’ve never recorded things I didn’t like.”
—Nicole Mullen, courtesy of the SFO Museum
The story continues beneath the gallery .
The Work of Chris Strachwitz
Chris Strachwitz is a record man—an individual with a rabid passion for music and especially records. A network of such collectors trade tapes of music and have actively set out to find and acquire 78-rpm recordings from the golden age of American vernacular music—blues, jazz, country, Cajun, Latino, and other genres. In the 1950s and early 1960s the majority of these old discs were out of print, and so many collectors started record labels like County, Origin Jazz Library, and Chris’s Arhoolie in 1960, followed by his Folk-Lyric label, to make this music available again. Anthologies and releases drawn from the collections were acquired by musicians who found treasures to perform on their own set lists, getting these songs back into circulation. “Collecting is obviously a real addiction! And collecting old records is a very special type of addiction which not only gives you great pleasure per se—but the hunt is rewarding and enjoyable, like when my father hunted animals which we enjoyed eating. But with records you don’t have to kill a living being but you can further enjoy the fact that others may also enjoy the incredible music in those old grooves if you help make them available again on modern sound carriers! I feel this is especially desirable for cultural and historic reasons but even better if the artists can be rewarded if they can still be found” (Chris Strachwitz interview with Tom Diamant, August 4, 2020).
Chris made it his life’s work to seek out the music he loved. He steered clear of pop music and gravitated towards the vernacular music of communities around the United States and Mexico. In sixty years, he discovered countless amazing artists and keeps the work alive with his Arhoolie Foundation. Chris took various genres of music which previously only could be found on small local record labels and used Arhoolie to distribute these musics worldwide. The nationwide popularity of Cajun and zydeco since the late ʼ70s can be traced directly back to the wonderful albums Chris released. He used a network of music scholars to turn him on to new sounds. With the help of folklorist Bob Stone, for example, he brought the sacred steel music of Florida to public attention.
The musical core of Arhoolie is blues (country and electric), Black string bands, Cajun, zydeco, country, and bluegrass, and especially music from Texas and Latin America. Chris amassed a huge collection of Latino 78s, acquiring the Ideal, Falcon, and Discos Smith labels; some of this material made its way onto Folk-Lyric Records. His massive Latino 78 collection has been digitized as the Frontera Collection and is available online through UCLA.
Chris has also been involved with filmmaking. In 1963 with German filmmaker Dietrich Wawzyn he created Down Home Music: A Journey Through the Heartland 1963. Many of the featured artists made their way to Arhoolie. He also had a long collaboration with Les Blank, Maureen Gosling, and Flower Films, bringing some of the wonderful music he found to the screen. Les and Chris’s production company, Brazos Films, made such films as J’ai été au bal, Chulas Fronteras, and Del Mero Corazon. Many of the soundtrack recordings were released on Arhoolie.
So explore Arhoolie Records if you want a deep dive into the roots of the roots. Experience the fruits of one man’s journey.
—Jeff Place, Curator and Senior Archivist, Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections, Smithsonian Institution. See more on https://folkways.si.edu/arhoolie
This release on vinyl is finally out and it’s Big Creek Slim’s first release. We had to postpone due to the Corona pandemic but we had a release concert on Lygten October 18. The concert was made in cooperation with Backbeat and Lygten.
Ramblin’ Big Creek
This release from the talented & prolific BIG CREEK SLIM is the first to feature a full band throughout. Recorded over 3 days in 2017, it has the raw energy & excitement that makes a good recording great. Using just one microphone, 11 musicians (including 3 horn players) and guest vocalist Diunna Greenleaf in a tiny room, the recording of all original songs is really exceptional. As the notes say, ” Slim targeted the perfectly unperfect sound of country blues and early urban blues recordings as found on such seminal labels as SUN- CHESS & EXCELLO.”
1. Ramblin’ Big Creek
2. How Unlucky
3. Sorrow & Consolation
4. Sick & Tired
5. Put You On Ice
6. If You Should Quit Me
7. I Just Don’t Understand (only on the CD)
8. Mean Ol’ Sunrise
9. One More Mile
10. Rock & Roll Mama (only on the CD)
11. Tear Me Down Again- w/ DIUNNA GREENLEAF
12. Big Fine Mama- w/ DIUNNA GREENLEAF
Ramblin Big Creek was recorded live over three days in a studio in the West Side of Aarhus. It involved 11 musicians (including a three-piece horn section), one engineer, one microphone and no overdubs.
Big Creek Slim produced the album, with a couple of specific objectives: (1) to record only original material on the album and (2) for the recording to have one cohesive sound throughout.
Big Creek targeted what he calls a perfectly unperfect sound on Ramblin Big Creek, one that would capture the raw spontaneity of country blues and early urban blues recordings, as found on such labels as Sun, Chess and Excello.
“I´m Ramblin´ Big Creek Slim. I am just one more bluesman beneath the sun, trying to do my thing in a world that doesn’t make no sense. I believe that playing the blues is all I ever wanted. The blues should be a universal feeling, and a world patrimony. Why I play them in this style – old, black, American – has something to do with the way I am. I always liked to find the roots of things. I also search for the roots of Scandinavian culture. I played a lot of Irish traditional music, and the roots of Brazilian Samba fascinate me. The thing that inspired me so about old blues and folk music is the strong sound. Less is more if you play it with attitude. The sound of the Delta blues carries me to a deeper state of mind, and I get to cut the cheese out of my life, if you know what I mean.”
