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Rochelle and the Sidewinders: Evolving at the International Blues Challenge

While the Great Freeze of 2018 trapped much of Memphis under a thin sheet of ice, Beale Street blazed with the best blues riffs as musicians from the world over came to town for a chance to win bragging rights as the best in the blues business. Each year for 34 years running, the Memphis-based Blues Foundation has brought the most talented musicians from its affiliate organizations to the Bluff City to compete in the International Blues Challenge (IBC). After the finalists showdown at the Orpheum Theatre wraps it up tonight, the VizzTone’s Blues Party on Beale will get started at the Rum Boogie Cafe and won’t end until late, as befits the celebratory cap-off shindig for the Blues Foundation’s signature event.

Returning blues band and 2018 semifinalists Rochelle & the Sidewinders, from Austin, shed a little light on the typical IBC contender’s story and experiences at the IBC.
The Sidewinders wound up in Memphis at the IBC for the first time in 2017, when the relatively new group, fresh off some contest wins in Texas, felt sure they would come away from the IBC with some great memories and an easily won trophy to take back to Texas. “I would say we were overly cocky, if I had to summarize,” says Sidewinders guitarist and founding member Tom Coplen. “And when we got there, we just weren’t prepared. We were a new band. We’d just formed in 2015, and we missed the cut-off that year. The Austin Blues Society is the sponsoring affiliate here in Austin, and they have a contest every year … the Heart of Texas Blues Challenge,” Coplen says. “The winner of that gets to go to the IBC. We won it last summer.”

Coplen says the prestige of the affirmation of the Austin Blues Society so early in their career — not to mention the rich blues tradition in Texas — contributed to the Sidewinders’ hubris their first time at the IBC. “And Austin kind of has a history. You go back to T. Bone Walker and Charlie Christian and these guys. The history of music, and specifically blues, is so entrenched here and so strong, literally you could be at a pizza place and the guy serving pizza used to play with Stevie Ray Vaughan in high school. There are just so many bands and so many musicians, that we just thought we were going to go there and win. That’s how ridiculous we were.”

Of course, this is Memphis, a Mecca of the blues, and we have our fair share of drink-slinging or package-delivering blues legends. And the IBC is an international competition that brings talent from 200 different cities to compete. Needless to say, Rochelle and the Sidewinders did not do quite as well as they expected. Coplen says the band didn’t make it past the first round. “My friend Jim [Trimmier], the sax player, said ‘the crowd’s gonna love us; the judges aren’t,’” Coplen says. But the band wasn’t discouraged. Coplen took in a lot of the talent in his time in Memphis, and he reasoned that maybe the judges would have appreciated a stricter take on blues traditions.

Rochelle Creone

Originally, The Sidewinders were a little “newer” sounding. They had a dance edge that complimented the vocal talents of their singer, Rochelle Creone. “I’ve had various incarnations of [the band], but it wasn’t until I found Rochelle that the band really worked. She’s just this amazing vocalist.” So, a little disappointed but not discouraged by their loss at the 2017 IBC, Coplen and his band of Austin blues players enjoyed Memphis, learned, and modified their expectations. And watched a lot of other blues bands do their wailing, shredding, and sliding.

Coplen wrote new songs, and the band kept chugging along through 2017, earning them their second win at the Heart of Texas Blues Challenge, which again opened the door to their second invitation to the IBC. “The music we’re playing, it’s straight, hard Chicago blues,” Coplen adds. “The old adage about doing the same thing twice is our [guide]. We’re not cocky, we just want to go and have fun.”

The work, the new songs, and the humbler attitude seem to have paid off. Rochelle and the Sidewinders made it to the semifinals at this year’s IBC. They played to a packed house at Club 152, and though they didn’t make it to the finals, Coplen says the band enjoyed themselves. “Our experience was fun, and we loved it. All the people were so nice; we just love Memphis,” Coplen says. “This year our perspective is we’re just so happy and honored to be able to go again. Just to be able to go twice in a row is amazing. We’re just happy to be able to go play.”

