Thirty Roads

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Muddy Waters, Rory
Gallagher, Tom Waits, the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and JJ Cale also had a
healthy influence.

 

The group’s name, Moondogs Blues
Party,
comes from a radio programme hosted by Alan Freed, one of the first
radio presenters to play black music in segregationist America, back in the
1940s and 50s.

 

There are no rehearsals or everlasting
recordings behind the music of Moondogs
Blues Party;
everything is just the way it sounded the first time it was
played. It may well be that this detracts from technical purity or modern
musical sophistication, but that is not what the group aims for. They offer
something fresh and ephemeral, that is felt and then lost, and thus unique. It
is almost like a religion and Thelonious Monk is the priest.

 

Hear: The Devil is on the Roof

 

               

Disc Type: CD
Publication date: 2011/06/10
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