Showing posts with label Soul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soul. Show all posts

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Tinsley Ellis Interviews with Blues Rock Review

Blues Rock Review - June 15, 2016


When you think of bluesmen Tinsley Ellis immediately comes to mind. He’s as prolific as they come in the genre. Ellis has been performing for over 40 years and is in the midst of touring his brand new album, Red Clay Soul. Blues Rock Review caught up with Ellis to discuss the new album and more.

What inspired you to make a soul album?

I listen to a lot of music by folks like Al Green, Sam and Dave, Howard Tate, and other Soul artists. It was my concept on Red Clay Soul to infuse Blues guitar playing over those type of songs. BB, Albert and Freddie King style guitar playing fits all styles of music, especially Soul music. Stevie Ray Vaughan proved that on David Bowie’s “Let’s Dance” album over 30 years ago.

You’ve continued to be very prolific releasing albums. How do you continue to find inspiration?

I have a home studio in my basement, so if I have a song idea while I’m off the road, I can go down there and lay it down. If I have a song idea while I’m traveling, I just sing and play it into the record function on my cell phone. These past few years, I’ve been writing more and more, which is good.

Kevin McKendree is someone you’ve collaborated with a lot in the past and he co-produced Red Clay Soul. What was it like working with him on the album?

Kevin has played on every studio album that I’ve done since 1997’s Fire It Up album, which was produced by the great Tom Dowd. His keyboard playing fits me like a glove. We have recorded the the past four albums in his home studio in Franklin, Tennessee. He also engineers and mixes the albums. On Red Clay Soul we recorded live in the studio for the first time in years. I love the results of recording live. There are very few overdubs on Red Clay Soul. What we played is what you get.

Once again, this album has been released on your own label, Heartfixer. What’s been the most challenging aspect of releasing albums on your own label and what’s been the most rewarding aspect? 

Having a record company is extremely time consuming. Just yesterday I made several trip to the post office, did a few interviews and put out business fires all day. It’s cut into my time as a songwriter, which is what I really want to be doing now. But the rewards are that I can make the type of albums I want to make and put them out as often as I want to. I love the artistic freedom that having my own record label affords.



Over your career you’ve accomplished a lot. What are some goals or things you’d still like to accomplish in your career? 

I’ve played all over the world but never in Asia. I hope to do that soon. Also it would be nice to have more artists cover my songs. I got a taste of that when Jonny Lang covered “A Quitter Never Wins” on his major label debut in 1997. That song has sold close to 2 million copies at this point.

You’re in the midst of another tour. Do you have a preference in terms of venues that you prefer whether that be theaters, clubs, festivals, etc.? 

The best tours are ones that include a variety of types of venues. In the Blues world, we find ourselves at a festival one night, at a Blues or Jazz club the next night, and a theater the next. The good thing is that the Blues works great in all these type venues. We even played a Blues festival once at a “clothing optional resort” (a.k.a. nudist colony). When the sun went down, it got chilly and we sold every t-shirt we brought!

Interview by Pete Francis

Monday, March 16, 2015

Tinsley Ellis releases "Tough Love" his 18th release and receiving fantastic reviews...






