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For
the past forty years I have played the guitar for the simple pleasure
of it and to relax and drift away at the end of the day. After hearing
Blues interpreters like David Bromberg, Ry Cooder and J.J. Cale
(all of them represented on my latest release) I became interested
in the music of the early acoustic bluesmen. Ironically, the finger
style I learned from a year of classical lessons was ideally adapted
to thus music. Playing this music became a passion after a while.
During my illness,
many people offered their prayers and assistance in a wide variety
of ways. As it would happen, Scott Dibble, a musician I have known
for about 25 years had just finished building a recording studio.
For a while, I had wanted to record a collection of some songs I
had written and a few of my favourite blues songs. After I told
Scott what was going on, he thought it would be good therapy for
me to come down for some recording sessions.
Since I had
always used music to relax and regroup, I had planned to work on
my music as a theraputic occupation to fill my time and forget about
the cancer. There weren’t too many days that I was too sick
to play. These unforeseen events in my life allowed me the time
to polish up some tunes and record this CD. I guess it was ironic
that a doctor would use music as a medicine. When you think about
it, that’s what these blues songs were written for. An expression
of longing and a view from people struggling with life. No matter
how far you go back in time, human feelings always go back to the
same themes.
After a few
informal sessions, Scott and I decided to try to capture the emotion
of this real life situation as it percolated through these traditional
songs in the style of the old blues players. – just a single
guitar and a voice, done live. We just started recording different
songs that I felt like playing. The idea was to end the sessions
when my treatment finished, sift through the takes and see what
we had. There are no overdub on the album and some of the tracks
were recorded direct to disc.
When you arrive
at the crossroads, get down on your knee and make your deal, you
realize that whether it’s the Lord or modern science that
saves you, you need people to make you feel better. Obviously your
Baby can make you feel a “Whole Lot Better”. The Blues
links with the feelings of the great equalizers in life, of loss,
lust, love and just keeping on living, sustained by dreams of things
getting better. Sometimes late at night when you’re deep into
these old songs, playin’ the slide, you feel like the whole
world is there with you.
In many ways,
our lives are shaped at the crossroads and borderlines along the
roads we travel. In that spirit we made this healing blues, with
the support and love of my family Loreen, Kate and Leni.
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