The 34th International Blues Challenge Finalist Competition is being held today, Saturday, January 20th, starting at noon at the Orpheum Theatre. The Bob Margolin Presents VizzTone’s Blues Party on Beale takes place tonight, once IBC competition ends, at the Rum Boogie Cafe. All proceeds benefit Generation Blues.

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Daniel Eriksen: Straight Outta Oslo with the Arctic Slide

Roald Jungaard

Daniel Eriksen

This January 16th through 20th, blues performers hungry for glory (and for Memphis’ famed soul food, a topic that came up in every interview) will descend on Beale Street from all over the world. Each year for 34 years, the Memphis-based Blues Foundation has brought the most talented musicians from its affiliate organizations to the Bluff City to compete in the International Blues Challenge (IBC). Daniel Eriksen, representing the Oslo Bluesklubb in the solo/duo category, is one of those performers. He and I talked desert island albums, Sun Studio, and the arctic slide.

The Memphis Flyer: Memphis is a long way from home for you. Are you excited about traveling so far to compete in the IBC?
Daniel Eriksen: Yes, I love Memphis and have been here many times before. I even recorded at Sun Studio when Matt Ross-Spang worked there. I look forward to coming back. It’s a beautiful city with great food, fine people, atmosphere, and culture.

Tell us a little more about that Sun Studios record.
We had a day off while in Memphis in 2011, and found out that Sun Studio was not booked, so we booked the night. Since we only had about four or five hours, we planned on doing one or two songs that we could include on an upcoming album.
But when we listened back, the overall sound was so special that we knew it couldn’t be copied anywhere else, so we just went ahead and recorded all 10 songs live in studio. The magic in the walls kicked in. It turned out it was Bike Night on Beale Street, so on a few ballads you can hear Harleys roaring, so we had to cut it down to an EP!

How was working with Ross-Spang?
Matt was very nice, a great engineer and a good guy, he even drove us home after.
I remember the first time I played on Beale Street, and I have to admit it felt pretty cool.

Does playing in Memphis hold any special significance for you?
I have played a lot in Louisiana, Arkansas, and Mississippi, but never in Memphis. It’s time, and I’m ready.

So it sounds like you don’t mind a lot of traveling to perform. Do you have any good stories from the road?
I travel a lot and have performed in countries like Russia, the U.S.A., and all over Europe. You get used to traveling, and it’s a big part of the job. I once spent an hour talking to Peter Green in a small hotel in a fjord in Norway, not knowing it was he — I didn’t recognize him and I suspect that is why he talked to me for so long. I didn’t ask the usual questions, I guess … Another cool memory was when Steve “Little Steven” van Zandt  tweeted about my concert and used the words “Fucking amazing!”

Blues is steeped in tradition. What sources do you find compelling when you play? What musicians have influenced you?
Being a slide guitarist, I usually listen to other “sliders.” I have, of course, listened to a lot of the old players such as Mississippi Fred McDowell, and Blind Willie Johnson. Among modern players, there are two artists that have had the biggest influence on my style, and I have been blessed with the opportunity to meet and work with both — either as an opening act or sitting in with them: John Mooney from Rochester/New Orleans and Roy Rogers from California.

Can you tell me a little bit more about yourself?
I grew up within the Arctic Circle way up north in Norway. That’s why I call my music “Arctic Slide.” I have performed as a professional artist for over 20 years now and have released five albums — one of which won the “Norwegian Grammy,” the Spelleman Award. And one was recorded in Memphis. On the personal side, I have two wonderful kids, a wife, and a cat, love Dutch licorice, and drive a black Chevrolet.

What kind of a set do you plan to play at IBC?
I will be bringing my drummer and we plan on doing a varied, well-balanced set of original songs, a few favorite covers, and some traditionals.
We are in Memphis to give it all, and get as far as we can in the competition. We also hope to show international promoters and booking people, that a fine swamp-delta-billy-blues duo could be a cool addition to their festivals and clubs. In addition we look forward to seeing a lot of friends, who are also in the competition this year.

Any other plans while you’re in the area?
Well, there’s the food, shopping for clothes and shoes at Winfield’s, the drum center … I guess we have to see how far we go in the competition, but if we have time, we might see some friends down in Clarksdale.

