Live Book: Don't Start Me Talkin'......
- 流派:Blues 蓝调
- 语种:英语
- 发行时间:1994-06-01
- 类型:录音室专辑
- 歌曲
- 时长
简介
Musically, Roy Book Binder is difficult to fence in or catergorize. His eclectic repertoire includes blues, country tunes, bluegrass, folk, and popular songs that originated on Tin Pan Alley. He fantasizes that if he had been born 50 years earlier, he would have become a minstrel man. One of his musical heros, Dave Van Ronk, once described himself to me as a songster. That title might suit Roy as well, his music, a reflection of his long musical journey through the rich American cultural landscape of the last half of the 20th Century. Roy Book Binder has been recording East Coast blues since the '60s, and this new live set may be the best recorded work of his career, proving once again that the blues is an art that rewards the passing years. A student of both Pink Anderson and Gary Davis, Book Binder is one of the few revivalists whose mastery of the elegant East Coast blues style transcends the technical to embrace the form's vision. As always, the program leans heavily on interpretations of classic material from the genre, including tunes by Bayless Rose, Gary Davis, and Willie McTell; also included are bows to country and western pioneer Jimmie Rodgers (He's In The Jailhouse Now) and the Delta's master of double-entendre, Bo Carder (Let's Get Drunk Again). Just as entertaining as his music, is Book Binder's rapport with his audience and his minstrel's ability to tell just the right story at the right time. Candy Man serves as a vehicle for the tale of his tutelage at the side of Gary Davis. Perfectly woven into the fabric of the song, the story is so captivating and evocative of Davis' spirit that the track's 11 minutes seem but a moment. Equally engaging is the story of the first time Book Binder met Jefferson Airplane/Hot Tuna veteran Jorma Kaukonen, who performs on two songs here. If you're a fan of Piedmont blues, get this CD - even the most pure of the purists will like it. Roy Book Binder has absorbed not just the notes and words, but the spirit of a blues style that was, after all, meant for good times. - Peter R. Aschoff (Living Blues)