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воскресенье, 14 июля 2024 г.

King Pima Wolf - Medicine

Bitrate:320K/s
Year:2013
Time:54:01 
Size:123,8 MB 
Label:Medicine Records 
Styles:Blues/Blues Rock/Rock 
Art:Front 

Tracks Listing:
 1. One -  8:30
 2. Magic Man Blues -  4:40
 3. Woman -  8:58
 4. What'cha Gonna Do -  6:23
 5. Free -  9:26
 6. Power - 10:52
 7. Good Day to Die -  5:09

Musicians:
King Pima Wolf - Vocals, Master of Ceremony
Matthew J Ruffino  Guitars
Troyous Ricciardi - Bass
Michael (Bam Bam) Sversvold -  Drums

Medicine was formed by four seasoned professional musicians. King Pima Wolf’s brainchild. The sole purpose of this band is to create and to address the harmony that is inherent within each of us. 
Recorded at Ashrum Studios, Detroit MI Mastered at The Legendary Piety Street Studios, New Orleans LA/  “Medicine”, King Pima Wolf and Big Medicine’s album, contains just seven tracks, though it clocks in at an impressive 54 minutes. They’re obviously not a group to be rushed. Indeed, slow blues is their forte and they’re unafraid to let a song unhurriedly unwind, building tension as it develops and respite when it breaks like a wave. Musically, it’s consistently effective, and the band, King Pima Wolf on vocals, guitarist Mathew J. Ruffino, bassist Troy Ricciardi and drummer Michael Sversvold repeatedly bring to mind legendary blues-rockers like Free, the Allmans, or The Doors circa “L.A. Woman”. Love and healing are the themes they’re promoting, and they’re ‘on massage’ from the off. They begin the album with “One”, a peaceful call to arms and a clear statement of intent. “Magic Man Blues” ups the pace and relocates to the swamps; Ruffino’s slide guitar providing thrills aplenty. “What'cha Gonna Do” arrives fully formed, like the illegitimate offspring of Deep Purple and Canned Heat, and final number “Good Day to Die” is upbeat and peculiarly positive, though ‘tomorrow is a good day to die’ is surely a universal truth, insofar tomorrow never comes.


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