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Steve Mann R . I . P . video


(Note video of the artist starts @ around 2 mins in .)
Good friend and blues (great) guitarist singer songwriter Frank Fotusky mentioned this wonderful player each time he guested on my program (Us Folk here in Portland, Maine over the years. He would say;"You got to hear his stuff, he's a remarkable player who influenced & or played with countless formidable performers!" He was talking about Steve Mann, whose enormous gift and talents on the guitar touched thousands both the players and audiences. He was a heralded an inventive blues guitar great but got sidelined by a nervous breakdown in 1967. Somehow he was able to recoup and resurfaced, and was booked in and around his Berkeley , California base, Frank Fotusky performed with him a series of shows on the west coast in 2005, he refered to it as a dream come true to be performing with such a brilliant player. My friend Frank also had introduced me to Facebook & introduced Steve to Facebook , Frank also introduced me to Steve Mann on Facebook whom I friended up only weeks ago & he friended back, only a few weeks had passed I was only to find that this incredibly gifted brilliant guitar player died on the 9th of September 2009.
I found this video searching YouTube it is one of an all too few videos of Steve performing.  If you got some share em

Thanks Frank.
Rest in Peace Steve Mann.

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Filed under  //   acoustic   acoustic blues   blues   fingerstyle   Frank Fotusky   guitarist   Music Legend   Steve Mann   Steve Mann R.I.P.   video   YouTube  
Posted September 18, 2009
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Sister Rosetta’s Stone: Gospel Music Legend Memorialized after 35 Years


DECEMBER 16, 2008 PRESS RELEASE (from Bob Merz, Philadelphia):

Sister Rosetta’s Stone: Gospel Music Legend Memorialized after 35 Years

Philadelphia, PASister Rosetta Tharpe, the pioneering gospel musician and instrumentalist, finally has a gravestone marking her resting place at Northwood Cemetery in Philadelphia. Since her passing in 1973, the gravesite of Sister Rosetta had been a barren plot lacking any memorial. Today, a beautiful, rose-colored monument bears respect to one of America’s most influential artists of the 20th Century.

Sister Rosetta’s monument was partially funded by a benefit concert at the Keswick Theatre in Glenside, PA on January 11, 2008, that featured performances by gospel and spiritual music legends—The Dixie Hummingbirds, Odetta, Marie Knight, Willa Ward, The Johnny Thompson Singers, and The Huff Singers. Additional financial contributions were provided by Philadelphia’s Rhythm & Blues Foundation, and the Blues Foundation in Memphis.

 A Great page  where the rest of this article resides;  http://www.shoutsistershout.net/marker.html

http://bit.ly/DidntitRain

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Filed under  //   American Music history   blues   Gospel   gravestone   legend   music   Sister Rosetta Tharpe  
Posted December 17, 2008
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"C'mon in my Kitchen" David Jacobs-Strain (resonator guitar) live on Us Folk

C'mon In My Kitchen (Robt Johnson) by David Jacobs - Strain  
(download)

Friday November 7th 2008 the very adept guitarist David Jacobs-Strain came into the studio and played the guitar like no one I'd seen do it before ( & I've see me some guitar players) he was doing chiropractic "moves" on the resonator guitar ('looked like he was going to break it's back!) a very innovative player, the piece starts out a bit faint but sure catches up.

His rendition of the Robert Johnson classic recorded  @ WMPG studio on Us Folk. His flourishes were like I'd neverheard. I did shoot some video of it (remote camera) so soon I'll checking out that footage and  drop this sound onto it and post to vimeo & here. David has a new Album; Liar's Day he did with two veteran players Kenny Passarelli (Otis Taylor, Stephen Stills), who's also featured on the bass. They're joined by Joe Vitale on drums. David is one of those players who breathes new fire, blood & life into the blues and already @ an early age  many consider an American master.

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Filed under  //   blues   C'mon in my Kitchen   David Jacobs-Strain   guitar   Maine   Portland   resonator   Robert Johnson tune   song   USM   Us_Folk   wmpg  
Posted November 9, 2008
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