Lee 3

AUSTRALIA


Joined February 1st 2010

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Went to see CW Stoneking at the Prince of Wales Friday night. He plays blues and calypso on a resonator guitar and banjo, backed by his Primitive Horn Orchestra. His songs could be straight out of the 1920s and his voice sounds like a 70 year old black man from Mississippi.

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There’s been a bit of debate about how appropriate it is for a middle class white guy to be making a career out of mimicking the music born from of the poverty of African Americans.

Critic Emma Hennings writes:

"It’s Stoneking’s voice that disturbs me more and more as this evening’s (very long) set wears on. More than his note-perfect guitar playing, or the commendable enthusiasm of his three-person horn section, it’s his eerie Xerox of a black man’s voice that leaves me doubting the veracity and the much-lauded ‘authenticity’ of his blues revivalism. Taking on a voice the very timbre of which denotes isolated, rural, African-American poverty – everything that Stoneking is so patently not – does not make for ‘authenticity’ any more than would painting your face with boot polish. His shtick is within half a centimetre of a Black & White Minstrel Show."

Read the full article here

The Courier Mail also tackled the subject.


Perhaps it’s a bit simplistic to divide music into black and white. There has always been cross fertilisation in music. Look at Dock Boggs the Appalachian banjo player who played a hybrid of blues and hillbilly music during the depression. Black musicians have also drawn on folk ballads with English origins (e.g. St James Infirmary Blues)

Stoneking has absorbed a range of different influences and melded them into his own style. I guess the musicians that he's influenced by are all dead. There is a bit of separation there and the show has a more of a feeling of reverence than the mimicry of the black and white mistrel show.
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Highly recommend it. Lots of free music.

http://winterblues.com.au/
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Take a closer look at the lyrics


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Slash - attacked but ever the pro

June 16th 2010 03:34
I'm not a huge Guns and Roses fan but isn't Slash a true professional. Attacked by a guy on stage playing the solo to Sweet Child o' Mine and hardly misses a note.


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Choosing a setlist

June 7th 2010 06:35


What is a great blues setlist? Should you stick to songs that suit your style? Should you try and mix it up as much as possible (slow, fast, minor, different eras) or should you write your own stuff


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The Trials of Organising a Band

May 25th 2010 04:42
It seems like the hardest thing about playing in a band isn't playing music.

It's about getting everyone together in the same place to practice - making last minute changes to practice days, calling people to make sure they are going to show up, trying to find new members when they don't


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Black Keys - New Album

May 18th 2010 05:32
The Black Keys have a new album out today called 'Brothers'.

Very positive review in The Age Newspaper
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John Lee Hooker released Boogie Chillen in 1948, later releasing several other versions.

Have a listen


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Bob Brozman is, perhaps, best known for his instructional books and DVDs but in between publishing and filming, he also manages to maintain a relentless touring schedule. His tour of Australia was no exception – over 20 shows in a month, travelling to all parts of the country. This was one of Brozman’s final shows before heading home to California but despite his obvious weariness, Brozman managed to maintain an amazing intensity throughout his two hour-long sets


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Recent Comments

Comment by Lee 3
on Time Saved to Waste Time - A Thought for a Day

June 29th 2010 06:49
Guitar noodling is dangerous though... as there's not time constraints.

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Comment by Lee 3
on Choosing a setlist

June 19th 2010 04:53
I'd love to help start a regular blues night at a venue in Melbourne. Get a few bands to play regularly. A lot of blues gigs seem to be sit down affairs or part of a festival. It would be great to get one going with a juke joint atmosphere where people can talk/be rowdy/dance if they want to.

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Comment by Lee 3
on Choosing a setlist

June 15th 2010 05:05
You're right. It is a bit all over the place. Lucky we haven't played a gig yet!
I'm not the singer (just the guitar player) but he has has his own deep growly sort of style.

We should look at grouping them better.

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That is good advice. The person only came to two practices but we should have made it clear that it was a trial to see how it went.

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Comment by Lee 3
on The Women Who Have Rocked My World

May 10th 2010 03:54
My pick: Australia's Liz Stringer

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Comment by Lee 3
on Best Punk Songs

April 19th 2010 05:48
I pick I wanna be sedated. Also check out this clip

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Comment by Lee 3
on Don't Stop the Beat

April 14th 2010 06:33
Sounds interesting. Keep posting.

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Comment by Lee 3
on HEAVY TRASH

April 14th 2010 00:50
I saw Heavy Trash at Meredith last year and I was expecting a lot seeing the album is great and I love JSBX but they disappointed. They seemed a bit flat and all the songs sounded really similar.

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Comment by Lee 3
on Desk Calendars, Cameras & Wisdom of a Kind

April 13th 2010 03:00
I have to confess, I'm a fan of the saying of the day. We have 2 at home. There's definitely a 'so bad it's good' factor.

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Comment by Lee 3
on The best of 1950.

April 13th 2010 02:51
I reckon the 50s were a pretty overlooked decade for music but there are some really interesting, innovative sounds... especially with the blues and early rock n' roll e.g. Rocket 88 by Jackie Brenston and his delta cats (arguably the first Rock n' Roll song). Also the early Chicago blues when people were just starting to discover what the electric guitar can do.

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