Showing posts with label Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival. Show all posts

Friday, September 19, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 21, July 3, 2014 - a funky good time at the end of my first day!



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Three members of the Goodfoot Allstars, on stage from 9:45 to 11 p.m. I know that's Farnell Newton on trumpet, but I don't know the names of the other two. Farnell, can you help me, please? Thanks! And with the other guys in the other photos, too?

Found on the blues festival Web site: The Goodfoot Allstars are now in their 8th year of this high-caliber tribute to the Godfather of soul: James Brown! This band was formed from a large cast of Portland musicians that have played the Goodfoot the last several years, including such past members as Scott Pemberton, Scott Law, and Jans Ingber. You can expect to be funked to the core with an incredible collection of musicians delivering a big sound, phenomenal dance cuts, and the kind of music that just makes you wanna shake your booty into the wee hours! The Goodfoot Allstars are: Carlton Jackson, Asher Fulero, Tye North, Devin Phillips, Darvey Santner, Farnell Newton, Doug Lewis, and Bruce Withycombe.

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Quite a crowd enjoyed every note of these beloved James Brown tunes!

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Keyboards.

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Guitars and bass.

By 10:45 p.m. I realized I had better head for the bus stop or I would miss the last bus of the night--I didn't want to have to wait for or pay for a cab. It all worked out and I was home in no time, ready to rest up for Day Two. However, it was not to be.

I woke up at 5:30 a.m. suffering from what turned out to be a mild case of food poisoning. I know it was mild because I've suffered for real through two other full-blown food poisoning episodes! Anyway, I never got to use the other three days on my ticket, I missed the fireworks on July 4. I could go on and on, but, to tell you the truth, I was just happy to get well enough to return to work on July 8, just in time to work three days before I realized that a painful urinary tract infection seemed to have taken up residence in my body. Turned out it was a kidney infection--I was sick as a dog for days.

By the time July came to an end weeks later, I had fully recovered from both of these episodes of ill health, my allergies had quit bothering me, and I slowly but surely worked at becoming stronger because I knew that on October 5, I'd be flying off to England and Scotland for a great tour, returning home late the night of October 16.

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 20, July 3, 2014 - Mr. Statue, after sundown



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Mr. Statue, after sundown. Christmas lights make me happy! So does Mr. Statue.

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 19, July 3, 2014 - spangled star?



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Next colors that caught my eye--this blue and white star on one of the boats out on the Willamette. I didn't even notice the flag or the red lamp thing beside the man until I had uploaded the photo. I like watching the lights on the star change, but this is my favorite configuration of those which I photographed, so I'm sharing it with y'all. Enjoy! Oh, I forgot. How much money do you think is floating there as their owners enjoy the music--I assume the boats are all personal property, unless someone leased or rented a boat for the blues festival. And this is only a small section of the boats gathered there--they start showing up a week or so before the blues festival begins. I wonder how the music sounds out there, behind the stages and speakers?

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 18, July 3, 2014 - a couple of color-coordinated ladies



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Color and its presence in more that one aspect is something I notice all of the time. Color almost always entices me to take a photo--as long as I have the time to get the camera in place. Naturally, I couldn't resist these two color-coordinated ladies sitting not too far from me. The lady with the chartreuse jacket--I wonder if she realizes her clothing totally matches her friend's chair? And the lady with the chartreuse chair cover, wearing the purple top. Did she wear it because it matches the purple case on her phone? Finally, take look at their hair, so close in color. I'm tickled that I got this photo of these two in the crowd at the blues fest.

Monday, September 15, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 17, July 3, 2014 - a bit more Los Lonely Boys



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I really like these brothers and their music. I left my seat and headed for the Music Millenium canopy, thinking I could get in line, buy a CD and have the guys sign it. By the time I got my ol' self over there, the waiting crowd was huge, spreading across the entire width of their CD-selling space. So, I took photos instead. I like the smile on Henry's face as he looks up at a fan.

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You can see how many folks packed into the space there in front of the guys, which represents only a portion of the huge crowd. I like this photo because it shows how intently each brother--JoJo, Ringo, and Henry--is signing folks' merchandise. I think that's speaks well of their respect for their fans.

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 16, July 3, 2014 - Los Lonely Boys



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I've read that family voices harmonize particularly well. I'm here to tell you that both times I've had the ecstatic pleasure of being in a Los Lonely Boys' audience, that is profoundly true. Here we have, left to right, Henry, Ringo, and JoJo, doing it oh so well.

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To the best of my memory and Google searching, this is Steve Berlin of Los Lobos joining Los Lonely Boys on stage. Magnificent music ensued, let me tell you!

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I was a long ways away from the stage and zoomed in the best that I could from my seat on the metal bench beneath the Blues Benefactor canopy. I decided that this photo, in addition to the other two, could be cropped and give you an idea of the dynamics on stage during the Los Lonely Boys performance. I especially enjoyed this when JoJo and Henry both played Henry's guitar while Ringo joined in on the drums.