Do you have a desert island album? You know, if you were stuck alone on a deserted island, what would you bring to listen to?
John Mooney’s Dealing With the Devil has been a longtime favorite. It’s a live solo performance from Germany, and he just kills it!
I also have a radio broadcast of Roy Roger’s performance at the Notodden Blues Festival in 1996 that I would like to bring. Those recordings have been my encyclopedia of slide guitar licks for a long time.

Is there anything else you want Memphis to know?
I haven’t seen the schedules yet, but please come see us. We won’t hold back. We sure look forward to seeing y’all, and we’ll be giving away free copies of our Sun recordings, the Grey Goose EP.

The 34th National Blues Challenge takes place in multiple venues on Beale Street, January 16th through 20th. https://blues.org/international-blues-challenge/

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Blues Awards Week!

This weekend, Bluff City residents will go down to the foot of Beale Street for three days of rock, rap, country, reggae, soul, and just about everything else. There will be blues, too, although for fans of the Devil’s music, what happens in the festival’s Blues Shack is just a prelude of what’s to come, once the final notes have faded and the last stragglers have vacated Tom Lee Park. The time has come once again to celebrate the down-home sounds that first put Memphis on the map.

Wednesday, May 10th, the night before The Blues Foundation’s annual awards gala, five new artists and one publisher will be inducted into Memphis’ Blues Hall of Fame. Performers being honored include Stax recording artist Mavis Staples, whose vocals on “Respect Yourself” and other Staple Singers hits helped lift the souls and spirits of civil rights marchers; Johnny Copeland, the Texas blues wailer known for songs like “Please Let Me Know”; Mississippi-raised, Chicago-tested guitar wizard Magic Slim; jazzy keyboard player, Henry Gray who cut his teeth with Howlin’ Wolf; and country- and gospel-influenced singer Latimore, best known for his smooth 1974 hit “Let’s Straighten It Out.” Living Blues co-founder Amy van Singel is also being inducted.

Blues Awards Week

Blues Awards Week kicks off Monday, May 8th at 7 p.m. with a screening of the Corky Siegel documentary, Born in Chicago. Siegel, who’ll be on hand to sign CDs and answer questions, plays a “Chamber Blues” concert at Lafayette’s Music Room Tuesday, May 9th.

Other Blues Awards Week events include the unveiling of a new exhibit at the Blues Hall of Fame, Big Lou Johnson’s Hall of Fame tribute jam honoring new inductees, as well as harmonica master James Cotton and rock-and-roll pioneer Chuck Berry. The awards are presented at the Cook Convention Center Thursday, May 11th.

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Blues Hall of Fame to Unveil R.L. Burnside Display

R.L. Burnside

This Saturday, The Blues Hall of Fame will unveil a new display of artifacts related to R.L. Burnside. Bruce Watson and Matthew Johnson of Fat Possum Records loaned the museum R.L. Burnside’s Stratocaster electric guitar, and also on display is the Grammy Nomination Medallion for Burnside on Burnside, nominated for Best Traditional Blues Album in 2002. Burnside recorded several albums for Fat Possum and was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2014.

The display will be unveiled to family members and fans at 10 a.m. on Saturday, April 9 and the public is invited to attend. Admission to the Blues Hall of Fame is $10 for adults, $8 for students 13 years and older, and free for children 12 years old and under. for more information on the Blues Hall of Fame, click here. 

Blues Hall of Fame to Unveil R.L. Burnside Display

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Music Music Features

Bringing Memphis to the Masses

For the past 19 seasons, Beale Street Caravan has broadcast a commercial-free hour of Memphis-centric music to 2.4 million listeners worldwide, on more than 400 radio stations. Hosted by Pat Mitchell Worley, the show covers local artists ranging from the Reigning Sound to Rev. John Wilkins, in addition to favorites from New Orleans, Chicago, and everywhere in between. Their annual fund-raiser always packs a punch, and this year cuisine by Chef Michael Patrick of Rizzo’s Diner will be paired with wine and beer and the music of Marcella & Her Lovers. The blowout — at Memphis Made Brewing on June 18th — also includes a silent auction featuring regional treasures of music, art, dining, and vacation getaways, in addition to vinyl grab bags and more. We sat down with Worley to learn more about the most widely distributed blues radio program in the world. — Chris Shaw

Flyer: How long has Beale Street Caravan been around and when did you become host of the show?

