Create account Log in

Richmond Blues

[Edit]

Download links and information about Richmond Blues by Cephas, Wiggins. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Blues, Acoustic genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:05:31 minutes.

Artist: Cephas, Wiggins
Release date: 2008
Genre: Blues, Acoustic
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:05:31
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Richmond Blues 3:59
2. Going to the River 5:03
3. Keep Your Hands Off My Baby 3:59
4. Black Rat Swing 3:35
5. Mamie 4:12
6. Crow Jane 3:02
7. Dog Days of August 4:11
8. John Henry 5:38
9. Pigmeat Crave 3:34
10. Prison Bound Blues 5:23
11. Key to the Highway 3:27
12. Going Down the Road Feeling Bad 3:36
13. Careless Love 5:50
14. Great Change 3:48
15. Reno Factory 3:18
16. Step It Up and Go 2:56

Details

[Edit]

Guitarist and singer John Cephas and harmonica player (and songwriter) Phil Wiggins have been playing together as an acoustic duo since they met in 1976, releasing their first recording in 1981, and throughout that long association they have been faithful to the Virginia Piedmont blues tradition, a tradition that owes more to the local Appalachian foothills than it does to the Mississippi Delta. A gentle mesh of ragtime, gospel, and string band reels, with traces of pop, country, and R&B as well, the Piedmont version of the blues is as easy to recognize as it is hard to accurately define. It is, in a nutshell, the folk music of Appalachian blacks from two generations ago, and this duo's mission has been to preserve and represent it. Richmond Blues is fairly typical of how Cephas & Wiggins have done that since they joined forces, and it is an easy flowing listen, steady as an Appalachian breeze, with no jarring moments. Among the high points are a gently pulsing take on the folk nugget "John Henry," a moving version of "Careless Love" (the perfect example of how a non-blues ballad with blues themes ends up being a blues song when all is sung and done), a solid "Going to the River" (originally recorded by Fats Domino in 1952), and Wiggins' own composition, "Dog Days of August." There's nothing new or revelatory about anything here. It's just Cephas & Wiggins doing what they've always done, sticking to their roots, and that's a good thing, and undeniably affirming and pleasant.