Music: Gary Clark Jr.

Last Friday at Antone's we caught Gary Clark Jr. play a midnight show. WOW. Check this cat out if you haven't already! The clip above is from a show at Shady Grove in Austin last year, where he's doin' Curtis Mayfield's Move On Up. Gary was named "Best Blues Musician" and "Best Electric Guitarist" at the Austin Music Awards in 2008.
And if he looks familiar to ya, he was in the John Sayles movie "Honeydripper" with Danny Glover.

Here's a clip of him playin' with the "Honeydripper" band at New York City's River to River Festival. And check out his myspace to hear some of his music and get his show schedule.

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Music: SMSB At Antone’s

We're back in the saddle after a weekend of good food and great music over in Austin. We got into town on Thursday and were lucky enough to catch the Arc Angels warmin' up for their tour at The Continental Club. We spent Friday eatin' crawdads & po'boys over at the Shoal Creek Saloon and then beat feet on over to Antone's to catch an amazin' set by South Memphis String Band. Thanks for the hospitality, Luther! And just when we thought it couldn't get any better, we stumbled onto Jimmie Vaughan playin' in the great little gallery space above The Continental Club on Saturday night. A big southern thank ya to Stephen.

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Music: South Memphis String Band

Ya'll ain't gonna wanna miss this! South Memphis String Band kicks off their tour next week (4/23) in Dallas. If ya ain't already heard, this is Jimbo Mathus (Squirrel Nut Zippers), Alvin Youngblood Hart (Grammy-winning bluesman) and Luther Dickinson (North Mississippi Allstars). It's their first tour and they're truckin' through the south and the eastern U.S. for about a month. Don't sleep on this! It's a rare opportunity to see three amazin' talents like these fellas together. They'll be performin' acoustic sets of good ol' Mississippi foot stompin' music. Check the dates and hear a couple of their songs here.

Here's the low-down from their myspace:

The three friends, bound by Memphis and North Mississippi roots, will tour ahead of recording their debut album later this year. So far only two songs have been unveiled, both at the trio’s MySpace page myspace.com/southmemphisstringband. So the April and May dates will be an opportunity for fans to get in on the ground floor. Although they’d known each other for years, the trio’s musical spirit gelled last year when they recorded a yet-unreleased album with Luther’s father, legendary producer Jim Dickinson, called New Moon Jellyroll Freedom Rockers. The South Memphis String Band was greatly influenced by the Mississippi Sheiks, Gus Cannon & the Memphis Jug Band and other string bands and jug bands of their ilk, as well as Mississippi Delta and Hill Country blues. They will travel with a passel of guitars, mandolins, banjos, lap steel guitars and harmonicas.

Luther Dickinson is lead guitarist and vocalist for the North Mississippi Allstars as well as lead guitarist for the Black Crowes. The son of producer Jim Dickinson was born and raised in West Tennessee, where he played concerts and gained recording experience with his father and brother, Cody. The family moved to the hills of North Mississippi in 1985. Luther befriended the musical families of Otha Turner, R. L. Burnside and Junior Kimbrough. They were the inspiration for Luther and Cody to form the North Mississippi Allstars in ‘96. The Allstars have been nominated for three Grammy Awards in the Best Contemporary Blues category. Luther produced two Otha Turner albums: Everybody Hollerin' Goat and From Senegal To Senatobia. Luther was recently featured in Rolling Stone as one of the “New Guitar Gods.” He has recorded with the Replacements, Mojo Nixon, Toy Caldwell, Billy Lee Riley, John Medeski and Robert Randolph (as The Word), John Hiatt and Jon Spencer, in addition to Turner, Burnside and the elder Dickinson.

