RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER UPDATE-SATURDAY JUNE 15 CANCELED-BIG STEVE IN IN INTENSIVE CARE AFTER A STOKE

DEAR FRIENDS,

I WANTED TO LET YOU ALL KNOW THAT MY DADDY, "BIG STEVE", HAS SUFFERED A MASSIVE STROKE. HE IS IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNITE OF THE BAPTIST MEDICAL CENTER IN JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI. I WILL BE FLYING BACK HOME TO BE WITH HIM, MY MOTHER, MZ SALLY AND MY SISTER, RENEE' ON JUNE 10.

I WILL BE AWAY FROM TOKYO FOR A WEEK OR SO AND WILL MISS OUR SCHEDULED SATURDAY JUNE 15 SHOW AT WHAT THE DICKENS (CANCELED). AS OF TODAY I EXPECT TO BE BACK TO PLAY OUT THE REST OF MY TOUR SCHEDULE AND OTHER LIVE SHOWS AND EVENTS. SO PLESE PLAN ON BEING A PART OF THE "BIG LEG MUSIC AND FUN!"

PLEASE KEEP OUR FAMILY IN YOUR THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS AS WE KEEP OUR LAMPS TRIMMED AND BURNING.

RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER

(CANCELED)-JUNE 15 WHAT THE DICKENS (CANCELED)

JUNE/JULY LIVE SCHEDULE

** JUNE 15 WHAT THE DICKENS (CANCELED)**

JUNE 18  AOYAMA UNIVERSITY AMERICAN ROOTS AND BLUES ROAD SHOW

JUNE 19  AMERICAN ROOTS AND BLUES ROAD SHOW

MONDAY JUNE 24

FIRST ANNUAL TOKYIO ARTS WEEK LIVE

 http://neptunetheatre.net/

SPRING DAY, RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER & HISA NAKASE WITH MASUMI TIMSON|! LIVE!!!!!

MONDAY JUNE 24 FROM 7PM ¥2,000 ADVANCE/ ¥2,500 AT THE DOOR

RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER & HISA NAKASE WITH SPRING DAY AND MASUMI TIMSON.

AMERICAN ROOTS AND BLUES, GREAT COMEDY AND KOTO!

  • 〒151-0053 東京都渋谷区代々木4-50-8参宮橋ゲストハウスB1
  • Running from 20th to the 30th of June. 
    Neptune’s banner event, TAW is a summer festival blending mixed media, theatre, music and food. It’s designed to give artists and those who enjoy the arts a reason to come out and enjoy two weeks chock-full of arts events.

    Reserve your tickets at: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1ZDLtn8oe89TWdzPclamampge1hLCXvDe9vp4RlmuYfk/viewform


    If you have any questions or want to contact Neptune Theatre Co, please email us at neptunetheaterco [at] gmail . com or go to
    http://neptunetheatre.net/

JUNE 28  FRIDAY TOKYO AMERICAN CLUB JULY FOURTH PARTY MEMBER'S EVENT-RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER, HISA NAKASE, SAMM BENNETT, KEVIN MCHUGH  6-9PM

JUNE 29 SATURDAY YOKOHAMA THUMBS UP

BEER TASTING LIVE-¥1000 ADVANCE OR WITH RESERVATION-RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER, KEVIN MCHUGH, FORREST NELSON, SAMM BENNETT

*TICKETS THUMBS UP  DOORS OPEN 7--FIRST BAND 7:30-8:30; RAMBLING STEVE AND THE BOYZ 9-10PM

JULY

SATURDAY JULY 6 FCCJ YURAKUCHO

RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER & KEVIN MCHUGH(ACCORDION)

6-9PM --NO CHARGE

The Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan is located on the 20th Floor of the Yurakucho Denki North Building in the heart of Tokyo.

Hibiya Station (Hibiya, Chiyoda & Mita lines, A3 exit), Yurakucho Station (Yurakucho line, D2 exit) and JR Yurakucho Station (Yamanote and Keihin Tohoku lines, Hibiya exit) are the nearest subway and train stops. Ginza, Uchisaiwaicho, Tokyo and Otemachi stations are all within walking distance. (The A3 exit at Hibiya station comes up in the basement of the club. Head toward the elevator bank for the North Building (Kita-kan) and take the elevator to the 20th Floor.)

SUNDAY JULY 7 HOBGOBLIN SHIBUYA

RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER SOLO 7-9PM NO CHARGE

3/F, Ichiban Building,
1-3-11, Dogenzaka, Shibuya-ku, 
Tokyo, 150-0043, Japan. 

http://www.hobgoblin.jp

FRIDAY JULY 12 SHIMOKITAZAWA CLUB 251

BLACK SIGN MUSIC MEETS FASHION LIVE SHOW

DOORS OPEN 6:30 START FROM 7PM

RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER & KEVIN MCHUGH ALONG WITH ROLLING ROCKS AND MIKO TRIO.

