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Stony Plain Records: Canada's Roots, Rock, Country, Folk & Blues Label
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Duke Robillard - A Swingin' Session
 

 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
 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
 Joanna Connor
 James Cotton
 Pee Wee Crayton
 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
 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
 Hugh Moffatt
 Katy 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
 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
 
Robin Rogers
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enlarge Robin Rogers

BPCD 5123
Genre: Blues
Released: 26 August 2008
$ 20 CDN

Treat Me Right
  1. Treat Me Right
  2. Don't Leave Poor Me
  3. Ain't No Use
  4. Can You Hear Me Now
  5. Color-Blind Angel
  6. Promised Land
  7. Nobody Stays
  8. Drunkard's Alley
  9. Nobody's Gonna Hurt You
  10. Moan
  11. Dark Love

 

Biography

  Music has been Robin Rogers' consuming passion ever since her days as a teenaged street singer. Possessing a deeply expressive and soulful voice and an infectious enthusiasm for the blues, Robin and her band have developed a devoted and growing following. Her Stony Plain/Blind Pig debut, "Treat Me Right", fulfills the promise of her previous two releases, revealing an accomplished artist of rare polish and originality. In the late sixties when America's youth was "rediscovering the Blues," Robin Rogers was "living the Blues." As a runaway teen trying to escape a troubled home, she made her way to cities like Richmond, Virginia; Ann Arbor, Michigan; Atlanta, Georgia; and Coconut Grove, Florida. Robin lived the hippie lifestyle of the times, even sharing residence in a commune in Love Valley, North Carolina for one summer, sometimes sleeping in parks, under picnic tables and in abandoned cars. After serving time as a juvenile in reform school for truancy and being out of parental control, she was released at age 15 to begin life on her own. It was a hard life for a young girl, and it wasn't long until Robin was addicted to drugs and alcohol and, thank goodness, to singing! She eventually learned to play guitar and began accompanying herself. Robin performed on the streets, at parties and coffee houses for food and tips, setting the stage for the emergence of an independent, strong-willed spirit and charismatic singer. After hearing the applause of strangers, she knew she was hooked! Her goal was to make a living performing music, and this she has done for over 30 years. Moving to South Florida in 1979 to record for the Sal Soul Label, a subsidiary of RCA, Robin recorded at the well-known Miami Sound Studios and lived in Ft. Lauderdale for the next ten years performing on a full-time basis. As fate would have it, Robin became drug and alcohol free in 1989 and began to turn her life around. She moved to North Carolina in 1990, performing in the Southeast area for the next ten years, recording, writing and enjoying music clean and sober for the first time in many years. Robin got involved with the Charlotte Blues Society in the mid-nineties. Shortly after that, she met and married fellow musician and Blues lover, Tony Rogers. They performed as an acoustic duo, with Tony playing guitar/dobro and Robin on harmonica and percussion. It wasn't too long before she was heard by producer/musician, Jim Brock and was asked to do a CD which was released in 2001 entitled "Time For Myself," a contemporary Blues record which contains six originals penned by Robin and Tony. They put together a band in support of that release and went on to win the 2003 Charlotte Blues Society's Blues Challenge, winning the right to represent Charlotte, North Carolina in Memphis, Tennessee in January 2004. They competed against 98 acts from all over the world in the International Blues Challenge, sponsored by the Blues Foundation. After three nights of tough competition, Robin Rogers and Her Hot Band emerged as one of only nine finalists in the 2004 International Blues Challenge, which was judged by the industry heavyweights including Bruce Iglauer of Alligator Records and Blues recording artist Kenny Neal. Robin and Tony recorded their long-awaited second release, entitled "Crazy, Cryin' Blues," which was released in 2004 and won the "Best Self-Produced CD" award from the Blues Foundation as part of the International Blues Challenge 2005. Robin signed with 95North Records in February 2005 and her self-penned "Caddy Daddy" was included on "Fins, Chrome and the Open Road," a Cadillac Tribute CD released in conjunction with 95North and General Motors Corp. Other artists on the disc include Little Milton, Rory Block, Charlie Musselwhite and Maria Muldaur. Robin has shared the stage with greats like Buddy Guy, Johnny Winter, Robert Cray, Carey Bell, Bob Margolin, Shemekia Copeland, Tommy Castro, Guitar Shorty, Jimmy Thackery & the Drivers, Cepphas and Wiggins, Ann Rabson, Roy Bookbinder, Paul Geremia and Sharrie Williams. She joined the roster of Piedmont Talent in February 2006 and performed in Europe in April 2006. Robin signed with Blind Pig in 2008, and her debut release for the label, "Treat Me Right", was issued in June of that year. It's a showcase for Robin's stylistic variety and passionate vocal intensity, from the rolling r&b title track to the jazzy "Nobody Stays" to the soulful groove of "Nobody's Gonna Hurt You." It also features perhaps Robin's most powerful composition, "Color-Blind Angel", a moving account of the life and death of white civil rights worker Viola Liuzzo, who was assassinated by the KKK in 1965. "Color-Blind Angel" won second place in the blues category of the 2007 International Songwriters Competition.