Though born in Oakland, California, Alvin “Youngblood” Hart had family connections in Carroll County, Miss., and spent time there in his childhood, hearing his relatives’ stories of Charlie Patton. Influenced by the country blues, Hart is known as one of the world's foremost practitioners of that genre. He’s also a faithful torchbearer for the ‘60s and ‘70s guitar rock of his youth, as well as Western Swing and vintage country. His music has been compared to that of artists ranging from Leadbelly and Spade Cooley to Led Zeppelin and Thin Lizzy. Hart plays acoustic and electric guitar as well as banjo and sometimes the mandolin. Bluesman Taj Mahal once said of him, “The boy has got thunder in his hands.” In 2003, Hart's album Down in the Alley was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Traditional Blues Album. In ‘05, Hart received a Grammy Award for his contribution to Beautiful Dreamer — The Songs of Stephen Foster. He was featured in the Wim Wenders film The Soul of a Man, which was part of Martin Scorsese’s 2003 PBS series “The Blues,” and also appeared in the documentary Last of the Mississippi Jukes.

Guitarist, songwriter, vocalist and producer Jimbo Mathus grew up in Clarksdale, Miss. He first caught the public’s ear in the 1990s with the hyper-ragtime vaudeville act the Squirrel Nut Zippers. Since then, he has released many recordings of his own in a style he describes as Mississippi Music. “Basically,” Mathus says, “I combine the myriad styles of deep roots music in a type of alchemy. Blues, country, gospel and soul all go into the equation equally.” His last outing, Knockdown South, was released on his own label and received much critical acclaim, including the No. 2 spot on Honest Tune magazine’s Best of 2005 list. He runs the Delta Recording Service, a studio based in Clarksdale, and is sought out by many artists seeking the old-school style of recording. One such artist was Elvis Costello, who recorded his Grammy nominated “Monkey to Man” single in Mathus’ studio in 2005. He has produced two blues CDs that were nominated for Blues Music Awards in 2006, Duwane Burnside’s Under Pressure and Big George Brock’s Club Caravan. Additionally, he contributed vocals on the North Mississippi Allstars’ 2006 Grammy-nominated Electric Blues Watermelon. Mathus sums it up: “I break down walls and stereotypes with my music. I confuse people. I use Mississippi music, which is renegade music at heart, as my inspiration and motivation. I use it as a tool to reach people, to express my own feelings and continue to express those that came before me. I keep the old stories alive while they help keep me alive.”

Mathus says, “Luther, Youngblood Hart and myself have been musical co- conspirators for over a decade. It is only fitting that we should come together with acoustic instruments and perform Mississippi music.”

We'll be checkin' out the Austin show on the 24th, so come on out and bear witness to this musical force of nature.

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Music/Film: Antone’s - Home Of The Blues

This is the trailer for the documentary on Antone's down in Austin, Texas. And here's a little background.

Clifford Antone (October 27, 1949 in Port Arthur, Texas–May 23, 2006 in Austin, Texas) was the founder of a well-known Austin blues club, record label, and a mentor to Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jimmie Vaughan and numerous other musicians.

Antone moved to Austin in 1968 and attended The University of Texas at Austin. An arrest for marijuana led to his dropping out of school. Nurturing a passion for Chicago blues, Antone started a blues club at age 25. The namesake club, Antone's, became one of the first music venues on Austin's 6th Street, helped lead to Austin's reputation as a music city, and fostered the careers of a number of musicians. Fats Domino, John Lee Hooker, Delbert McClinton, Pinetop Perkins, Muddy Waters, Albert Collins, Jimmy Reed, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown and B.B. King and many other legends performed at Antone's in its more than 30-year history. Along with keeping all of the existing bluesmen in business, Antone began the career of Stevie Ray Vaughan. At the time Stevie was only known as Jimmie's little brother but his dream had always been to play with Albert King. Clifford asked Albert if it would be ok for Stevie to sit in with him one night and (after much persuasion), it was agreed. Stevie sat in with Albert and gave an amazing performance that astounded King. Thus Stevie Ray Vaughan became increasingly well known and went on to bring the blues back into the mainstream.

In 1987, Antone founded a recording label, Antone's Records and Tapes. Antone served time in federal prisons for drug charges in the early 1980s and in 2000. On hearing of Antone's passing, Austin Mayor Will Wynn was quoted as saying, "One of the primary reasons Austin is known as the Live Music Capital of the World is because of Clifford Antone."
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