Showing posts with label Taj Mahal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taj Mahal. Show all posts

Friday, August 3, 2018

Living Blues Award Winners Announced!

Taj Mahal & Keb’ Mo’s TajMo
The results are in for the 25th annual Living Blues Awards, with a pair of legends – Taj Mahal and Mavis Staples – taking the “Blues Artist of the Year” award in their respective categories (male and female) as voted on by Living Blues magazine’s writers and editors.

The entire list of award winners is available on the Living Blues website, along with the readers’ choices for the best of the year, but we’ve listed some of the recording award winners below (click on the links to buy the albums from Amazon.com).  

Album of the Year
Taj Mahal & Keb’ Mo’ – TajMo (Concord Records)

New Recordings (Contemporary Blues)
Mr. Sipp – Knock A Hole In It (Malaco Records)

New Recordings (Southern Soul)
Don Bryant – Don’t Give Up On Love (Fat Possum Records)

New Recordings (Best Debut)
Jontavious Willis – Blue Metamorphosis (self-produced)

Rhiannon Giddens' Freedom Highway
New Recordings (Traditional & Acoustic)
Rhiannon Giddens – Freedom Highway (Nonesuch Records)

Historical (Pre-war)
Various Artists – Blue 88s: Unreleased Piano Blues Gems 1938–1942 (Hi Horse Records)

Historical (Post-war)
Jimmy Reed – Mr. Luck: The Complete Vee-Jay Singles (Craft Recordings)

Blues Book of the Year
Lynn Abbott and Doug Seroff – The Original Blues: The Emergence of the Blues in African American Vaudeville (University Press of Mississippi)

DVD of the Year

Various Artists – I am the Blues (Directed by Daniel Cross, Film Movement) 


Sunday, May 13, 2018

2018 Blues Music Award Winners

Blues legend Keb' Mo', photo by Joseph A. Rosen
Keb' Mo', photo by Joseph A. Rosen, courtesy The Blues Foundation
The Blues Foundation held its 39th annual Blues Music Awards celebration on Friday, May 11th, 2018 in Memphis, Tennessee with the event hosted by the legendary ‘Little Steven’ Van Zandt. Legendary bluesmen Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’ were the night’s big winners, the duo’s critically-acclaimed musical collaboration, TajMo, winning both “Album of the Year” and “Contemporary Blues Album of the Year” awards. Additionally, Blues Hall of Fame 2009 inductee Taj Mahal walked off with the “Acoustic Artist of the Year” and the coveted “B.B. King Entertainer of the Year” awards while Keb’ Mo’ was named the “Contemporary Blues Male Artist of the Year.”

Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’ weren’t the only big winners on Friday night. Esteemed blues outfit Rick Estrin & the Nightcats celebrated ten years in the trenches by earning the “Band of the Year” honor while Estrin was named “Traditional Blues Male Artist of the Year” and his song “The Blues Ain’t Going Nowhere” was named “Song of the Year.” Dynamic young blues woman Samantha Fish was named “Contemporary Blues Female Artist of the Year,” her second BMA (she won “Best New Artist Debut” in 2012 for her album Runaway) of many I’m sure she’ll win in the years to come. The Blues Foundation added two new categories this year – Mike Zito won the new “Blues Rock Artist of the Year” award while Beth Hart earned the new BMA for “Instrumentalist of the Year, Vocals.”

Along with hosting the event, Little Steven was also among the presenters for the evening, joined by such talents as Janiva Magness, Ruthie Foster, Tony Joe White, Joe Louis Walker, and David Porter. Several of the BMA nominees also performed during the show, including Walter Trout, the North Mississippi Allstars, Keb’ Mo’, Guy Davis, Trudy Lynn, and Rick Estrin & the Nightcats, among others. For those naysayers claiming that the “blues is dead,” half the performances at this year’s event were by artists under the age of 45 years old, with many still in their 20s and 30s.

Taj Mahal & Keb' Mo's TajMo
Of this young blood injecting new life and electricity into the genre, Blues Foundation President and CEO Barbara Newman states “we are watching the trends closely, and the blues, as a genre, is definitely on an uptick, with younger musicians being drawn to create and play this style of music and a continually growing following of the music on our social media outlets and beyond.”

Little Steven set the tone for the evening and beyond with his introductory speech, stating “at a time our country is more segregated than at any time in the past 100 years, music holds us together and touches all our souls.” You’ll find the complete list of 2018 Blues Music Award winners below.

Acoustic Album of the Year:
Doug MacLeod’s Break the Chain

Acoustic Artist of the Year:
Taj Mahal

Album of the Year:
Taj Mahal & Keb’ Mo’s TajMo

B.B. King Entertainer of the Year:
Taj Mahal

Southern Avenue's Southern AvenueBand of the Year:
Rick Estrin & the Nightcats

Best Emerging Artist Album of the Year:
Southern Avenue’s Southern Avenue

Contemporary Blues Album of the Year:
Taj Mahal & Keb Mo’s TajMo

Contemporary Blues Female Artist of the Year:
Samantha Fish

Contemporary Blues Male Artist of the Year:
Keb’ Mo’

Song of the Year:
Rick Estrin’s “The Blues Ain’t Going Nowhere”

Historical Album of the Year:
Luther Allison’s A Legend Never Dies, Essential Recordings 1976-1997 (Ruf Recordings)

Walter Trout's We're All In This Together
Rock Blues Album of the Year:
Walter Trout’s We’re All In This Together

Rock Blues Artist of the Year:
Mike Zito

Soul Blues Album of the Year:
Robert Cray & Hi Rhythm’s Robert Cray & Hi Rhythm

Soul Blues Female Artist of the Year:
Mavis Staples

Soul Blues Male Artist of the Year:
Curtis Salgado

Traditional Blues Album of the Year:
Mike Welch & Mike Ledbetter’s Right Place, Right Time

Traditional Blues Male Artist of the Year:
Rick Estrin

Koko Taylor Award (Tradition Blues Female Artist of the Year):
Ruthie Foster

Instrumentalist of the Year Awards:
Beth Hart, vocalist
Ronnie Earl, guitarist
Michael “Mudcat” Ward, bassist
Tony Braunagel, drums
Jason Ricci, harmonica
Trombone Shorty, horn

Pinetop Perkins Piano Player of the Year:
Victor Wainwright

Also on That Devil Music.com: 2017 Blues Music Award Winners

Links in album titles to Amazon.com...buy, Buy, BUY!!!

Thomas Ruf, Walter Trout & Mike Zito, photo by Jeff Fasano
Thomas Ruf, Walter Trout & Mike Zito, photo by Jeff Fasano, courtesy The Blues Foundation