Category Archives: Book review

Book Review: Blues Highway Blues

As y’all might probably expect, I unfortunately don’t have a lot of time to do the reading I want, or should do. So it is a rare bird indeed that gets past the jacket notes and intro with me.

Let me say that Eyre Price has created a very rare bird with “Blues Highway Blues“.

The cover features a sepia toned photo of  a crossroads in a very rural setting, not quite dark enough to obliterate the sense of vision but just light enough to make you squint to see what lies before you. A subtitle of sorts, ‘A Crossroads Thriller’ reinforces the overall feel of the photo with an inkling of a American Flag’s stripes – what this does is really set the stage for this fascinating and fun book and calls you into like the proverbial spider to the fly.

Chapter 1 opens with a tasty, if not overly syrupy, two paragraph description of the Las Vegas Strip . Not quite what I think of  when Blues are mentioned but the next paragraph turns this world view around by 180 degrees, and like the aforementioned fly we are trapped in the web that Mr. Price has created.So now all we can do is ride the rails and see where this train of a novel will take us.

The featured character (I’m not about to say hero) is one Daniel Erickson who suddenly has a serious case of the Blues. With all the karma that he has laid down prior to this point in his life coming back and laying a round-house punch to his solar plexus. As you know that would take the wind of your lungs and leave you grasping in a netherworld sure that you are dying but hoping that you live. It is at this very moment that you plead to whomever or whatever to just get you outta this situation regardless of the consequences of such a deal.

Sound somewhat familiar? No hmm, Robert Johnson at the crossroads on a dark night making  a deal with the Devil himself. Now whether or not that story is tree has no bearing on anything at all. But allegorically it rings true to each and every one of us (well, at least the folks I know) and this is what Mr. Price has given us here. When one is at the end of their rope they are most apt to strike a deal ‘with the Devil’ and when that happens baby, you are off that hook, but seriously skewered on another one.

The novel takes us around the country from LA to Memphis, NYC and even Cleveland. All is a merry musical jig-saw puzzle with a well crafted set of characters that make the merry way all the more merrier. There are insights into the music business, self-belief, self-realization, musical history. There is a visceral edge to the situations that ring true to anyone who has ever encountered the mean streets, ’nuff said.

Mr. Price has a broad and solid base in the music he writes about. His understanding of the Blues and other forms and their history plays out well within the context of his debut work. Please visit his web site and especially his ‘juke joint‘ section. Mr. Price does a great service for our chosen music and hopefully his work will draw many more into our realm. For this I say “thank you” and let’s keep the blues alive and thriving.

I consumed “Blues Highway Blues” in just abut two days, unfortunately I had to sleep, and do some Blues411 work in between or it woulda been quicker. Yeah, it really was that much fun and enjoyable so on many levels that I highly recommend this to all my Blues Framily.

 

Until next time,
Love, Peace & Chicken Grease
chefjimi
©Blues411.com 2012
artwork: beaucat artworkz
Where Blues Thrives

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Filed under Blues, Blues411, Book review, Entertainment, Opinion, The 411 in 15 minutes

Book Review: The Language of the Blues: From Alcorub to Zuzu

Folks are always trying to ‘demystify’ the Blues and the words used in the songs and conversations. Well with “The Language Of The Blues: From Alcorub to Zuzu” by Debra Devi, we have actually found one that makes sense and can be actually used for reference or just pure enjoyment.

Blues lyrics are often mysterious and unapproachable to the fair weather fan and more so to the general public. The music is comprised of words/lyrics from another culture, from the inner city side streets and rural jook joints where the music took root. So often the language of these songs are misinterpreted or sanitized into something less that real. Real is what makes the Blues so alluring and forceful.

While not an incunabulum of out-dated, seldom used terms it is a book that can serve as a reference and jolly point of learning more in the form of a slightly bawdy, racy yet witty dictionaries around. We all know that when Bobby ‘Blue’ Bland sang that ‘the eagle flies on Friday‘ he is referencing the money one gets on pay day (usually Friday), yet do we know that when one ‘dusts his broom’ that it could mean several things? It could be as simple as just leaving, or does it involve more complex processes as cleansing the house of evil spirits by ‘dusting’ the broom with powder to force them out?  This is just one of the many things that we find inside the book that I devoured with a smile plastered on my face.

Ms. Devi has scrupulously researched the subject matter and created a comprehensive accompaniment to the culture of the Blues which includes excerpts from interviews with such luminaries as Bonnie Raitt, Dr. John, Hubert Sumlin, Buddy Guy and many others. With a line up like we would be first in line to see the show, so using that logic why would we not avail ourselves of this compendium of Blues lexicon. A must for every Blues, Music, language fan out there, so you have to fit into one of these categories so get on it now!

To read more and order a copy go to:
http://www.devi-rock.com/thelanguageoftheblues/

Ms. Devi is on facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/devirock

Until next time,
Love, Peace & Chicken Grease
chefjimi
©Blues411.com 2012
photo: courtesy of author

 

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Filed under Blues, Blues411, Book review, Entertainment, Uncategorized