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 15, July 3, 2014 - blues on the river with a Delta Music Experience Blues Cruise



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Not my cup of tea--yet. Maybe one of these years I'll get brave enough to go on a Blues Cruise during the blues fest. Looks like a lot of fun, but I'm not too sure about being on the water when someone I do not know personally is in charge of the vessel. I think that's the Portland Spirit heading south on the Willamette River. 713 p.m. Folks board just north of the Hawthorne Bridge, a portion of which you can see on the left of the photo. That brick building in the distance, visible above I-5, is the Multnomah Building--I work on the third floor facing the river.


Friday, September 12, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 14, July 3, 2014 - summer hat in the sunshine



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Another cool hat at the Oregonian Front Porch stage, during The Bone Pickers' T-Bone Walker Tribute performance. I'm not sure what he's looking at, but I'm noticing that person swinging something at the right edge of the photo. What could it be?

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 13, July 3, 2014 - Kevin Selfe himself performing with The Bone Pickers



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Lots of Sunday evenings for over a year I've been at the Blue Diamond, my nearby neighborhood bar, enjoying the Sunday evening blues jam. Kevin Selfe and his band The Tornadoes host. It is a special treat to see him singing and playing at a different venue with other musicians, his talent and skill and love of music readily evident for every moment he's featured during The Bone Pickers' performance. They are a T-Bone Walker Tribute Band of great talent.

Here are some other candid shots of their performance. Sorry that I don't know their names.

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Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 12, July 3, 2014 - so very happy to have heard fellow Mississippian 82-year-old Leo "Bud" Welch perform



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Despite his age and posture impacted by the passage of time, Welch took over the FedEx Crossroads Stage and grabbed hold of the audience as he played and sang, either from a folding chair or as he stepped across the stage, turned and made his way back to the chair. Mississippi country blues at its best, y'all.

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I took quite a few photos of Leo "Bud" Welch on guitar, singing. Some of the photos include fellow music-man-from-Mississippi Stan Street on drums. For me, this particular photo shows the enjoyment and mutual respect comes to each man as they perform together.

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Here's the bio I found for Welch at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival's Web site:

The new year is a time of new beginnings, new resolutions, new projects and new directions. So it's seems appropriate that Leo “Bud” Welch, at the age of 81, to put out his very first record in early January.
Welch has been playing gospel and blues around the tiny town of Bruce, Miss., for decades. He was a local standout unknown to the outside world—until he called up Oxford, Mississippi-based label Fat Possom, went in for an audition, and signed a record deal on the spot with the label’s subsidiary, Big Legal Mess. The album, Saboulga Voices, has been featured on NPR, drawn accolades in the blues press, and landed Welch invites from major blues festivals. Raved NPR, “It’s quite a joyous kick, with the raw boogie of Junior Kimbrough and other Mississippi Hill Country blues greats, but also a fiery religious undercurrent that’s about as far from grace as you can get while still under the church tent.”
Not the kind of newly-discovered buzz-act who is going to hop in a tour van for weeks on end, Leo “Bud” Welch is nonetheless making the most of his sudden celebrity. In addition to his stop at Waterfront he’ll be playing the Vancouver Island Music Festival in British Columbia a few days later, with a likely gig in Seattle on the way.
Born in Sabougla, Mississippi in 1932, Welch picked up his cousin’s guitar for the first time when he was 13, and two years later was performing locally. Welch was offered an audition by BB King but couldn’t afford the bus trip to Memphis. He played the blues continuously until 1975, when he converted to playing mostly Gospel, with the Sabougla Voices, which consisted of his sister and a sister-in-law. Welch also played with the Skuna Valley Male Chorus. Bud earned his living by carrying a chain saw up and down the hills and hollows of North Mississippi, logging for 35 years. Welch does not believe that Blues is the “devil’s music” but rather a way of expressing the highs and lows of one’s life through song. Though happy to talk about his earlier life Welch proudly notes that he has never had to worry about hangovers since he began singing gospel.
And here's another bio that I found at The Country Blues Web site--with much more about Welch's life and career, plus what's next:


The old blues lyric so aptly states, “There are strange things, strange things happening every day.” We’ve seen 13 year old blues prodigies out touring the festivals and 93 year old bluesmen still on the road, mostly because they couldn’t afford to retire. Plenty of blues and soul musicians turned to gospel and stopped secular music in favor of the sacred. Yet, it would be hard to match the unique case of bluesman Leo Bud Welch from down in Bruce, Mississippi. He entered the blues scene at the ripe old age of 81 after having played lead guitar and sung in church since 1975. In this unlikely case, the late in life emergence of an octogenarian bluesman is actually good news for the blues and for the artist, whose spent a lifetime in music.