Pat Mitchell Worley: The show is about to enter its 20th season. I’ve worked on the show since the very beginning. Originally, I was hired to be Sid Selvidge’s assistant, and I had already been working in radio. At the time, I was the blues director at a radio station, but my role at Beale Street Caravan was just to get artist clearances for Sid and things like that. After six months, I moved on to the Blues Foundation and started working on things there, but I was still doing stuff for the Caravan, and the hosts were the Memphis Horns. They did two seasons telling stories, and the whole thing was scripted.

After the Horns left, Joyce Cobb and Sam the Sham took over, and they were around for a while, but when they left, we didn’t know what we were going to do next. So Sid put me on for a season just to try it out. Daren Dortin joined me for a while, but once he left and we got a new producer, we wanted to change things up and so we brought Kevin Cubbins on board. Having Kevin was really refreshing, because it didn’t just feel like I was talking at people. Since then, I’ve been hosting for the past 16 years.

Where did the name Beale Street Caravan come from?

I always thought it was a combination of things. We have always featured blues musicians, and when it first started, we didn’t have hosts. It was just guys performing. Now we air pre-recorded sets and famous sets from festivals, but we started out live at B.B. King’s club. We’d also go to blues festivals in Chicago and festivals like King Biscuit and the Waterfront in Portland. That was the precursor to what we do now. We’ve had shows that have taken place everywhere. We even have a show from Venezuela that we air. When we first started, we were able to capture stuff from Rufus Thomas, because some of the greats were still with us.

How has the audience reach grown since the show started?

It’s always been sporadically picked up all over the world, but it’s been picked up by a lot more networks as we’ve grown, like Armed Forces Radio, for example. Having them air our show puts us anyplace that American troops are, which is everywhere if you think about it. We are in so many places now. We didn’t used to have such a big presence in the Middle East, and we also have a lot of sessions recorded online for people to hear all over the world.

What are the criteria for the types of music you play on your show? Does it ever venture out of blues? Do you ever record in-studio?

Kevin Cubbins will record things live sometimes, depending on where he is. One of our engineers, Matt Brown, might get sent somewhere to record something. But some shows that we play are older and were recorded long ago. Other times, people just submit something they recorded themselves. New Orleans Jazz Fest also records their festival and sends it to us. Kevin lets our audience and contributors know what he’s looking for, but most of the stuff we air stays within the region.

How is Beale Street Caravan different from something like Rocket Science Audio, Ditty TV, or the now-defunct Live From Memphis?

I think we are a little more focused than the shows you mentioned. We promote the brand of Memphis, and we want people to listen to our show and decide to make a move to Memphis or at least come here and track down an artist. We have a focus on the region, but we’ll have acts from all over on the station. The center of [Beale Street Caravan] is always the blues-roots sound that made Memphis famous, and we like to have fun on air and show the reach that Memphis music has across the world and on other musicians. That’s why we fit within the NPR format. Our message takes people behind the scenes.

How big is the annual fund-raiser in terms of keeping Beale Street Caravan in business?

It’s our only fund-raiser. It’s changed over the years, and we’ve become bigger and bigger, but we only do one thing in terms of raising money.

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Inside the Blues Hall of fame

Little Walter’s harmonica, Johnny Winter’s Firebird guitar, and Koko Taylor’s $2,000 gold boots all have a new home at the Blues Hall of Fame, along with many other artifacts that tell the story of influential blues musicians nationwide.

“Once we got rolling, the artifacts being donated just kept on coming,” said Nora Tucker, manager and curator.

“Almost all of our donations come from the families of musicians, which is a testament to how long the Blues Foundation has been around and our relationship to the blues community.”

