Sherman Robertson at
the Bronte Blues Club
22/11/08 08:51
Arriving early to avoid the forecasted
Pennine blizzards, ickledot was lucky enough to
catch the closing bars of the Sherman Robertson
Band’s soundcheck. I knew then that we were in
for a special night. As the audience gathered,
the sense of anticipation grew.
I know I’ve said it before, but the house band,
BBC5, were in particularly good form. Apparently
singer Michael Ford had been suffering with a
head cold for a number of days and whatever it
was that lingered in his nose or throat gave his
voice a pleasingly gravelled edge.
And then came the whirlwind that was the Sherman
Robertson Band! Having heard their session on
last Monday’s Radio 2 Blues programme with
Paul Jones, I knew what
to expect in terms of style, but nothing
could have prepared our little gathering for
the performance that followed. From Beaux
Bridges, Louisiana to Laycock Village Hall!
It never ceases to amaze me that such a
quality of music can be heard at this tiny
venue high in the hills.
Sherman Robertson is a truly wonderful guitarist
and showman. To me, the sound was vaguely
reminiscent of Robert Cray and a number of others
confirmed the validity of such a comparison. I
saw Cray a few years ago (at Manchester Apollo:
an inferior venue) and to me Sherman has the
edge. More grit in the voice and guitar style.
The supporting band were superb. Loud, but so
clear, tight and obviously having a great time.
Unfortunately a quick trawl on the old internet
has not revealed any names, but I think I heard
that the bass and keyboards players hailed from
Leicester and the drummer from Birmingham.
Thanks go also to the organisers for managing to
capture this rare talent for the
Bronte Blues Club. If not
thought of as an essential venue on the
British blues scene before, it truly is now.
A magical night. And it didn’t snow.
Tags: bronte blues
Bit Guilty …
11/11/08 17:03
… not been blogging enough recently. Soz.
Over the last few days I’ve kept hearing about
various things and thought ‘I could write a blog
about that’ and then days pass and the chance has
gone.
I was very pleased about Obama. Whether you like
him or not you have to agree it’s good to have a
politician elected without having to ‘dumb down’;
appear less bright than he is in order to pander
to ‘the common man’, whoever that is. Same with
Gordon Brown really. He recently seems to have
got the plaudits by being serious, being himself,
rather than pretending to be something he’s not.
I’ve been spending quite a bit of time updating
another
site I run. I first
designed it using Freeway about four years
ago. Now I’m attempting to bring it into the
Web 2.0 era using Rapidweaver. Trouble is,
it has grown to be huge and so is taking
forever to transfer.
Also been using Twitter a lot. I’m enjoying it
more and more. There’s a huge variety of people
out there and it is truly amazing what can be
said in the space of 140 characters.
OK. I’ll try to write something on a more regular
basis from now on.