Blues The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/pl/blues/5877.html Sat, 18 May 2024 17:19:50 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management pl-pl Cephas & Wiggins - Richmond Blues (2008) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/pl/blues/5877-cephas-a-wiggins/22099-cephas-a-wiggins-richmond-blues-2008.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/pl/blues/5877-cephas-a-wiggins/22099-cephas-a-wiggins-richmond-blues-2008.html Cephas & Wiggins - Richmond Blues (2008)

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01 - Richmond Blues 03:59
02 - Going To The River 05:04
03 - Keep Your Hands Off My Baby 04:00
04 - Black Rat Swing 03:35
05 - Mamie 04:12
06 - Crow Jane 03:03
07 - Dog Days Of August 04:12
08 - John Henry 05:39
09 - Pigmeat Crave 03:35
10 - Prison Bound Blues 05:23
11 - Key To The Highway 03:27
12 - Going Down The Road Feeling Bad 03:37
13 - Careless Love 05:51
14 - Great Change 03:49
15 - Reno Factor 03:18
16 - Step It Up And Go 02:57

Acoustic Guitar, Vocals – John Cephas
Harmonica, Vocals – Phil Wiggins

 

In Richmond Blues, guitarist-singer John Cephas and his harmonica-player partner Phil Wiggins personify the century-old blues sound of the Piedmont, the Appalachian foothills running from Richmond to Atlanta. Drawing from roots of ragtime, ballads, country, old-time string band, rhythm and blues, and more, Richmond Blues is a musical roadmap of the Virginia Piedmont tradition. While Cephas calls it "part of my heritage, part of my soul," their sound is at the same time distinctly modern, a kind of "urban acoustic blues."

This recording is part of the Smithsonian Folkways African American Legacy series, co-presented with the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. --- folkways.si.edu

 

Piedmont Blues is the rather lesser known cousin of Delta Blues, and while the Mississippi players went to Chicago and generated electric Blues, the Piedmont artists gravitated to the New York club scene, inspiring a generation of post-WWII protest singers, including a kid called Bob Dylan, and a whole different kind of music. Cephas and Wiggins were an acoustic duo who picked up the banner of Piedmont Blues in the 1980s and revitalised it with their own dramatic compositions.

Guitarist John Cephas was born in Washington DC in 1930 and sang in a Gospel group as a kid and picked up some finger-style guitar from an aunt. He learned about his Virginia heritage from his grandfather and, after service in the Korean war, John played mainly for fun, but when the Folk/Blues revival came around in the early 60s, he began performing professionally as ‘Bowling Green John’, a reference to his Virginia roots. John’s guitar style was reminiscent of Blind Boy Fuller and the Rev. Gary Davis, but he also used his clear tenor voice to sing Folk and Delta Blues songs too. John met harp player Phil Wiggins, another native of DC, born there in 1954, at a jam session at a Smithsonian Folklife Festival in the mid 70s. They played together in a band called The Barrelhouse Rockers, headed by old-school Alabama pianist Wilbert ‘Big Chief’ Ellis, who ran a liquor-store in DC.

John played on ‘Big Chief’s album with Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee and Tarheel Slim in 1977, and when the Chief went to the Happy Hunting Ground later that year, John and Phil continued as a duo dedicated to spreading the Piedmont style. When Terry & McGhee finally ended their acrimonious partnership, Cephas and Wiggins were left as the prime performers of classic Piedmont material, but they also wrote a lot of deep and affecting songs of their own. They took a while to get noticed, but their 1984 album ‘Sweet Bitter Blues’ included several live tracks which gave an insight into the powerful stage performances they had developed. The duo became very popular on the Festival circuit and their ‘Dog Days of August’ won a Handy Blues Award in 1986.

They continued to release critically acclaimed, award-winning, good-selling albums for the next two decades. John’s accomplished finger-picking was complimented by Phil’s rich-toned chording when his harp was backing up, and his inventive solo lines lent a special magic to their work.

In 2008, Cephas and Wiggins released their 13th and final album, ‘Richmond Blues’ on the Folkways label. John passed away in early 2009 after a short illness at the age of 78. --- allaboutbluesmusic.com

 

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Cephas & Wiggins Thu, 17 Aug 2017 13:07:08 +0000
Cephas & Wiggins - Somebody Told The Truth (2002) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/pl/blues/5877-cephas-a-wiggins/22084-cephas-a-wiggins-somebody-told-the-truth-2002.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/pl/blues/5877-cephas-a-wiggins/22084-cephas-a-wiggins-somebody-told-the-truth-2002.html Cephas & Wiggins - Somebody Told The Truth (2002)

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1 	Stack And The Devil 	3:35
2 	Railroad Bill 	5:09
3 	Last Fair Deal Gone Down 	3:47
4 	Sick Bed Blues 	4:33
5 	The Pimp In The Pink Suit 	2:26
6 	Burn Your Bridges 	4:04
7 	Darling Cora 	4:15
8 	Foregiveness 	3:18
9 	Bowling Green Strut 	4:33
10 	Darkness On The Delta 	4:37
11 	Reno Factory 	2:41
12 	Somebody Told The Truth On Me 	2:21
13 	Something Smells 	3:57

Acoustic Guitar, Vocals – John Cephas
Harmonica, Vocals – Phil Wiggins
Bass – Rob Thomas (tracks: 10)
Drums – Steve Williams (tracks: 10)
Lead Guitar – Tal Farlow (tracks: 10)
Rhythm Guitar – John Stewart (tracks: 10)

 

The acoustic duo's first album in three years doesn't substantially alter the twosome's established game plan. But its well-recorded mix of studio and live tracks -- including one with a full yet laid-back band -- shows them to be at the top of their form. Combining traditional Delta and Piedmont blues and gospel classics like Robert Johnson's "Last Fair Deal Going Down" (a concert staple that finally makes it to disc), Blind Boy Fuller's salty, suggestive "Something Smells," and Skip James' "Sick Bed Blues" with their similarly styled originals proves they are not stuck in the past, even as they revel in visiting and interpreting it. John Cephas' "The Pimp in the Pink Suit," with its cowboy chorus, could just as well have been written in the '30s. Phil Wiggins shines on "Burn Your Bridges," an instrumental showcase for his lip-shredding harmonica gymnastics that is as compelling as anything from the great Sonny Terry, an obvious influence. While the torchy, supper club jazz of "Darkness on the Delta" (featuring Tal Farlow on guitar) is an interesting tangent, it doesn't really fit with the rest of the more roots-oriented material. But with their devotion to authentic ragtime, folk, deep blues, and religious music, Somebody Told the Truth is another uncompromising entry into Cephas & Wiggins' exceptional catalog. ---Hal Horowitz, AllMusic Review

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Cephas & Wiggins Mon, 14 Aug 2017 14:02:00 +0000