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Live In Chicago

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Download links and information about Live In Chicago by Dave Specter. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Blues, Jazz genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 01:06:58 minutes.

Artist: Dave Specter
Release date: 2008
Genre: Blues, Jazz
Tracks: 10
Duration: 01:06:58
Buy on iTunes $9.90

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Boss Funk / Riverside Ride 7:56
2. What Love Did to Me (featuring Tad Robinson) 6:21
3. How I Got to Memphis (featuring Tad Robinson) 5:27
4. What's Your Angle? (featuring Tad Robinson) 5:47
5. Texas Top 6:38
6. Feel So Bad (featuring Jimmy Johnson) 6:52
7. Out On the Road (featuring Jimmy Johnson) 8:29
8. Is What It Is 7:02
9. In Too Deep (featuring Sharon Lewis) 5:10
10. Angel (featuring Sharon Lewis) 7:16

Details

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There are still some die-hard purists in the blues world who want nothing to do with rock, soul, or jazz and refuse to perform anything that doesn't adhere to a traditional 12-bar structure, but people who fit that description have become harder and harder to find. Go to a major event like the annual Chicago Blues Festival in downtown Chicago's Grant Park, and you will not only encounter disciples of Muddy Waters, Lightnin' Hopkins, or John Lee Hooker — you will also find blues-oriented performers who have been influenced by Tower of Power, Jimi Hendrix, Richard "Groove" Holmes, or Ike & Tina Turner. One of the bluesmen who has been contributing to that diversity is guitarist Dave Specter, whose Live in Chicago was recorded in August 2007 at two of the Windy City's blues clubs: Buddy Guy's Legends and Rosa's Blues Lounge. Specter, true to form, gets his inspiration from a variety of places, tackling everything from electric 12-bar blues on Chick Willis' "Feel So Bad" and Jimmy Rogers' "Out on the Road" (both of which feature singer Jimmy Johnson) to instrumental soul-jazz on "Is What It Is." Specter even embraces a country-rock song: Tom T. Hall's "That's How I Got to Memphis," one of three selections featuring Tad Robinson on vocals. Specter and Robinson, however, don't approach "That's How I Got to Memphis" as country-rock, but rather as Southern soul of the Stax/Malaco variety — and considering that Hall was never a country purist any more than Specter has been a blues purist, it isn't terribly surprising that one of Hall's compositions would find its way to an R&B performance in a blues-oriented (though not blues-exclusive) environment. And speaking of R&B, singer Sharon Lewis' soul credentials make their presence felt when she joins Specter on "In Too Deep" and the gospel-ish "Angel" (which straddles the fence between the secular and the spiritual). Live in Chicago is a consistently rewarding demonstration of Specter's versatility.