Thursday, 26 June 2008

Lighting Hopkins

Lighting Hopkins   
Artist: Lighting Hopkins

   Genre(s): 
Blues
   



Discography:


Blues Train   
 Blues Train

   Year: 1951   
Tracks: 15




Sam Hopkins was a Texas country bluesman of the highest caliber whose career began in the 1920s and stretched all the way of life into the 1980s. Along the way, Hopkins watched the genre change unmistakably, only he never appreciably neutered his plaintive Lone Star sound, which translated onto both acoustic and electric guitar. Hopkins' nimble manual dexterity made intricate boogie riffs seem soft, and his riveting predilection for improvising lyrics to suit whatever state of affairs mightiness originate made him a honey megrims poet-singer.


Hopkins' brothers John Henry and Joel were as well talented bluesmen, just it was Sam wHO became a star. In 1920, he met the legendary Blind Lemon Jefferson at a social function, and even got a chance to play with him. Later, Hopkins served as Jefferson's guide. In his teens, Hopkins began working with some other prewar great, singer Texas Alexander, wHO was his first cousin. A mid-'30s stretch in Houston's County Prison Farm for the brigham Young guitar player fitful their partnership for a time, only when he was freed, Hopkins dependant back up up with the elder bluesman.


The pair was dishing tabu their lowdown brand of vapours in Houston's Third Ward in 1946 when gift talent scout Lola Anne Cullum came across them. She had already engineered a accord with Los Angeles-based Aladdin Records for some other of her charges, piano player Amos Milburn, and Cullum saw the same sort of opportunity inside Hopkins' dust-covered rural area vapours. Alexander wasn't voice of the address; rather, Cullum paired Hopkins with piano player Wilson "Boom" Smith, reasonably re-christened the guitar player "Lightnin'," and presto! Hopkins was very shortly an Aladdin transcription creative person.


"Katie May," cut on November 9, 1946, in L.A. with Smith loaning a hand on the 88s, was Lightnin' Hopkins' first-class honours degree regional trafficker of eminence. He recorded prolifically for Aladdin in both L.A. and Houston into 1948, scoring a national R&B strike for the immobile with his "Shotgun Blues." "Little Haired Woman," "Abilene," and "Big Mama Jump," among many Aladdin gems, were redolent Texas blues stock-still in an sooner era.


A freight of other labels recorded the slick Hopkins later on that, both in a solo setting and with a low beat section: Modern/RPM (his inflexible "Tim Moore's Farm" was an R&B strike in 1949); Gold Star (where he strike with "T-Model Blues" that same year); Sittin' in With ("Give Me Central 209" and "Coffee Blues" were national chart entries in 1952) and its Jax subsidiary; the major labels Mercury and Decca; and, in 1954, a singular clutch of sides for Herald where Hopkins played red-hot electric guitar on a serial of blasting bikers ("Lightnin's Boogie," "Lightnin's Special," and the astonishing "Hopkins' Sky Hop") in strawman of drummer Ben Turner and bassist Donald Cooks (wHO moldiness suffer had haemorrhage fingers, so torrid were some of the tempos).


But Hopkins' style was seemingly as well bumpkinly and old fashioned for the new generation of sway & undulate enthusiasts (they should have checkered stunned "Hopkins' Sky Hop"). He was back on the Houston scene by 1959, for the most part disregarded. Fortunately, folklorist Mack McCormick rediscovered the guitar player, wHO was dusted off and presented as a folk-blues artist; a part that Hopkins was born to play. Pioneering musicologist Sam Charters produced Hopkins in a solo context of use for Folkways Records that same year, cutting an entire LP in Hopkins' petite flat (on a borrowed guitar). The results helped introduced his medicine to an wholly new interview.


Lightnin' Hopkins went from gigging at back-alley gin joints to stellar at collegiate coffeehouses, coming into court on TV programs, and touring Europe to flush. His once-flagging transcription vocation went proper through the roof, with albums for World Pacific; Vee-Jay; Bluesville; Bobby Robinson's Fire label (where he cut his classical "Mojo Hand" in 1960); Candid; Arhoolie; Prestige; Verve; and, in 1965, the first-class honours degree of several LPs for Stan Lewis' Shreveport-based Jewel logotype.


Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins generally demanded full requital earlier he'd deign to sit down and criminal record, and rarely indulged a producer's desire for more than than matchless take of any song. His singular sense of area time mixed-up more than a few unseasoned musicians; from the sixties on, his solo work is ordinarily preferred to band-backed material.


Film producer Les Blank captured the Texas troubadour's informal modus vivendi most vividly in his acclaimed 1967 objective, The Blues Accordin' to Lightnin' Hopkins. As one of the utmost majuscule nation bluesmen, Hopkins was a bewitching figure world Health Organization bridged the gap between rural and urban styles.






Monday, 16 June 2008

Pete Namlook and H.I.A

Pete Namlook and H.I.A   
Artist: Pete Namlook and H.I.A

   Genre(s): 
Ambient
   



Discography:


S.H.A.D.O 2   
 S.H.A.D.O 2

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 4




 






Friday, 6 June 2008

Deyn named best-dressed ahead of Kate Moss

Kate Moss has been knocked off the top of a best-dressed list by model-of-the-moment Agyness Deyn.
34-year-old Moss had taken the best-dressed crown for the last two years thanks to her prized ability to influence the contents of women's wardrobes.
Although she still receives praise in Tatler magazine's annual list, it is Moss's rival Deyn, 25, whose sartorial choices enlist most respect.
Tatler also puts Samantha Cameron, the wife of Tory leader David Cameron, in the top 10 for being "consistently chic and never flash". The magazine adds: "She brings some much-needed glamour to the Tory Wives Club."
Actress Keira Knightley takes fourth place, for being a "red carpet style icon" who works the "grungy but clean" look during the day.
Anouck Lepere, the Belgian model girlfriend of Moss's ex, Jefferson Hack, is sixth.
Alexa Chung, the girlfriend of Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner and presenter of T4, is 10th. The magazine says she is often "seen in a navy children's princess coat with a velvet collar which cost a tenner in Brick Lane".
Former chip girl Deyn, winner of Model of the Year, recently replaced Moss in the latest Burberry campaign.
The fashion label says Moss is "still part of the Burberry family".
Tatler writes of Deyn: "Whether she's sipping chai at the Russian Tea Rooms in Primrose Hill or kicking back at Henry Holland's studio, She's fash-fabulous... Rockin."
It still credits Moss with influencing women, giving her second place in the top 10 and writing: "If she wears it, the rest of the world follows suit.She has proven her designer credentials with her sell-out Topshop clothing range."
Top 10 Best-Dressed1. Agyness Deyn (model)2. Kate Moss (model)3. Natalia Vodianova (Russian model)4. Keira Knightley (actress)5. Stella Tennant (model)6. Anouck Lepere (model)7. Lynn de Rothschild (of the banking family)8. Kirsty Bertarelli (billionaire's wife and former beauty queen)9. Samantha Cameron (David Cameron's wife and creative director of Smythson)10. Alexa Chung (T4 presenter)