Leo Bud Welch does not hear too well, so he plays an electric guitar with a headset and monitors, yet his music is pure Mississippi country blues. “They don’t make the acoustic guitars like they used to, they used to be louder,” says the blues bard, a fact which may be more attributable to his hearing than the state of instruments today. He plays fingerstyle on a bright pink guitar, which at first glance may seem unusual, but it is a statement in solidarity with breast cancer awareness, a disease that has afflicted so many families, including his own. He’s also played fiddle and harmonica, and he sings with a clear and strong voice, belying his age. There is an ethereal, deep quality to his music, a man whose blues is deep from a lifetime in the Mississippi timber fields. His sudden emergence took the world by surprise, and then  his career took off like a rocket.

Like many musicians, he came from a musical family and first picked up the instrument from kinfolk when he was a young kid. He learned from his first cousin R.C. Welch with whom he would later play picnics and house parties. Before 1975, he was a true folk-blues musician, playing with his cousin at locally at gatherings, celebrations and wherever the community gathered, mostly for little or no money. He worked a hard day job in the logging industry, cutting timber along the banks of the Mississippi River and played music on the side. “I done some hard work. Some really hard work. The music we did on the side for fun.” Like most musicians at the time, the pair were very much songsters. “We played everything including what the white people liked to hear. We played hillbilly and everything. Whatever the people liked to hear, we played the songs for them to make them happy.”

He is well known in the African American gospel world around his hometown Sabougla, Mississippi, a tiny rural enclave in central Mississippi, often not even shown on the map. There he played in the Missionary Baptist Church, and in Webster County, Mississippi at the Double Spring Church, where he is a Deacon, and leader of congregational songs. Since emerging himself in gospel, Welch has played with the Sabougla Voices and the Skuna Valley Male Chorus. Among his many pursuits, he was the host of a gospel television show, in the local Bruce station, in a show featuring videos of local church gospel performances. All of that seems a long way from the blues, but true blues lovers know that the gospel/spiritual element has always been an important part of the blues, with a long songbook of sacred songs. To date, he plays both gospel-blues and secular blues, and sometimes the congregants give him the business about “taking the devil’s money” for playing blues, which he laughs off and takes in stride, saying, “Well, at least this time I’m getting paid.” He told the Memphis Flyer, “I don’t see where there’s no devil in the blues,” Welch says. “They do more devilsome things than that. Oh yeah.”
After 27 years of playing strictly gospel in the center of the church music ensemble, he emerged on the blues scene and surprised the world. His first album Sabougla Voices on Fat Possum got him featured on the US National Public Radio (NPR), a feat that many famous musicians who have been active on the blues scene have not reached. He got help on the album from Jimbo Mathus, among others. Through it all, Leo holds tight to his faith. The opening cut Praise His Name says it all, with Welch putting down a Rosetta Tharpe type rocking riffs and energetic leads taking from both the Mississippi Delta and Hill Country style.

Leo had a remarkable reception in the roots & blues community because he’s not just an excellent guitarist but a consummate showman. He gives you the old blues going back to the 1940s, often backed by just a drummer, lately by Dixie Street. Unlike most of the older generation players, he does not sit and prefers to walk the stage to connect with his audience, an uncanny showman, a skill he carried over from a lifetime as a performer.

Much of the credit for the mercurial rise is due to his manager and friend, Vencie Varnado, who has known Leo for all of Vencie’s life. He is helping Leo through all this and guiding his career as an honest broker, a true friend. By now, Leo Bud Welch is internationally famous, actively touring the major folk, blues and roots festivals in the US, Canada and Europe. It is a friendship based on longtime community links.
It all had a funny start. While most people would assume Bud to be too old, Vencie  realized that it is never too late in life. He had asked Leo to perform at his birthday party and he secretly recorded the performance, and sent the demo to send to a record label indie label Big Legal Mess, owned by Bruce Watson of Fat Possum Records, who has an uncanny history of picking up unsung, under the radar roots musicians and realizing their value, long before others recognize them. Think Jr. Kimbrough.

Amazingly, this story is not over…Leo Bud Welch is still touring and seemingly full of energy. But, Vencie makes it clear: “I will not allow Leo to get exploited. He’s going strong now. He is enjoying himself. I will make sure that nobody will ever push him out on stage when he is no longer up to it. There is too much of that, when people make money off the old guys. That’s not going to happen to Leo. I don’t need it and he does not need it. He’ll play as long as he is enjoying it and not a day longer.”
Amen to that.

Monday, September 8, 2014

Seen at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, No. 11, July 3, 2014 - jumpin' along to Blind Boy Paxton's music



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Two more folks captured by my camera as they enjoyed Blind Boy Paxton's performance at the Oregonian Front Porch Stage. That little girl can jump! The woman was not yanking her up--she was jumping! I took this photo at 4:29 p.m., almost at the end of his show.