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Stony Plain Records: Canada's Roots, Rock, Country, Folk & Blues Label
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 Index of Artists
 3-B |  C-E |  F-H |  J-L |  M-O |  P-S |  T-W Y to Y
 3
 Stony Plain Records 30th Anniversary
 A
 Arthur Adams
 Luther Allison
 Dave Alvin
 Billy Boy Arnold
 Asleep At The Wheel
 The Asylum Street Spankers
 Renee Austin
 The Austin Lounge Lizards
 B
 Mr. B
 Long John Baldry
 Carey Bell & Tough Luck
 Eric Bibb & Leon Bibb
 Big James & The Chicago Playboys
 Elvin Bishop
 Rory Block
 Deanna Bogart
 Ray Bonneville
 Brave Combo
 Kevin Breit & Harry Manx
 Sarah Brown
 Nappy Brown
 Norton Buffalo
 Jim Byrnes
 C
 Chubby Carrier & The Bayou Swamp Band
 Tommy Castro
 Bobby Charles
 Rita Chiarelli
 Chicago Rhythm And Blues Kings
 Christmas Blues
 Popa Chubby
 Cindy Church
 Otis Clay
 David Clayton-Thomas
 Deborah Coleman
 Commander Cody
 Joanna Connor
 James Cotton
 Pee Wee Crayton
 Crowbar
 Rodney Crowell
 Albert Cummings
 Nick Curran & The Nitelifes
 D
 Debbie Davies
 Jesse Dayton
 Downchild
 E
 Ronnie Earl
 Steve Earle
 Herb Ellis
 F
 Gary Fjellgaard
 Gary Fjellgaard & Valdy
 Rosie Flores & Ray Campi
 Chris Flory
 Peter Karp & Sue Foley
 Damon Fowler
 Lowell Fulson W/ Powder Blues Band
 G
 Amos Garrett
 Amos Garrett, Doug Sahm, Gene Taylor
 Jay Geils
 Rosco Gordon
 Great Speckled Bird
 Grievous Angels
 Buddy Guy W/ Jr. Wells
 H
 Harper
 Emmylou Harris
 Jeff Healey
 Jeff Healey And The Jazz Wizards
 Jimi Hendrix
 High Noon
 Tish Hinojosa
 Dave Hole
 Holmes Brothers
 Walter Horton
 Tim Hus
 J
 Pj Jackson
 Doug James
 Waylon Jennings
 Santiago Jimenez, Jr.
 Kristi Johnston
 Lloyd Jones
 Jr. Gone Wild
 K
 Peter Karp
 Chris Thomas King
 King Biscuit Boy
 Smokin Joe Kubek & B'nois King
 L
 Frankie Lee
 Little Mike & The Tornadoes
 Professor Longhair
 Hamilton Loomis
 Charlie Louvin
 Corb Lund
 M
 Magic Slim & The Teardrops
 Charlie Major
 Harry Manx and Kevin Breit
 Bob Margolin
 Iain Matthews
 Ellen Mcilwaine
 Big Dave McLean
 Linda Mcrae
 Jay Mcshann
 Katy Moffatt
 Hugh Moffatt
 Coco Montoya
 John Mooney
 Big Bill Morganfield
 Maria Muldaur
 Charlie Musselwhite
 Shirley Myers
 N
 Kenny Neal
 Willie Nelson
 John Németh (John Nemeth)
 Bob Neuwirth
 Aaron Neville
 Neville Brothers
 New Guitar Summit
 O
 Carla Olson
 Omar & The Howlers
 P
 The Paperboys
 Pine Top Perkins
 Bill Perry
 Rod Piazza & The Mighty Flyers
 George Porter
 Preacher Boy
 Snooky Pryor
 R
 Sonny Rhodes
 Duke Robillard
 The Rockin' Highliners
 Robin Rogers
 Roy Rogers
 Jimmy Rogers
 Roy Rogers & Norton Buffalo
 The Rounders
 Otis Rush
 Tom Russell
 S
 Walter Salas-Humara
 Savoy Brown
 E.C. Scott
 Johnny Shines & Snooky Prior
 George Smith
 Jo-El Sonnier
 South Mountain
 Jeremy Spencer
 Spirit Of The West
 Studebaker John & Nighthawks
 Sunny And Her Joy Boys
 T
 Eric Taylor
 Jimmy Thackery
 Jimmy Thackery & John Mooney
 Jimmy Thackery & The Drivers
 Rosetta Tharpe
 Dr. Duke Tumatoe & The Power Trio
 Sylvia Tyson
 Ian Tyson
 V
 Valdy & Gary Fjellgaard
 Various
 W
 Joe Louis Walker
 Monte Warden
 Muddy Waters
 Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
 Barrence Whitfield With Tom Russell
 David Wilcox
 Webb Wilder
 Willie & The Poor Boys
 Reverend Billy C. Wirtz
 Jimmy Witherspoon
 Carolyn Wonderland
 Mitch Woods & His Rocket 88's
 Y
 Mighty Joe Young
 
Rory Block
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gallery Rory Block

SPCD 1329
Genre: Blues
Released: 16 September 2008
$ 20 CDN

Release Sheet

Blues Walkin' Like A Man: A Tribute To Son House
  1. My Black Mama (4:25)
  2. Downhearted Blues (4:39)
  3. Preachin' Blues (Listen to mp3 clip) (3:28)
  4. Jinx Blues (4:25)
  5. Dry Spell Blues (3:58)
  6. Shetland Pony Blues (3:33)
  7. Death Letter (Listen to mp3 clip) (4:25)
  8. County Farm Blues (3:31)
  9. Grinnin' In Your Face (Listen to mp3 clip) (2:09)
  10. Low Down Dirty Dog Blues (4:33)
  11. Depot Blues (3:09)
  12. Government Fleet Blues (7:03)
  13. I Want To Go Home On The Morning Train (4:01)