Listen To "tough love" CLICK HERE


Review by 

When it comes to modern electric blues, Tinsley Ellis has always been the exception to the rule. He has always understood that the music's roots are more about feel than chops (though he is rightfully celebrated for them). Musically, he displays that different genre bends -- blues, country, jazz, soul, R&B, and of course rock & roll -- are part of an inseparable American musical heritage. Tough Love is Ellis' third set for his own Heartfixer label. He penned all ten tracks and produced the date with engineering and mixing help from keyboardist Kevin McKendree. Drummer Lynn Williams remains, but bassist Ted Pecchio has been replaced by Steve Mackey. Though Ellis has cut many different kinds of records, this is the first to display his considerable abilities as a singer. Things get off to a choogling start with "Seven Years," a minor-key, midtempo heartbreak groover that contains plenty of stinging lead fills, with McKendree's electric piano and B-3 fueling the rhythm section. It's followed by "Midnight Ride," a dirty-ass, good-time boogie. "Give It Away" is a soulful, Americana blues ballad with Ellis playing an acoustic National Steel. And this is the gift of the album in three tracks: he delivers three variants on the blues, in as many vocal approaches -- all of them excellent. Each song has its merits in craft and execution -- these days he's not writing any substandard ones -- but there are other clear highlights. "All in the Name of Love," another minor-key, midtempo slider, showcases electric piano and B-3 as Ellis' voice evokes the soul-blues. (Think Solomon Burke.) His guitar eventually catches up with ringing, emotive fills. A horn section punctuates the margins and it works so well, it makes one wish he'd used it more than on just this one tune. "Should I Have Lied" is a stone-electric blues ballad that crosses Albert King with T-Bone Walker, all in Ellis' phrasing. Leave Me" is a strutting blues rocker, while "The King Must Die" is a dark, brooding, swampy jam that showcases the band at their intuitive best under his six-string storm. Closer "In from the Cold" (on which McKendree plays a Mellotron) is a steamy, emotionally wrought blues. It rumbles from the depths, its emotion wrenching and desperate; Ellis' playing is lyric and forceful, it bites, snarls, and cuts. While he has issued plenty of fine records, he's never revealed himself as such an axe slinger, singer, and songwriter with this magnitude and abundance. Tough Love is a tough record to beat.


Thank You Thom Jurek for the Great Review
Staff writer Thom Jurek was born in 1958 and grew up in and around Detroit. He has been writing about music since he was 15. His reviews, interviews, and articles have appeared in magazines and journals including Rolling Stone, Creem, Musician, Spin, American Songwriter, Paste, Interview, The Canadian Journal of Political and Social Theory, and Rock and Rap Confidential. Jurek has also written liner notes for a variety of albums. He is the author of two poetry collections: DUB (In Camera, 1986), and Memory Bags, with French artist Jacques Karamanoukian (Ridgeway, 1995). His fiction has been anthologized in Storming the Reality Studio: A Casebook on Cyberpunk and Postmodern Science Fiction (Duke University Press) and elsewhere. Jurek served as senior editor for Detroit's Metro Times from 1990-1996; he has been affiliated with All Music Guide since 1999.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Digital Music Marketing Signed to Distribute Jumpsuit Records






 Digital Music Marketing is happy to announce the addition of Jumpsuit Records to our Digital Distribution Family. Formed by The Polish Ambassador, Jumpsuit Records is a platform for artists to release music, collaborate and tour internationally. The label will shine a light on melodic mid-tempo, organic hip hop, textured electronica, and acoustic roots music.


Wildlight is the first act featured on The Polish Ambassador’s imprint Jumpsuit Records. Look for this duo on tour this fall.



Jumpsuit Records is proud to announce saQi as the newest member of our roster and present the title track to his upcoming album, "Quest's End". 








Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Landslide Records Celebrates their 32nd Anninersary




♫ Landslide Records celebrates their 32nd Anniversary with a retrospective playlist featuring Sean Costello, Col. Bruce Hampton, Derek Trucks, Widespread Panic and more - Click on link to subscribe now! Landslide Records 32nd Anniversary


Landslide Records was established in 1981 with the now rare "Outside Looking Out" by The Late Bronze Age, a group led by Atlanta legend Colonel Bruce Hampton. The label released debut albums in the 80's by The Bluesbusters, Webb Wilder and the Beatnecks and Widespread Panic plus critically acclaimed blues by Tinsley Ellis and The Heartfixers and Nappy Brown. Throughout the 1990's to present, Landslide has released a wealth of great Southern roots music, including The Derek Trucks Band's first album, new Webb Wilder sounds on CD and DVD, diverse Americana projects by ex-BR-549 leader Gary Bennett, folk Singer/Songwriter Jan Smith, and Bluegrass hybrids Blueground Undergrass. Newest releases include Toe tapping Blues/Jazz/Soul wonders Scrapomatic, featuring Mike Mattison, and Carolina favorites, Jim Quick & Coastline.






Monday, February 8, 2010

New Music | The Hipstones | Dreamers

New music from Australia's, The Hipstones...download, listen and play "Dreamers" now