Opened in 2001, the Blues Foundation’s headquarters sits across the street from the Lorraine Motel on S. Main, with a recently constructed life-size statue of Little Milton greeting people as they walk by. Inside, to the right of the Blues Foundation entrance, is a nine-panel art gallery that will feature the work of legendary blues photographer Dick Waterman for the next six months.

Past the free art gallery is a large set of stairs descending to the Blues Hall of Fame. Complete with interactive screens that act as a database for hundreds of blues artists, the Blues Hall of Fame features guitars, stage clothing, Grammy Awards, and even platinum records from artists like Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson, and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Other highlights of the exhibit include Albert “Master of the Telecaster” Collins’ amazing leather jacket, original hand-written lyric sheets from W.C. Handy and Memphis Slim, an original Otis Spann electric piano, and many more one-of-a-kind artifacts. Tucker said that when curating the Blues Hall of Fame, the Blues Foundation wanted to focus on the blues as a genre instead of the bigger musical landscape of Memphis and Mississippi.

One of ten tour jackets left from the Muddy Waters 1982 World Tour.

“We are the Blues Hall of Fame, so we specifically recognize all this great work that has been done within the blues genre,” Tucker said. “We don’t really need to tell the story of what created the blues because it’s already being told at places like the Blues Exhibit in Tunica and the Rock and Soul Museum. You can go to other museums and see a chronological story about Memphis music and its evolution, but we wanted to create something that concentrates specifically on blues musicians and their bodies of work.”

Even with an amazing start to their collection underway, Tucker said the exhibit will grow and evolve as more musicians get inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.

After a 10-month construction process, the Blues Hall of Fame will officially open at 10 a.m. on Friday, May 8th during the weekend-long Blues Foundation celebration, which includes the 36th Annual Blues Awards.

Thursday, May 7th

10 a.m. Will Call and BMA Merchandise Sales – Ticket Desk Cook Convention Center (immediately across the street from Sheraton entrance)

Noon–3 p.m. — Health screening for blood pressure, diabetes, cholesterol, custom ear plugs provided by Musicares, and more. — Sheraton Memphis Downtown (St. Louis foyer at top of escalator)

1-3 p.m. — Yellow Dog Records Showcase with Fo’ Reel and Eden Brent — B.B. King’s, 143 Beale, free

1:30–3:30 p.m. — The Recording Academy Chicago & Memphis Chapters Reception Celebrating the Blues Music Awards — Heritage Ballroom Sheraton Memphis Downtown

5:30 p.m. — The Party Begins Reception, featuring performances by 2015 Blues Music Award nominees — Grand Lobby, Cook Convention Center

5:30-9:45 p.m. — Auction & Blues Music Award Merchandise Sales — Outside the Ballroom, Cook Convention Center

6:30 p.m.-1 a.m. — Dinner, Awards, & Nominee performances — Ballroom, Cook Convention Center

Friday, May 8th

10 a.m.-5 p.m. — Grand Opening of the Blues Hall of Fame — 421 S. Main

11 a.m.-11 p.m. — Tennessee Brewery Revival with Billy Gibson — 495 Tennessee St. (2 blocks from Blues Hall of Fame)

1-5 p.m. — Brandon Santini’s 4th Beale Street Mess Around — Proceeds benefit the HART Fund, with performances by: Janiva Magness, John Primer & Bob Corritore, Victor Wainwright, Jarekus Singleton, Andy T- Nick Nixon Band, EG Kight & Greg Nagy, Monster Mike Welch & Anthony Geraci, Igor Prado, Lisa Mann, Annika Chambers, Mick Kolassa, Jeff Jensen Band, Wendy DeWitt & Kirk Harwood, and more — Rum Boogie Café

4:30-8:30 p.m. — Play-it-Forward Fundraiser, benefiting Generation Blues. Featuring Andy T-Nick Nixon Band, Janiva Magness, Brandon Santini, John Primer with Bob Corritore, EG Kight, Lisa Mann plus many other special guests — Hard Rock Café

4:30 p.m. — Barbara Blue Beale Street Note Dedication — Silky O’Sullivan’s

6-10 p.m. — 30th Anniversary with Tas Cru & Band of Tortured Souls — Rum Boogie Café

