Tags
Language
Tags
April 2025
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
30 31 1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 1 2 3
Attention❗ To save your time, in order to download anything on this site, you must be registered 👉 HERE. If you do not have a registration yet, it is better to do it right away. ✌

( • )( • ) ( ͡⚆ ͜ʖ ͡⚆ ) (‿ˠ‿)
SpicyMags.xyz

Roomful Of Blues - The First Album (1977/1988) [Re-Up]

Posted By: countryfreak
Roomful Of Blues - The First Album (1977/1988) [Re-Up]

Roomful Of Blues - The First Album (1977/1988)
EAC Rip | FLAC (Image) + CUE + LOG | 251 MB | Covers Included
Genre: Blues/Jump-Blues/Jazz/Swing | Label: Rounder/Varrick | Catalog Number: VR-035
Release Date: 1977/1988 | RAR 5% Rec. | Uploaded

Roomful of Blues' self-titled 1977 disc on Island Records, produced by Joel Dorn and the great Doc Pomus, reveals a powerful and entertaining approach to material from Noble "Thin Man" Watts, Chick Willis, Aaron Walker, Lou Willie Turner, and others. Duke Robillard's authentic vocal and guitar lead with authority, the group performing these solid blues with the precision of jazz greats. There's an interesting resemblance here to the Atlantic debut of the J. Geils Band, not in sound, but in look and attitude. Decades later Robillard would join John Geils; merging their journeymen talents, this ten-track collection by the septet is chock-full of this Duke's magic and indicates great things to come. Though Greg Piccolo is the tenor sax player in the ensemble, Scott Hamilton is featured on Aaron Walker's "Still in Love with You," a performance by the group that allows their respective talents to shine, the production flawlessly gives breathing room to each instrument. The rave version of "Honey Hush" condenses the music, focusing the elegance of the previous track into a rocking stomp with the band building into a mini blues Wall of Sound. Where members of another New England band of the day, Duke & the Drivers, were more fans than musicians, creating a party atmosphere from the sheer love of it, this serious bunch re-creates the aura found on some of the better known renditions of these compositions much like Stompy Jones, a group of veterans in the new millennium capturing the spirit of the time when this music was in its heyday. "Duke's Blues" is an inspired original with the guitar and saxes wailing in a symphony of earthy tones. The disc is an impressive contribution, but perhaps a bit out of place on a label that featured Bob Marley, Robert Palmer, Ultravox, John Cale, and Steve Winwood around the time of this album's release.

––––––––-
Tracklist
––––––––-

1. Red, Hot & Blue 3:14
2. Love Struck 4:19
3. That's My Life 3:47
4. Duke's Blues 4:21
5. Texas Flood 2:55
6. Give It Up 3:15
7. Stormy Monday 4:33
8. Take It Like A Man 2:11
9. Still In Love With You 4:19
10. Honey Hush 4:57

Personnel:
Duke Robillard - Guitar & Vocal
Al Copley - Piano
Oreston Hubbard - Bass Fiddle
John Rossi - Drums
Richard Lataille - Alto Sax
Doug James - Bariton Sax
Greg Piccolo - Tenor Sax
Scott Hamilton featured on Tenor Sax on "Still In love With You"

Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 from 4. May 2009

EAC extraction logfile from 21. July 2010, 9:35

Roomful of Blues / The First Album

Used drive : HL-DT-STDVDRAM GSA-H60N Adapter: 3 ID: 0

Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No

Read offset correction : 667
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

Used output format : User Defined Encoder
Selected bitrate : 1024 kBit/s
Quality : High
Add ID3 tag : No
Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy\FLAC\FLAC.EXE
Additional command line options : -6 -V -T "ARTIST=%a" -T "TITLE=%t" -T "ALBUM=%g" -T "DATE=%y" -T "TRACKNUMBER=%n" -T "GENRE=%m" -T "COMMENT=%e" %s -o %d


