MATT FLINNER TRIO: BLOOMINGTON 4/29/10

Matt Flinner Trio

Matt Flinner Trio

The Grant Street InnKimble Mandolins and I are pleased to announce that the Matt Flinner Trio — Matt Flinner (mandolin), Ross Martin (guitar), and Eric Thorin (bass) — are bringing their “Music Du Jour” tour to Bloomington on Thursday April 29th, 2010!

Supporting an album released last year, Music Du Jour, Matt, Ross, and Eric will perform compositions, both established and written the day of concert.  Expect to hang on to your seat, because this will be a whirlwind of acoustic music.

Will Kimble (of Kimble Mandolins fame) and myself will open with a small set of Jim Richter originals and maybe a tasty cover.  It’ll be a good 15 minutes of Norman and Nancy for you, though I’m unsure which of us will be Nancy.

Read more of the particulars (and to buy tickets) here  . . .

  • Share/Bookmark

NEW TAB: Pink Floyd’s Goodbye Blue Sky

Pink Floyd has been one of my top bands for a very long time.  Whether it be the Syd Barret era Floyd, the Rogers Waters era, or the Waters-less era, Pink Floyd is still one of my favorites.  The Wall truly stands as a masterpiece within the band’s catalog and I can safely I say I learned every guitar part and solo from that album.  David Gilmour, much like Clapton, has the incomparable ability to say more with less.

I arranged Goodbye Blue Sky for octave mandolin some time back.  It works well for standard scale mando too.  The challenge of this fairly easy piece is two fold: 1)  try to achieve a ringing sound throughout to more closely achieve the open guitar string sound of the Gilmour’s playing and 2) achieve the steady “pulse” or “heartbeat” of the original.  It’s steady but never rushed.

Tab is available both in TEF and PDF on THE TRANSCRIBABLE page.

  • Share/Bookmark

New YouTube video: Edgar Winter’s “Frankenstein”

A few months ago someone messaged me through YouTube asking for some far out rock with “Frankenstein” being one of the requests.

I worked this up over a period of a couple days.  Hard part is keeping track of all the parts.  Hope you enjoy!

  • Share/Bookmark

Nuvo Review of Yank Rachell Tribute CD — May 6, 2009

The following review appeared in Nuvo Newsweekly, Indianapolis, IN, May 6, 2009.  It was written by Scott Shoger.

“A Tribute to Yank Rachell” CD review

A Tribute to the Legendary Blues Mandolin Man James “Yank” Rachell
Various Artists
Yanksville Records

NUVO rates it 4 out of 5 stars

As one might expect, this tribute to country blues mandolinist Yank Rachell, released last year but never given a full review in this paper, is chock-full of mandolin, recorded in all corners of the globe (or at least as far away as Sweden). Which is a good thing: The project has enough cred and is unique enough to attract some big names like John Sebastian and Mike Seeger, but also gives a chance for masters of the mandolin to have a shot at some of Rachell’s tunes.

Briefly, Rachell was first heard at the advent of electric recording in the mid ’20s, playing in a jug band with Sleepy John Estes. John Sebastian, in a spoken introduction to the live track he contributes to the record, recalls his astonishment in hearing Rachell’s voice on the phone when the mandolinist called him up in the mid ’90s. But Rachell, who moved to Indianapolis in 1956, lived until 1997, enough time for Sebastian to record with him.

Sebastian’s cover of “Tappin’ That Thing” — recorded with David Grisman — is about the most fun to be had on the record. It’s a double-entendre tune (the music reference being to tapping or playing a mandolin), and includes audience participation, as well as Sebastian’s intro that recounts the recording process.

It’s not necessarily the most moving tune, though; there are two others that really stand out. Former Rocky Ripple resident Andra Faye’s performance of the lament “My Baby’s Gone,” recorded solo on string bass and mandolin, doesn’t tug at the heartstrings unnecessarily, but it’s just a flawless rendition; the music effortlessly swings, and Faye’s voice is crystal clear. Sheena Rachell, Yank Rachell’s granddaughter, sings “Lake Michigan Blues” slowly and mournfully, suggesting a late night at the blues club by someone who’s down on her luck (and Rachell doesn’t come by a weakened warble incidentally, as she’s faced serious health problems recently).

The 21-track album only includes a few clunkers. Also noteworthy are the opening two tracks, “Texas Tony” and “Shotgun Blues,” both about crimes of passion, and played by two masterful blues mandolinists, Tim O’Brien and Rick DelGrosso. Mike Seeger’s rendition of “Deep Elam Blues” wanders a little away from the mandolin; he performs on a Vega mandurria, a mandolin-like instrument with a little more bass. And a duet between Gordon Bonham (guitar) and Jim Richter (mandolin) on “Brownsville Blues” was my favorite contribution by locals (emphasis by JR), though there are also fine performances by singer Karen Irwin, guitarist Scott Ballantine and mandolinist Mike Butler, who plays on Rachell’s Harmony mandolin on a few tunes (and also executive produced the CD).

  • Share/Bookmark