8 p.m. — BMA Blues Jam proudly presented by 2 Left Feet, featuring the Electrix (Eli Cook, Scott Holt, Eddie Turner), Roger Earl & Bryan Bassett of Foghat, Billy Blough & Jeff Simon of the George Thorogood Band, and more — Earnestine & Hazel’s

9 p.m. — Bernie Pearl & Barbara Morrison — Blues Hall

10 p.m. — Vizztone Label Group Presents: Bob Margolin, Amanda Fish, Dave Gross, Long Tall Deb, Rob Stone, and more — Rum Boogie Café

10 p.m. — Barbara Blue’s official CD release party — Hard Rock Café

Saturday, May 9th

10 a.m.-5 p.m. — Blues Hall of Fame Open — 421 S. Main

5:30 p.m. — Women in Blues Showcase — Rum Boogie Café

9 p.m.– Gracie Curran & the High Falutin’ Band — Rum Boogie Café

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Blues Music Award Nominations Announced

Janiva Magness

  • Janiva Magness

Los Angeles singer Janiva Magness and San Francisco harmonica master John Nemeth lead the way with five nominations each for next spring’s Blues Music Awards.

The Memphis-based Blues Foundation announced the nominations yesterday and tickets for the event — which will be held on May 9th at the Cook Convention Center — go on sale today.

Both Magness and Nemeth are up for the B.B. King Entertainer of the Year award, along with Joe Louis Walker, Curtis Salgado, and Rick Estrin.

For more information on the event, see blues.org.

The full list of nominees:

Acoustic Album
Billy Boy Arnold Sings Big Bill Broonzy – Billy Boy Arnold
Blues on Solid Ground – John Primer
Deeper in the Well – Eric Bibb
Not Alone – Ann Rabson w/ Bob Margolin
Talking Guitar – Paul Rishell

Acoustic Artist
Carolina Chocolate Drops
Doug MacLeod
Eric Bibb
Harrison Kennedy
Paul Rishell

Album
And Still I Rise – Heritage Blues Orchestra
Double Dynamite – The Mannish Boys
Show of Strength – Michael Burks
Son of the Seventh Son – Mud Morganfield
Stronger For It – Janiva Magness

B.B. King Entertainer
Curtis Salgado
Janiva Magness
Joe Louis Walker
John Nemeth
Rick Estrin

Band
Lil’ Ed & the Blues Imperials
Phantom Blues Band
Rick Estrin & the Nightcats
Tedeschi Trucks Band
The Mannish Boys

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Crossover Blues

The blues may be a foundational element for most of American music, but these days the genre is pretty self-contained — widely restricted to a network of specialty clubs and festivals catering to a loyal base of fans. The Blues Music Awards — the annual “blues Grammys” sponsored by the Memphis-based Blues Foundation since 1980 — is of and for this base of committed fans. The event moves to the Mississippi Delta for the first time this year, landing at the Grand Casino Event Center in Tunica on Thursday, May 8th.

But this year the awards showcase a trio of artists — chitlin-circuit kingpin Bobby Rush, deep-soul reclamation project Bettye Lavette, and eclectic roots-music bandleader Watermelon Slim — who represent a broader vision of blues culture. Perhaps it’s a sign of health that the three highest-profile nominees this year are all artists with cachet both within and outside the parameters of the contemporary blues scene.

Together, Slim, Lavette, and Rush have garnered 13 nominations across 10 of the 25 award categories. All three are among the five nominees for the night’s biggest award, the B.B. King Entertainer of the Year, while Slim and Lavette are both up for the other big prize, Album of the Year, for their 2007 discs The Wheel Man and The Scene of the Crime. Rush, meanwhile, is the first person in the ceremony’s history to be nominated for Artist of the Year in both the Acoustic and Soul Blues categories.

Watermelon Slim & the Workers lead the nominations for the second year in a row, with six. In addition to the aforementioned album and entertainer awards, Slim and his band are up for Band of the Year, Contemporary Blues Album of the Year, Contemporary Blues Male Artist of the Year, and Song of the Year (for “The Wheel Man”).