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
1 | 0:00.00 | 3:15.02 | 0 | 14626
2 | 3:15.02 | 4:19.58 | 14627 | 34109
3 | 7:34.60 | 3:47.57 | 34110 | 51191
4 | 11:22.42 | 4:21.13 | 51192 | 70779
5 | 15:43.55 | 2:55.12 | 70780 | 83916
6 | 18:38.67 | 3:15.38 | 83917 | 98579
7 | 21:54.30 | 4:33.30 | 98580 | 119084
8 | 26:27.60 | 2:11.20 | 119085 | 128929
9 | 28:39.05 | 4:19.12 | 128930 | 148366
10 | 32:58.17 | 4:53.00 | 148367 | 170341


Range status and errors

Selected range

Filename D:\MUSIK\Roomful Of Blues - The First Album [FLA] (1977)\Roomful of Blues - The First Album.wav

Peak level 91.2 %
Range quality 100.0 %
Copy CRC BEC3C723
Copy OK

No errors occurred


AccurateRip summary

Track 1 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 1) [035D06F0], AccurateRip returned [CD4575A0]
Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [90F415C0]
Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [2A85DAFB]
Track 4 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 1) [749C2CA6], AccurateRip returned [0D0E5E9D]
Track 5 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 1) [199C72D9], AccurateRip returned [20908B80]
Track 6 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 1) [25F6305B], AccurateRip returned [96A4B332]
Track 7 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 1) [D719106A], AccurateRip returned [C3CB8E81]
Track 8 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 1) [A65C744A], AccurateRip returned [470135C9]
Track 9 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 1) [0E5FB3B4], AccurateRip returned [8ADE2FCD]
Track 10 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 1) [F47E0D2E], AccurateRip returned [801B26B2]

2 track(s) accurately ripped
8 track(s) could not be verified as accurate

Some tracks could not be verified as accurate

End of status report


[CUETools log; Date: 21.07.2010 09:36:56; Version: 2.0.9]
[AccurateRip ID: 000e097a-007037b9-8908df0a] found.
Track [ CRC ] Status
01 [035d06f0] (1/1) No match but offset
02 [90f415c0] (1/1) Accurately ripped
03 [2a85dafb] (1/1) Accurately ripped
04 [749c2ca6] (1/1) No match but offset
05 [199c72d9] (1/1) No match but offset
06 [25f6305b] (1/1) No match but offset
07 [d719106a] (1/1) No match but offset
08 [a65c744a] (1/1) No match but offset
09 [0e5fb3b4] (1/1) No match but offset
10 [f47e0d2e] (1/1) No match but offset

Track Peak [ CRC32 ] [W/O NULL] [ LOG ]
– 91,1 [BEC3C723] [62CCF53E] CRC32
01 91,1 [5A337734] [97470311]
02 91,1 [5F256910] [70FA96D2]
03 91,1 [0C7D4D31] [ED1144F7]
04 91,1 [112C48D2] [FE5B971A]
05 91,1 [CC80AD46] [DCDF87BE]
06 91,1 [B9E81EBF] [22671425]
07 85,8 [8C721656] [E62AF21E]
08 91,1 [B727560F] [6950B627]
09 91,1 [FBF72409] [DC6DAC51]
10 91,1 [41C9FDD8] [DBCB57DC]


Biography by Steve Huey Over the course of its decades-long existence, Roomful of Blues effectively became a franchise unto itself, built more on a brand-name collective identity than on the voices of the myriad individual members who kept the band a smoothly humming machine. Describing Roomful of Blues that way, however, gives short shrift to the many accomplished musicians who have emerged from the band's ranks over the years: guitarists Duke Robillard and Ronnie Earl, organist Ron Levy, pianist Al Copley, singer Lou Ann Barton, vocalist/harmonica player Sugar Ray Norcia, and drummer Fran Christina (later of the Fabulous Thunderbirds), to name the most prominent. Plus, the band's horn section blossomed into a renowned freelancing unit, backing countless other artists both on-stage and in the studio. They've evolved over the years, too; from a swinging jump blues revivalist group into expert blues historians with a handle on numerous regional variations: Texas, the West Coast, Chicago, New Orleans, Kansas City. Perhaps the best way to put it is that regardless of who was in the group, Roomful of Blues just kept going strong.