Reviews:

JazzReview.com
By Karl Stober
Block appeals to the inner sense that the blues instills into an audience. (more)

Blues has an extraordinary musical emotion, with an inner texture dipped into a sixth sense that opens a weathered journey for whoever chooses its dramatic passage. Every time I spin a fine grit of blues, life becomes focused. Such was the case with Rory Block and her new tribute project to Son House, Blues Walkin’ like a Man. Released by Stony Plain Records in 2008, this blues storyline has escorted the audience in the direction of their own crossroads. This is the “glue” to the days when blues was the story of every man’s road. Block has set the flow for an Americana time capsule in musicianship!

Delta bluesman Son House never really received the accolades he so richly earned, but this preacher man–blues icon has influenced a globe in the art form known as blues. Block took this iconic existence to become her mission, unearthing the greatness of the man who influenced her world. Blues Walkin’ like a Man injects a deceptively strong tribute spin in the form of Son House’s signature style at the same time. Block is very much in control of her own precise formula.

Block's sense of commitment inspires with the performance of “Preachin’ Blues” as the old school of hard blues is exercised. The pick configurations are solid and methodical. Strategically injected solos truly ignite the fever blues can only trigger. The acoustical romance of blues comes to a righteous pulse with “Government Fleet Blues.” In this experience, Block vocalizes the story with the signature pain desirable to properly break through the meaning within the blues dimension. Many times, blues is imparted through song with a hollow emotion. However, Block brings that traditional style to life, executing the tale of a weathered and traveled soul. Classic feel with structure!

Block appeals to the inner sense that the blues instills into an audience. A pure grit of life pours from her strings as she massages each fret of her musical drive. In this case, she applauds the life of Son House and with her smooth tones and hard core vocals. Block came to the crossroads with this project and took it into the right direction.

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Biography

 

A Stony Plain artist's biography

RORY BLOCK — A TRUE MESSENGER FOR THE BLUES — RELEASES A TRIBUTE TO THE GREAT SON HOUSE ON STONY PLAIN RECORDS

"BLUES WALKIN' LIKE A MAN" RECREATES AND REINTERPRETS THE MUSIC OF THE FATHER OF THE DELTA BLUES

Rory Block was 15 years old when she met Son House. Two improbable people. A young teenaged Greenwich Village guitar prodigy and an older black man, 62, who had recorded nine of the most powerful blues pieces ever for the Paramount label in 1930.

Years later, she recalled the moment: "Backstage at the Village Gate in 1965 Son House virtually radiated a golden light. As I watched him perform, rolling his head back, slamming the strings and almost choking on the intensity, I learned a deep lesson about the power of the music which became an inseparable part of me."

"Later I had a chance to play for him. I will never forget his amazement as I played Willie Brown's Future Blues. He was asking people "Where did she learn to play like this?"

"He was beautiful looking; smooth skin, tall and handsome, his face filled with a million stories of the music, a life lived in hardship and cloaked in mystery."

Now, more than 40 years later, the guitarist has paid Son House an ultimate tribute: A collection of 13 songs associated with the legendary blues singer titled "Blues Walkin' Like a Man." The album is being released September 30 on Stony Plain, the international roots music label based in Edmonton, Alberta.

Rory Block's life-long involvement with the blues has reached a new high point with this release.

With encouragement and support from Dick Waterman, who helped discover Son House and managed him until the singer died in 1988, she cut 13 tracks, mostly with her own solo acoustic guitar, and three with the support of one of her oldest friends, The Lovin' Spoonful's John Sebastian, on harmonica.

Revered songs like Preachin' Blues, Death Letter, Grinnin' in Your Face and Jinx Blues are loaded with the power — vocally and instrumentally — that marked Son House's recorded repertoire and live performances.

Rory Block's first recordings (under the pseudonym Sunshine Kate) were made for Elektra Records; she didn't record again until 1975, when she recorded for RCA Victor and Chrysalis before signing to Rounder Records, for whom she cut more than a dozen albums. She has also recorded for a number of other labels, in between endless tour schedules that have only recently begun to slow down.

Along the way, she has won five W.C. Handy Awards (now known simply as Blues Awards) from the Blues Foundation, two for "Traditional Blues Female Artist," and three for "Acoustic Blues Album of the Year," the most recent just last year. She's earned a gold record in Holland, and toured from one end of the United States to the other end of Canada, not to mention Poland and Norway and Italy and a half a dozen more European countries.

Everywhere she plays, audiences are touched by the depth of her commitment to her music; Critical plaudits follow the applause: The New York Times put it plainly enough: "Her playing is perfect, her singing otherworldly as she wrestles with ghosts, shadows and legends." And Guitar Extra, a publication that knows what it speaks about, added: "Rory Block has become one of the world's most important preservers of the roots of American music. She has become a national treasure in the form of an uncompromising mature blues artist."

And her peers echo the praise; Bonnie Raitt put it this way: "Rory has been an inspiration to me since we started out years ago. Her guitar playing, singing and songwriting are some of the most soulful in traditional and modern blues."

And Dick Waterman, listening to the test pressings of the new record, summed it up: "She is a true messenger for the blues; an artist who can bring this music to people — perhaps in the same way that Mr. House brought it to Robert Johnson and countless others."

Rory Block's own watchwords are simple: "Life is short, and fragile, and I know we all have a mission. Don't forget that it is a great privilege to be in this miraculous place, and that if you're here, you're chosen."