Only three years after being a Best New Artist nominee at the BMAs, Slim is racking up the kind of notice previously reserved for the likes of Robert Cray and B.B. King, and the fascinating, satisfying The Wheel Man testifies that the attention might be deserved.

Like Jimmie Rodgers, another working-class hero, Slim is a blues-loving white guy who blends country into his sound. The generally stomping electric blues on The Wheel Man is almost totally devoid of blues-bar-band clichés, with echoes of field hollers and jump blues thrown into the mix. And Slim proves to be a sharp songwriter too: “Drinking & Driving” (“You better pull over baby instead of drinking and driving me away”) is one of those songs you can’t believe hasn’t already been written.

Content-wise, the album mirrors the diversity of experience of the man himself. “Newspaper Reporter,” about one of Slim’s past career paths, acknowledges his white-collar credentials, while the title track and “Sawmill Holler” speak to the blue-collar experience that has seemingly shaped him more.

In addition to the two big awards, Lavette is also nominated for Contemporary Blues Female Artist of the Year. Never exactly a straight-blues artist, Lavette is among the many survivors of the ’60s soul scene that never quite hit. Detroit-raised, she recorded for regional indie labels and for Atlantic, cutting sides in soul hotspots Memphis and Muscle Shoals, but never had that big breakthrough. By the ’80s and ’90s, she was a live performer who rarely recorded.

Then earlier this decade, Lavette embarked on the comeback that most of her era and predicament can only dream of, inspiring an overseas reissue boom at the outset of the decade and then re-emerging fully with 2003’s A Woman Like Me, a reintroduction produced and guided by former Robert Cray collaborator Dennis Walker.

From there, she moved on to Anti-, an indie label that’s lately specialized in rootsy prestige artists, first with 2005’s I’ve Got My Own Hell To Raise and then with last year’s The Scene of the Crime, an album recorded at her old Muscle Shoals stomping grounds with the Drive-By Truckers on back-up.

Lavette shows off her chops as an interpretive singer by claiming Willie Nelson’s “Somebody Pick Up My Pieces” and Elton John’s “Talking Old Soldiers” as her own. But the real showcase is the album’s only original song, written with trucker Patterson Hood, “Before the Money Came (The Battle of Bettye Lavette)” —  an autobiographical statement of purpose that acknowledges a whole new audience (“I was singing R&B back in ’62/Before you were born and your momma too”).

Rush, by contrast, is not a comeback story. He’s an institution. Unlike Lavette or Slim, he doesn’t so much straddle the blues scene and more general music fans. Instead, he represents a constituency that you might think would be absolutely central to the “blues” audience but really isn’t: working-class African-American adults.

In addition to Entertainer of the Year, Acoustic Artist of the Year, and Soul Blues Male Artist of the Year, Rush is nominated for Acoustic Album of the Year for his 2006 country blues disc Raw.

Raw comes across as somewhat of a bid for respect, the kind that — in the words of colleague Chris Davis — being a “big-panty provocateur” doesn’t always provide. It’s mostly a solo, acoustic affair, stripping away the ostensibly cheesy soul flourishes that are too fun and, in its own world, too contemporary to be deemed authentic and respectable by roots puritans. Not that Rush — a sublime entertainer in his more typical element — gets too staid here. The opening “Boney Maroney” has some of the lascivious, mischievous qualities we expect, while the closing “I Got 3 Problems” refers to the complicated trinity of “my girlfriend, my woman, and my wife.”

If Rush, Lavette, and Slim represent the possibilities of the blues today — as traditional music alive in the modern world — then the blues is doing alright. All three are slated to attend the ceremony.

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Nominees for Blues Music Awards Announced

The nominees for the 29th annual Blues Music Awards, presented by the Memphis-based Blues Foundation, are out, with Bobby Rush, Watermelon Slim, and Bettye LaVette leading the way. All three are nominated for the B.B. King Entertainer of the Year award, as well as album of the year for LaVette’s The Scene of the Crime and Watermelon Slim & the Workers’ The Wheel Man and acoustic album of the year for Rush’s Raw. Additionally, Rush is up for acoustic artist of the year and soul-blues male artist of the year; LaVette is up for contemporary-blues female artist of the year; and Slim is up for band of the year, contemporary blues album of the year, contemporary-blues male artist of the year, and song of the year for “The Wheel Man.”