A nine-piece outfit for the majority of their existence, Roomful of Blues was founded in Westerly, RI, all the way back in 1967, by guitarist Duke Robillard and pianist Al Copley. Settling on drummer Fran Christina and bassist Larry Peduzzi, the group began playing around the local club and coffeehouse circuit, initially pursuing a contemporary blues-rock style. Robillard quickly rethought their direction when he discovered jump blues, and in 1970 he added a horn section featuring saxophonists Greg Piccolo (tenor) and Rich Lataille (alto/tenor), plus a more swinging drummer in John Rossi; baritone saxophonist Doug James joined up in 1971. After a couple of years honing their sound and achieving local popularity, Roomful of Blues started supporting established blues artists, and started what would become a 15-year residency at the Knickerbocker Cafe in Westerly. In 1974, they gigged with Count Basie, a professed admirer, and after a few more years of live work, songwriter Doc Pomus finally helped the band get a record deal with Island. Their self-titled debut was released in 1977, and they followed it up with 1979's Let's Have a Party for Antilles. Robillard subsequently left the group to pursue other projects, eventually finding considerable success as a solo artist.

Robillard's spot as guitarist and bandleader was taken by Ronnie Earl, and trombonist Porky Cohen was also added to flesh out the horn section. Meanwhile, female vocalist Lou Ann Barton spent a year with the group, and saxophonist Piccolo subsequently took over, making his vocal debut on 1981's Hot Little Mama (recorded for Blue Flame); the same year, trumpeter Bob Enos joined the group, as did bassist Jimmy Wimpfheimer (who was replaced by Preston Hubbard in 1983). Roomful of Blues' reputation had been growing steadily in the blues world, and they soon attracted more mainstream notice by serving as a studio backing group for legends like Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson (1982's Eddie Cleanhead Vinson & Roomful of Blues), Big Joe Turner (1983's Blues Train), and Earl King (1988's Glazed); all three albums in question earned Grammy nominations. Roomful of Blues hit the studios on their own as well, signing with Varrick and recording 1984's Dressed Up to Get Messed Up. Helped by good timing, the record raised the group's profile even further following the emergence of Stevie Ray Vaughan and the Fabulous Thunderbirds, and they were able to tour heavily behind it. Unfortunately, Piccolo needed throat surgery, and at first Keith Dunn filled his spot in concert; vocalist/harpist Curtis Salgado was brought in as a longer-term replacement, and fronted the group on 1987's Live at Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel; new organist Ron Levy also made his debut there, replacing Copley.

Unfortunately, Ronnie Earl left the group later that year, and while Roomful of Blues remained a popular touring attraction, it would be seven years before they would pull together and re-enter the recording studio (at least, on their own; they did back Pat Benatar on 1991's True Love). Predictably, several personnel shifts ensued: Salgado left when Piccolo's voice healed; trombonist Cohen was replaced by Carl Querfurth in 1988 (later serving as the group's producer as well); guitarist Chris Vachon joined in 1990; and new pianist Matt McCabe came on board in 1992. With a trail of busted record deals behind them, Roomful of Blues eventually bankrolled their own sessions and found a home for the result, Dance All Night, on Bullseye Blues in 1994. With Piccolo now departed, Ronnie Earl's longtime friend Sugar Ray Norcia handled vocals and harmonica, and stuck around for the subsequent Bullseye albums Turn It On! Turn It Up! (1995, nominated for a Grammy) and Under One Roof (1997). Following the latter, a mass exodus of personnel left Roomful of Blues down to just a core of drummer Rossi, guitarist Vachon, trumpeter Enos, and saxman Lataille (even the long-running horn team was broken up). The remaining members restored the band to a nine-piece fronted by new vocalist McKinley "Mac" Odom, and returned in 1998 with There Goes the Neighborhood. Prior to recording their next album, longtime stalwart Rossi finally retired from the band and was replaced by Chris Lemp on 2001's Watch You When You Go. Looking to return to a more traditional blues sound, in early 2002 the band replaced Odom with singer/harpist Mark DuFresne.

Homepage Roomful Of Blues

Uploaded

***** Pass: countryfreak *****