Live
Download links and information about Live by The Jimmy Bowskill Band. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to Blues, Rock genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 01:01:28 minutes.
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Artist: | The Jimmy Bowskill Band |
Release date: | 2009 |
Genre: | Blues, Rock |
Tracks: | 12 |
Duration: | 01:01:28 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Far from Reality | 4:18 |
2. | Rattlesnake Shake | 4:22 |
3. | Walk In My Shadow | 3:12 |
4. | Loser | 8:17 |
5. | Be Mine | 6:14 |
6. | Broke Down Engine | 3:19 |
7. | Drifting Haze | 5:55 |
8. | Diamond Ring | 3:00 |
9. | Ride a Pony | 5:00 |
10. | Karadag | 3:46 |
11. | Three O'clock In the Morning | 10:12 |
12. | Link Into Your Chain | 3:53 |
Details
[Edit]There can't be too many musicians who have released their fourth albums at the age of 19, but for Canadian blues singer/guitarist Jimmy Bowskill, this is his first disc not to be self-released, as he has signed to Ruf Records after three albums on his own, starting with Old Soul, which came out when he was about 13. Now a veteran, Bowskill proves to be a blues-rock player with a power trio on this concert date. His basic style had its heyday two decades before his birth, and that style is suggested by the album cover painted by poster artist Bob Masse, who is very much in the ‘60s San Francisco tradition. It is psychedelic rock, as played by the Jimi Hendrix Experience and Cream, among others. Bowskill's rhythm section of bassist Wayne Deadder and drummer Dan Neill provide support, but the show is all about Bowskill and his electric guitar playing, on which he uses a lot of effects, with a heavy sustain when he isn't using a slide. He also sings in a soulful high tenor. Other major influences are suggested by the inclusion of two songs by Free and one from the Peter Green era of Fleetwood Mac. This music now fits into the "blues" category, but back in 1969, it would have been called rock. Bowskill finally does nod to blues with a ten-minute encore version of B.B. King's "Three O'Clock in the Morning," but that's really the exception that proves the rule. This is blues-rock as they used to play it at the Fillmore, even if they stopped doing so a long time before Jimmy Bowskill made his appearance across the Canadian border.