More Flyer music coverage.

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Music Music Features

Blues Nominees Announced

The nominees for the 29th annual Blues Music Awards, presented by the Memphis-based Blues Foundation, are out, with Bobby Rush, Watermelon Slim, and Bettye LaVette leading the way. All three are nominated for the B.B. King Entertainer of the Year award, as well as album of the year for LaVette’s The Scene of the Crime and Watermelon Slim & the Workers’ The Wheel Man and acoustic album of the year for Rush’s Raw. Additionally, Rush is up for acoustic artist of the year and soul-blues male artist of the year; LaVette is up for contemporary-blues female artist of the year; and Slim is up for band of the year, contemporary blues album of the year, contemporary-blues male artist of the year, and song of the year for “The Wheel Man.”

For a genre constantly warding off contemporary irrelevance and niche-genre stasis, Rush, LaVette, and Slim are strong standard-bearers — blues artists who make traditional but still broadly relevant new music.

There’s not as much Memphis-specific action in the nominations as in past years, though the Memphis-based Yellow Dog Records had three artists nominated: The Soul of John Black for best new artist debut, Mary Flower for acoustic artist, and Fiona Boyes for contemporary blues female artist.

The Blue Music Awards move to Mississippi for the first time in 2008, with the ceremony to be held at the Grand Casino Event Center in Tunica on May 8th.

A Vending Machine Xmas

Vending Machine, the musical brainchild of indie-rocker Robby Grant, is responsible for one of 2007’s very best local albums with King Cobras Do. Now, Grant is giving fans a Christmas gift in the form of a four-song holiday EP available for streaming and downloading on his Web site, VendingMachineBand.com. The highlight is “Wot Is Nog,” a musical paean/instructional duet with ex-Memphian Shelby Bryant. Vending Machine also plays a holiday show Saturday, December 22nd, at Young Avenue Deli with Jump Back Jake. Doors open at 9 p.m.; admission is $5.

In related news, Bryant has a new, Memphis-record album, Luscious, out now on Smells Like Records.

Plan Ahead

January is shaping up to be a strong month for live music in Memphis. Locally connected indie-rock up-and-comers The Whigs will be at the Hi-Tone Café January 12th. One of the best bands of the past — yep! — 20 years, New Jersey’s Yo La Tengo, play the Gibson Lounge for the first time on January 18th. Current indie darlings Band of Horses join Cass McCombs at the Hi-Tone January 30th. And FedExForum will feature a couple of big shows, with hard rockers The Foo Fighters on January 25th and country crossover star Brad Paisley on January 31st.

Or, to plan even further ahead, roots-music fanatics might want to start making plans for the 2008 edition of Ponderosa Stomp, the New Orleans roots festival that recently announced its lineup.

There are copious Memphis-connected acts on the bill for the Stomp, including The Bo-Keys, Syl Johnson, The Hi-Rhythm Section, William Bell, and Sonny Burgess. The Ponderosa Stomp takes place April 29th and 30th at House of Blues and The Parish in New Orleans.

Riffs: The Hard Rock Café hosts a benefit concert — dubbed “Applause for the Cause” — this week for Global Angels, an international children’s charity organization. Local hard-rockers Egypt Central headline the 12-band bill on Friday, December 21st. Admission is $5.

Live From Memphis is hosting a podcast from local label Makeshift Music. The 17-track podcast features songs from bands such as Snowglobe, The Coach and Four, and The Subteens. You can hear it at LiveFromMemphis.com/listen/radio/Makeshiftfamily.

Memphis International Records will release a solo album from California-based ex-pat Memphian Bob Frank. The album, Red Neck, Blue Collar, takes its title from the Frank song Jim Dickinson used to lead off his Jungle Jim and the Voodoo Tiger album and will be released by Memphis International on February 19th.