Bitrate:320K/s
Year:2007
Time:60:44
Size:139,0 MB
Label:Self-Released
Styles:Electric Blues/Harmonica Blues/Boogie Woogie/Funky Blues
Art:Front+Back
Year:2007
Time:60:44
Size:139,0 MB
Label:Self-Released
Styles:Electric Blues/Harmonica Blues/Boogie Woogie/Funky Blues
Art:Front+Back
Tracks Listing:
1. Boogie Through The Years - 4:41
2. It's About Time - 6:14
3. Lonely Lonely Lonely - 4:53
4. High Steppin' Woman - 5:01
5. Rough Dried Woman (Pt 1) - 4:24
6. Gutter Song - 5:01
7. Ready To Ride - 4:11
8. Something Inside Of Me - 5:48
9. Gotta Past People - 3:54
10. Pay The Price - 6:50
11. Santa Cruz - 3:40
12. Once Was A Big Man - 6:04
1. Boogie Through The Years - 4:41
2. It's About Time - 6:14
3. Lonely Lonely Lonely - 4:53
4. High Steppin' Woman - 5:01
5. Rough Dried Woman (Pt 1) - 4:24
6. Gutter Song - 5:01
7. Ready To Ride - 4:11
8. Something Inside Of Me - 5:48
9. Gotta Past People - 3:54
10. Pay The Price - 6:50
11. Santa Cruz - 3:40
12. Once Was A Big Man - 6:04
Drums, Percussion, Singer - Jazz, Blues - Rockingham (Halifax), Nova Scotia, Canada Jan.22, 1953 - July 5, 2016.
What do you get when you mix Nova Scotia fog with Mississippi mud, California boogie and British Blues? You get the Electric Blues sound of Geoff Jardine's debut album.A varied album with different styles of blues, from house rockin' to roadhouse blues, passing through rock-boogie and some funky-blues. The rhythmic patterns are simple, uncomplicated, but at the same time solid, effective, and well-executed, based on slows, funks, grooves, and shuffles. It is in all of these that our protagonist, drummer and singer Geoff Jardine, showcases his refined drumming technique and his excellent command of tempos, which he displays and perfectly balances. Geoff Jardine is accompanied by bass, guitar, harmonica, and keyboards to complete this Once Was A Big Man, which contains four covers (Nick Gravenites, Elmore James, John Mayall, etc.) and eight originals, two by Geoff himself and the remaining six by bassist Paul McNeill. An album that has pleasantly surprised me with the control and instrumental mastery of these powerfully effective musicians, who are also perfect connoisseurs of the genre they perform.
What do you get when you mix Nova Scotia fog with Mississippi mud, California boogie and British Blues? You get the Electric Blues sound of Geoff Jardine's debut album.A varied album with different styles of blues, from house rockin' to roadhouse blues, passing through rock-boogie and some funky-blues. The rhythmic patterns are simple, uncomplicated, but at the same time solid, effective, and well-executed, based on slows, funks, grooves, and shuffles. It is in all of these that our protagonist, drummer and singer Geoff Jardine, showcases his refined drumming technique and his excellent command of tempos, which he displays and perfectly balances. Geoff Jardine is accompanied by bass, guitar, harmonica, and keyboards to complete this Once Was A Big Man, which contains four covers (Nick Gravenites, Elmore James, John Mayall, etc.) and eight originals, two by Geoff himself and the remaining six by bassist Paul McNeill. An album that has pleasantly surprised me with the control and instrumental mastery of these powerfully effective musicians, who are also perfect connoisseurs of the genre they perform.

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