Greetings Blainreaders - and welcome to my new subscribers, James and George. It's only by serendipity that I collect a few names every month. I never think to ask - even when someone just bought a 3-pack of my CDs. I always appreciate when someone comes up to me at the gig and says "I got your Blainletter yesterday and here I am." Once again it's the day before the gig and here I am trying to remind everyone plus the obligatory whine from this seventy-something struggling emerging artist and a few tips & clips of some of the great music I've heard in Toronto last month.
But first things first: The "Second Saturday" Campfire Jam is back at the Old Mill Home Smith Bar on Oct 14. Bass guru George Koller played with me last year at the Old Mill and figures prominently on "New Folk Blues". I've jammed with Rick Taylor a couple of times, once at a Winterfolk Campfire and a hotel room jam or two and I've always been a big admirer of his guitar style on that big ole Gretch White Falcon. I never played with Jesse O'Brien but every time I've seen him play I was knocked out - then I heard him sing a tune at Hugh's Room and I knew I had to get him out to the Campfire. So lucky to catch him between tours & recording with Colin James, Harrison Kennedy, Steve Strongman and many more. He's everybody's favourite pianoman these days and it will be a treat swapping songs and jamming with this crew!
Colorblind Brian's Toronto Blues Diary has been selected as one of Toronto's Top 50 Music Blogs! I guess maybe I better start posting more often...
Southside Shuffle was a Gas: This was the first time I played the Shuffle under my own name and I'm so thankful to Chuck Jackson for bringing me in. I invited Mark "Bird" Stafford to play with me. Harp + drums...works for me (and I didn't have to pay him double!). You can tell that festival is run by a musician. Everything was about the musician, great hospitality, top notch production, lots of little things (if you can call a towel on the stage a little thing). Hmmm, I wonder if it's bad form to keep the towel...I've got some iPhone footage but it's not edited yet. There was a magic moment when I just finished my song about Kathi McDonald when a butterfly took over the stage, darting about - I'm going to have to go ahead and say that was a nod from Kathi from beyond the grave. It didn't seem like a big crowd there at my 1PM set, but throughout the day I ran into folks who complimented me - one guy even bought a couple of CDs. And the big highlight was Al Lerman telling me I had a "killer guitar sound." I told him I realized at the end of the set that my overdrive pedal was on all the time because I couldn't see the light in the bright sun. And then, my new looper with the red and green lights very hard to discern by ole Colorblind. Many thanks to Bird for doing the gig with me and then inviting me to sit in with him and Kenny "Blues Boss" Wayne - that was a real highlight for me.
Steve Hill gave a great set - solo as always - but he puts out a lot of sound. I had to laugh when he yelled "How Ya doin' Toronto!" and a park full of Missassaugans thinking "we wouldn't know..." I like that Ben Racine (probably because he reminds me so much of one of my faves, James Hunter). And at the end of the video is a long slow blues which he dedicated to Sab, a real champion of a lot of artists including yours truly not to mention a master of self-promotion. They named the stage after him...The Sab Memorial Stage. And Jack plays the most heartfelt blues. Check it out
Steve Hill gave a great set - solo as always - but he puts out a lot of sound. I had to laugh when he yelled "How Ya doin' Toronto!" and a park full of Missassaugans thinking "we wouldn't know..." I like that Ben Racine (probably because he reminds me so much of one of my faves, James Hunter). And at the end of the video is a long slow blues which he dedicated to Sab, a real champion of a lot of artists including yours truly not to mention a master of self-promotion. They named the stage after him...The Sab Memorial Stage. And Jack plays the most heartfelt blues. Check it out
Blues For the Red Door
This will be a great event. I played it the year before last and looking forward to doing it again. And look at the line-up they're bringing in this year. This is a very good cause and always a great show
Terry Wilkins celebrated his 70th Birthday at the Cameron last Tuesday and it was a great evening. I told his daughter Gabriella and also a woman I had never met that of all the people in that room, I might have been just about the first one he met when he landed here in Toronto with the Flying Circus. I was supposed to be A&Ring them while my buddy Frazier Mohawk was crafting together the Blackstone Rangers. It didn't last very long and I headed back to Quebec where Frazier soon caught up with me and ended up producing some tracks for me. Anyway, Terry's band, the Sinners' Choir, was soooooo tight - and yet improvising all the time. 3-part harmonies throughout. They've got something special. Here's a great montage from the party by Pamela Kohly:
Best Wishes to Terry and to all who read this far. See you out there. If you see me, please say hi and let me know you're a "blainreader." And if you like what I'm doing, please "like" it on my Facebook page. This will all help with my "klout" and, believe it or not, these statistics are what it takes to be "verified" as an artist on Spotify. It gets crazy