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Gulf Coast Blues & Impressions - A Hurricane Relief Benefit

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Download links and information about Gulf Coast Blues & Impressions - A Hurricane Relief Benefit by George Winston. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to New Age, Blues, Jazz, Rock, Pop, Alternative, Acoustic genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 46:23 minutes.

Artist: George Winston
Release date: 2006
Genre: New Age, Blues, Jazz, Rock, Pop, Alternative, Acoustic
Tracks: 10
Duration: 46:23
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. New Orleans Shall Rise Again 2:36
2. Creolé Moon 6:17
3. Pixie 5:11
4. The Breaks 4:09
5. Pixie #3 (Gobagie) 4:08
6. Stevenson 1:57
7. Gulf Coast Lullaby, Pt. 1 2:37
8. Gulf Coast Lullaby, Pt. 2 2:44
9. When the Saints Go Marching In 11:48
10. Blues for Fess, Beloved 4:56

Details

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George Winston's benefit record for the Gulf Coast and New Orleans was issued a week after the first anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, and in the middle of hurricane season. He is donating all proceeds to various organizations around the region. Winston proves he can shake it on this set. He's not James Booker, whose "Pixie" he covers wonderfully here. Nor is he "Fess" (Professor Longhair), Dr. John (a cover of "Creole Moon" is on this set), or his friend Henry Butler — whose crib in the Lower Ninth Ward got wiped out by Katrina. But he can play this music, and his own compositions are soulful, direct, and loaded with aural imagery from the Big Easy tradition. His read of "Creole Moon" may not possess the loose, joyous, funky butt swing of Dr. John's ballad, but it does contain plenty of soul; as an interpreter, Winston coaxes some of the more sophisticated compositional aspects of the tune out through the blues. Likewise, "Pixie" is a bit more formal than the fluid jump of Booker's version, but Winston gets the spirit across and kicks it into high stride blues. He composed his own extrapolation of the cut as well, called "Pixie #3 (Gôbajie)" (named after his cat). Apparently there will be a "Pixie #4 (Gôbajie)" on a future disc. The best of the covers is Butler's "The Breaks"; he nails it. His interpretation, while different, leans heavily on the left hand, but it's got the funk. His own short ballads and the brief "Stevenson" are lovely in their own way, relaxed and engaging simultaneously. "When the Saints Go Marching In" offers the single greatest testament to Winston's technical and emotional abilities, and he gives the tune an extended workout; it's nearly 12-minutes long. His middle-register playing is deep blues brined in stride-style boogie-woogie with a gorgeously long intro. The album closes with "Blues for Fess," a New Orleans elegy that comes whispering out of the gate and keeps its quiet dignity, even while caressing its blues. This is perhaps the most engaging Winston album ever, and one anyone who's ever been interested in him should own.