His singing is raw, unpolished, genuine and soulful, straight from the heart. Some calls it black. So is also his guitar playing. It’s economic, but intense, on a dirty old Danish-made guitar he found in a friend’s attic. The notes goes straight into your marrow.
Marc Rune began playing guitar early and as soon as he made enough money on a construction site he left for the U.S. and hoboed around. He played on street corners, in bars and small venues in Clarksdale, Memphis and other locations in the south. After a while he stayed at Teddy’s Juke Joint in Baton Rouge where he jammed with various bands and artists. Finally, he ended up in Brazil where he settled down in Florianopolis on the tropical island Santa Catarina, in a cottage on the beach.
Marc’s foremost inspiration was James ‘Chicken Scratch’ Johnson, Slim Harpo’s former guitarist. It was Johnson who made Marc stop playing with a flat-pick and start fingerpicking. Doug “Dubb” McLeod encouraged him to concentrate on his right hand and when you watch him play his fingers are almost dancing across the strings. He says that his quite unique style of playing is something that has evolved over time.
Other important inspirations are John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters. Answering the question about who he would like to invite over to Denmark he says, “Terry ‘Harmonica’ Bean. He has played with him in Brazil after they first met in Arkansas. Marc is also fortunate to have been playing with the late pianist Henry Gray, one of the giants of contemporary Southern Blues.
Read more about the release in bluesnews (in Danish)
See more about Big Creek Slim here. VISIT ARTIST PAGE
The Cornbread Project
Catawampus
Straigh Shooter – SHOT 025
The Blues, as You Have Never Heard Them Before
As the saying goes, there are two sides to every story.
One side of the story regarding Catawampus, the debut release by The Cornbread Project, involves an idea for a fresh approach to the blues. The Cornbread Project is comprised of musicians/producers Laust “Krudtmejer” Nielsen (Krudtmejer Productions, “Trainman Blues”) and Peter Nande (Straight Shooter Productions). Their concept: Apply contemporary music production techniques – samples, loops, beats, etc., as found in R&B, hip-hop, reggae and dancehall – to themes from traditional blues and roots music. For about half the songs on this album, Nielsen and Nande pulled vocal and instrumental tracks from unreleased recordings that Nande had on hand from a variety of gifted artists, including James Harman and Big Creek Slim. The pair built the remaining songs from the ground up with new recordings. Then, Nielsen applied his musical ideas and production magic to the performances to elevate the songs to a place they’d never been before.
That was the concept in action. Why title the album Catawampus? Simply, it’s a term for something that’s out of alignment, askew, and the tracks on this recording often fit that description. This is not your typical, predictable blues album. It’s more than a little off-kilter, in the best way possible.
Now that you have the concept clear in your mind, forget about it, because Catawampus is not a cerebral experience. The title word also describes something fierce, a dark force of reckoning, and this album is one that you feel, not think about. It’s a visceral experience, and not always an upbeat one. (This is still the blues, after all.) Still, even in its heaviest moments, Catawampus is a recording that makes you want to move. It leans forward. It has momentum. It travels in the present tense. It also rides well in your vehicle, turned up loud.
That’s the other side of the story. On to the songs:
The opening track features Big Creek Slim singing John Lee Hooker’s “Hobo Blues,” but this is not the train-hoppin’ man-and-guitar homage that Big Creek recorded on his 2015 Straight Shooter album, Hope For My Soul. This version carries a more demanding weight, delivered primarily by a ghostly chain gang-inspired chant that recalls a time past.
“Rollin’ & Tumblin’” has been a staple for slide guitarists since it was recorded in 1929 by Hambone Willie Newbern. Here, the track, featuring Sahra da Silva, is fully reimagined with a slinky bassline, jazzy drum work and a jangly rhythm guitar that gives way to an Albert King-inspired solo. It ends too soon. Da Silva also appears on the simmering “Change My Ways,” in which the singer laments a Devil-at-the-crossroads encounter.
James Harman performs on two tracks. “You Got to Choose” frames Harman within a funky ‘70s-inspired bass line and rhythm guitar, and features lean, sinewy harp lines, while “Grandma Lurleen’s Recipe” showcases James in a spoken piece that offers exactly what the title suggests (right down to the size of the cast iron skillet and the oven temperature setting). Take notes!
Other tracks include “Kokomo Blues,” featuring Troels Jensen, which transforms the Fred McDowell classic into a barn dance worthy blues-meets-country stepper; the haunting “Autumn Shakedown,” featuring Richard Farrell; Mud Morganfield honoring the family tradition with “Mannish Boy,” which features intriguing rhythm variations and dynamic range; and “My Little Machine,” which gets a swinging treatment for vocalist Big Joe Louis.
Collectively, the music on Catawampus embraces the traditions of the blues while also inviting them into the 21st century. As sure as Muddy Waters, Little Walter and others plugged into amps and cranked them up in the clubs of post-WWII Chicago, so the blues will continue to evolve and change with the times. Something to think about… Or, just listen to the music and let it move you.
Big Creek Slim – vocal
James Harman – vocal
Big Joe Louis – vocal
Troels Jensen – vocal
Richard Farrell – vocal
Sahra da Silva – vocal
Mud Morganfield – vocal
Peter Nande – harmonica, backing vocal
Niklas Kure – guitar
Laust Krudtmejer – bass
Marco Diallo – drums