¥3000 ADVANCE / ¥3,500 AT THE DOOR.

JULY 14 MIKE AND STEVE'S

SUMIDA RIVER BLUZ CRUISE

VOL. 2

MARK YOUR CALENDAR AND DON'T MISS THIS YEARS CRUISE. BIG FUN. MORE INFO SOON!!!!

ALL THAT YOU CAN EAT AND DRINK WITH MUSIC AND DANCING BY: RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER, HISA NAKASE, SAMM BENNETT AND KEVIN MCHUGH.

NEW REVIEW OF RAMBLING STEVE GARDNER'S "HESITATION BLUES" MAY 23, 2013 BLUES BLAST MAGAZINE.

http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/ramblingstevehardner

Issue 7-21, May 23, 2013  

    Featured Blues Review 7 of 7

Rambling Steve Gardner – Hesitation Blues

Blues Cat Records (Tokyo)

www.stevegardner.info

20 songs – 1.2 hours

Rambling Steve Gardner is a fascinating character. Born in Mississippi in 1956, he learned the blues from (and sometimes played with) the likes of Sam Chatmon, Jack Owens and Jessie Mae Hemphill. His work as a photographer took him to Japan in 1980, where he still lives but where he now focuses on playing and teaching the music, songs and stories of late 19th and early 20th century American music.

Recorded in July 2012, Gardner’s new CD, Hesitation Blues, is his sixth release for Blues Cat Records (Tokyo) and his fourth solo recording project. Hesitation Blues is a collection of 20 acoustic tracks, some performed solo by Gardner, some featuring duo and trio arrangements, but also three full band pieces.

Other than the occasional use of B-3 organ, this album could have been recorded before the invention of electric instruments. In addition to singing in his rough-hewn but versatile voice, Gardner plays steel guitar and harmonica and adds hambone percussion. Bill Steber contributes saw, banjo ukulele, mandolin and steel guitar. Hisa Nakase plays up-right bass, Yu Ojima plays drums and Gardner’s co-producer, Nick Vitter, adds up-right piano and organ. Other featured instruments include the accordion, tuba, trombone and fiddle. The musicians also add claps, hollers and stomps in addition to backing vocals.

Gardner is a fine finger-picker on his National Reso-Phonic guitar, equally adept with a bottleneck on pieces like “St Louis Blues”. He also wrote two songs for the album, “Mississippi River Blues” and “Bill Bailey Rag”, both of which sit comfortably with the cover songs (which were themselves all written before 1946 and several of which date to the 16th and 17th centuries). A number of the cover songs are very well known indeed (“House Of The Rising Sun”, “Froggy Went A-Courtin’”, “Love In Vain” and “I Shall Not Be Moved”), but Gardner gives many of them a fresh re-working. For example, “Hesitation Blues” sounds nothing like the Reverend Gary Davis or Hot Tuna versions, but does sound like it has been given a serious bath in New Orleans waters. Equally, “House Of The Rising Sun” sounds like a wholly new song, with a funky drum beat, lonesome trombone and driving bass. At times I found myself wondering if Gardner was deliberately re-interpreting the songs to give them a different (and more modern) perspective, or whether his arrangements are actually closer to how the “original” versions might have been performed.

One of several highlights on the album is “I Shall Not Be Moved”, which opens with Gardner’s solo National guitar, before he is joined by a full band including accordion and trombone and a lovely gospel chorus.

Gardner is an educator as well as a musician, running workshops and seminars on American roots and blues music, often sponsored by educational institutions in the USA and Japan. Hesitation Blues is a musical companion to those seminars and workshops. As such, it is not surprising that Gardner has selected so many pieces that are central to the evolution of American (and world) music, and hence also extremely well-known. In some ways that could be seen as the raison d'être of the album: to point listeners towards the giants who first created this music.

But this album is not a dry, dusty exercise in academia. It is immediately obvious from the music that the musicians had a blast playing together and, despite the absence of electric instruments, the rhythm and groove established on several songs rock at least as hard as many “modern” bands. This is not a cautious, overly-worthy homage to the past. It is an invigorating reminder of why early American music has had such long-lasting and far-reaching influence. It is a celebration of some wonderful songs, played and sung with real power.

If you are a fan of other modern National guitar masters, such as Steve James, Paul Rishell or Terry Garland, you will thoroughly enjoy this album.!

Reviewer Reviewer Rhys Williams is a blues enthusiastic based in Cambridge, England. One of the few times his children have seen him cry was when his then-two-year-old son knocked over his prized National guitar, breaking the headstock clean off

.http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/ramblingstevehardner

For other reviews and interviews on our website CLICK HERE

HERE IS A LOOK AT THE NEW WELCOME BILLBOARD AT THE JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT CELEBRATING MUSIC IN MISSISSIPPI.

PHOTO: JAMES PATTERSON PHOTORAPHYhttp://www.119gallery.com/

 

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